I do not still have it. After loving on it for ~ 32 years, in 2007 a gentleman from Belgium came to Wichita Falls with his broker from Florida, and made me an offer I could not refuse. I traded the Lola for a new Ariel Atom II. a new Ultima Can-Am, and a 300 mile Ford GT Heritage edition.
It was a good trade for me, because I have had more fun with each one of these three than I ever did with the Lola.
I still think the Lola T-70 coupe is the most beautiful car ever built, with the Ford GT a close second place in my eyes. But the Lola had become so valuable, that I could not relax and really play hard with it, for fear of damaging it in some way. Kinda like my Heritage has since become.
On the other hand, I do not worry at all about hurting any of my Ariel Atoms (I have three now) and have run them absolutely as hard as my instinct of self preservation will allow, twice a month, weather permitting, at two different road race tracks, ever since the trade in 2007. Over three gee max cornering while winning the open wheel race car class at Hallett weekend before last. 300 HP, 1325 pounds.
The Ultima is a real hoot to drive, too, and is faster than the Atom on the straights, especially long ones, and it sounds wonderful with a 427 cube small block Chevy turning 7500 or more, no mufflers. It will actually turn lap times about as quick as the Atom, and here again, I don't worry about hurting the Ultima, but the extra 700 pounds that it weighs more than the Atom , makes it feel heavy and unresponsive by comparison. 569 HP, 2090 pounds. So it is not as much fun as the 1325 pound car.
I would not dare put my Heritage on track, with what they are worth now, but I love looking at it and photographing it, and detailing it, and taking it to our little Cowboy Church (60 mile round trip) on pretty Sundays. Taking friends for rides or taking Wife BabyCakes to the Dairy Queen, or daughter Sabrina to the Sonic in the Heritage, has been more fun for me than what I did with the Lola.
My Lola was originally owned by James Garner, (Rockford files, Maverick,) and with his drivers Ed Leslie and Lothar Motzenbacher, finished the 1969 24 hours of Daytona in second place. The AIR on the front of the car was Garner's American International Racing. When the studio required Garner to quit racing, George Lucas used the Lola in his first full-length movie, THX 1138, with Robert Duvall driving the car.
I think there were only ~24 of these coupes made, and with the provenance this one has, it might have brought a lot of $ if it was actively promoted and marketed, but my buyer was there, with the funds for the trade, and it was an easy deal, and I have thoroughly enjoyed the results of the trade and been very grateful for the time I had with the Lola, and the joy I've had, and continue to have, with the replacements.
Thank you, Lord.
Life is good.
Eddie:biggrin