- ABChttp://www.abc.net.au/newcastle/stories/s1783540.htm
- Backyard car collector builds shrine to lemon
- Wednesday, 25 October 2006
- Reporter: Anthony Scully
- 'They're a lovely comfortable car, there's no doubt about that,' Mr Maloney says.
- 'And plenty of room in them; they were just a great road car to go touring in.'
- There is a fine line between passion and obsession for Beresfield car lover Hal Maloney, whose enthusiasm for a
- discontinued 1970s Australian fuel guzzler has overwhelmed his backyard shed.
- Mr Maloney is the proud owner of not one but two Leyland P76 Executives - a much loved but often maligned example of
- Australian engineering, considered ahead of its time for using many lightweight components.
- But today Mr Maloney conceded he had far more spare parts for the vehicles than he could ever hope to use.
- "What I have in the shed here is too many parts!" Mr Maloney said. "Absolutely, by a long way! What I'm going to do with them I don't know!
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- Car hobby consumes a lifetime
- Hal Maloney gently opens the door of his "aspen green metallic" Leyland Executive and sinks down behind the steering wheel into an accommodating bucket seat.
- 'They're a lovely comfortable car, there's no doubt about that,' Mr Maloney says. 'And plenty of room in them; they were just a great road car to go touring in.'
- Fay Maloney reveals her husband's passion for cars has been a lifelong affair.
- "I think he's always been very car oriented, ever since he was little," she says. "And ever since he's found that he liked these cars, he's just kept it going; constantly; all the time!"
- How Leyland missed the market
- Mr Maloney, who has written a book on the Leyland's history, concedes the P76 sales figures 'certainly show that they
- weren't a success'.
- 'Just after the Leyland was released, the first of the fuel crises happened at the end of 1973,' Mr Maloney said.
- He recalls an 'odd and evens number plate' system was put in place as fuel was rationed.
- 'People wanted smaller cars, the same as they're doing now,' he said. 'We go through these cycles.'
- Photo
- 'They're a lovely comfortable car, there's no doubt about that,' Mr Maloney says. 'And plenty of room in them; they were just a great road car to go touring in.'