A Delivery Mileage McLaren F1 Is Up For Sale, And It Makes Us A Bit Sad

McLaren F1 chassis no. 060 is being sold at a specialist dealer, and it's done just 148 miles from new
A Delivery Mileage McLaren F1 Is Up For Sale, And It Makes Us A Bit Sad

What we have here is a McLaren F1 like no other. It’s clocked just 239km (148 miles), effectively meaning it’s covered delivery mileage only. It was never registered by its single owner, and is still wearing its factory protective wrapping. Oh, and it includes all the original accessories including the tool chest and luggage set.

A Delivery Mileage McLaren F1 Is Up For Sale, And It Makes Us A Bit Sad

This 1997 example is finished in Dandelion Yellow, while on the inside you’ll find a dark grey interior with contrasting yellow inserts on the driver’s seat. Gordon Murray’s signature is hand-painted on the body, and you get a spare, LM-style exhaust and a GT R steering wheel along with the deal.

A Delivery Mileage McLaren F1 Is Up For Sale, And It Makes Us A Bit Sad

This is the closest thing to a new McLaren F1 in existence, and it’s up for sale at specialist dealer Tom Hartley Jnr. It’s listed - as you’d probably expect - as ‘£POA’, but this will almost certainly become the most expensive F1 ever sold, exceeding the current record of $15.62 million.

All of this makes us a little sad. The McLaren F1 is one of the greatest driving machines ever built, and one of the 64 produced has sat for most of its 20 years on Planet Earth doing nothing. Never turning a wheel in anger. Not once hitting the 7500rpm red line of its BMW-derived V12.

A Delivery Mileage McLaren F1 Is Up For Sale, And It Makes Us A Bit Sad

There is of course hope that the next owner decides “screw that” and uses this car in a way that’s fit and proper, but we can’t help but assume its factory fresh condition will continue to be preserved.

Any super rich people out there want to prove us wrong?

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Comments

Anonymous
10/17/2017 - 14:22 |
26 | 0
Felix Tang

I wonder what the oil inside the engine looks like…

10/17/2017 - 14:25 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

All rubber or silicon components in the engine will likely have to be replaced.

10/17/2017 - 14:47 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

We found one that wasn’t crashed by Rowan Atkinson.

10/17/2017 - 14:48 |
0 | 0
TheRealBouss

People seriously have to stop buying incredible cars and not using them, then selling them for higher prices. Makes financial sense, but you buy such a car to drive it, not to make money.
SMH

10/17/2017 - 14:56 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

To give you an answer to your question: Nope.

10/17/2017 - 15:11 |
2 | 0
Fat Beckham

It’s £25m in case anyone’s wondering…

Not a bad return on investment for £540k.

10/17/2017 - 15:34 |
4 | 0
TheBagel

Unfortunately, the people on here are certainly not rich. Just a bunch of car obsessed teens

10/17/2017 - 15:36 |
4 | 0
Ewan23 (The Scottish guy)

It needs to be driven someone please buy it

10/17/2017 - 15:46 |
0 | 0
TheMindGarage

I wonder if this thing will even work without some serious servicing. Leaving a car in storage for 20 years can’t be good for it.

10/17/2017 - 15:56 |
0 | 0