Drop the Top and Free Your Soul with a Convertible

James Lipman

This article first appeared in the May/June issue Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Join the club to receive our award-winning magazine, and as part of the first-ever HDC Days from June 21 to June 23, Hagerty Drivers Club members will be eligible for some amazing deals, cool contests, and epic events and experiences. Not an HDC member? Sign up today!

Seductive as the tropical beaches and emerald waters shown in glossy brochures, tourism companies always make their travel packages sing. Follow the path of the Rhine aboard a comfy bed-and-breakfast barge; glimpse glaciers on an Alaskan cruise; or ride the Skunk Train through the redwoods. So close, you can almost touch history. But sometimes, you can’t actually do anything, let alone control your route or pace. In 2024, the price of a monthlong luxury cruise for two is about $30,000. Yeah, you’ll see some cool stuff, but then the money’s gone.

We say: Go buy a convertible instead. You know you’ve always wanted one. Is this finally the year? Yes! Beating that cruise cost, the 1967 Lincoln Continental, 1973 MGB Mk III, 1974 Chevy Corvette, and 1986 Jeep CJ-7 Laredo models featured here average $28K in #3 (good) condition, according to Hagerty’s Valuation Tools. And instead of a one-and-done holiday, you get to enjoy the car for life. Get the hint? We did, and a few Hagerty staffers kicked off the 2024 summer travel season along California’s alluring Central Coast.

Characterized by two-lanes and highways, rural routes, and tiny towns, this was an ideal place to sample and compare these four affordable convertibles on a real-time basis. It was amazing and revealing, at times curious and confounding—maybe even weird, since the cars were quite disparate, like freewheeling vignettes roped together in a Tarantino film. Just for instance, the spacious Continental is nearly 18.5 feet long, weighs more than 5700 pounds, and wields an enormous 462-cubic-inch, 340-hp V-8 underhood. Why, a family of five could occupy the condo-size air cleaner, with room left over for a rat infestation. In contrast, the wee MGB is but 12.5 feet long, weighs a feathery 2240 pounds, and has a 110-cube (1.8-liter) inline-four under its bonnet. Like Mutt and Jeff or Schwarzenegger and DeVito, they don’t really belong on the same road at the same time. Or do they? Let’s see.

Magnetic MGB

1973 MG MGB Custom Convertible front three quarter driving action
BMC’s unibody roadster reigned from 1962-80. Thanks to plentiful replacement parts, drives like this are practically guaranteed from now till eternity.James Lipman

On a crisp morning in tony Santa Barbara, our convertible posse purred over the coastal mountains toward the area’s famed wine country. Initially, we were in whine country due to the supercharger noise emanating from the MG. Built up by the team at Moss Motors, re-pop parts purveyors for vintage sports cars, the penultimate chrome-bumper MG also sported a five-speed Miata gearbox, Bilstein shocks, Wilwood four-piston disc brakes, and other upgrades. Its improved power, lazy overdriven top gear, and well-sorted chassis that included a Panhard rod to better locate the rear axle transformed the somewhat plebeian stock MGB (your author has owned several) into a quick enough, tight-handling, and high-speed-capable little sports car. With one demerit: The overstuffed “Deluxe” aftermarket upholstery shoved our thighs into the Moto-Lita wheel, whose wide rim blocked the gauges.

James Lipman
1973 MG MGB Custom Convertible interior seats
James Lipman

The bustling morning drive swept us past the county’s largest reservoir, Lake Cachuma, whose quiet blue waters and surrounding rolling hills populated by coast live oaks imagined a scene from the English countryside. The MG was happy here, and so were we inside it, thanks partly to the roll-up side windows, which cut down on wind blast in the early chill. Happily, the plucky car had zapped us straight into a Goldilocks Zone for convertibles: stylish and sporty, simple and affordable, and quick, nimble, and fun.

Going fast was a blast, and the boosted-up MGB did it with aplomb. But when you’re in a carriage that’s barely 4 feet high, with precisely no crumple zones, door beams, airbags, or even a rollbar, a closing rate of 110 mph with oncoming Escalades and F-350s is disquieting. So, despite the MGB’s engineering improvements, we needed to find quieter country lanes, where less traffic, modest speeds, and lovely scenery would improve the experience. We knew just where to go: the Santa Ynez Valley, inland from coastal Santa Barbara and a renowned wine-growing region.

1973 MG MGB Custom Convertible dash gauges
Like the Turtles song, “Happy Together,” our chrome-bumper ’73 MGB and Santa Barbara’s backroads just plain matched. Numerous upgrades boosted performance.James Lipman

Here waited the type of roads on which the MGB was bred near the end of the 1950s, when BMC began working on a replacement for the old-school, body-on-frame MGA, itself deriving from a family of postwar sports cars beginning with the seminal 1948 MG TC. Intended largely for the U.S. market, the unibody MGB (first available as a roadster and later as a GT coupe—with a dabbling of six-cylinder MGC and V-8 versions available later) enjoyed a production run of 19 years, with over a half-million built. Modest in its pretensions, readily available, and inexpensive, the four-cylinder variant became the most successful product in MG history. This includes competition, where MGBs scored a multitude of class wins, including in the SCCA, at the Sebring 12 Hours, and even in the Targa Florio.

If you will, MG’s popular roadster was—and remains—the Ford Model A or Volkswagen Beetle of English sports cars. With virtually every hard part reproduced today—fenders, floors, and doors included—its lifespan is essentially limitless. As befitting a “people’s sports car,” Bs are simple to work on, encouraging ownership and use. Today, prices for the 1973 models range from $4800 to $38,000, per Hagerty data.

One Jittery Jeep

Jeep Wrangler Laredo CJ-7 front three quarter
Invented for World War II, the Jeep was born badass and remains so today. Our test CJ-7 rocked the upscale Laredo package, a Freightliner-worthy bumper, and beefy 31-inch tires.James Lipman

Following the first civilian Jeep of 1945, the CJ-2A, the blockbuster CJ-7 debuted in 1976 and lasted through ’86. Designed for more versatility and dynamic stability than the short, twitchy CJ-5, the long-wheelbase (93.5 inches) CJ-7 is regarded as the last Jeep with engineering tracing back to the original WWII military model. If you’re curious why it’s included here, it is actually more convertible than the other vehicles in this group, thanks to its availability with not only a removable soft or hard top, but removable doors, too.

We felt even more unprotected in the Jeep than in the MGB. Minus its doors, top, and side windows, the CJ-7 felt like a barely obedient roping horse. While driving, we could see the road streaking below the doorsills. The beefy 31-inch tires, elliptical leaf springs all around, and high center of gravity (the CJ stands close to 6 feet tall) made for a nervous ride at 55 mph. The CJ tolerated the morning’s fast, flowy route but clearly hungered for something different, like overlanding in the Mojave or the Sierras, or at least tracing some ranch road toward the Pacific, 25 miles to the west. This seemed at least within the realm of possibility, and the CJ-7 carried a shortboard behind the passenger seat for later use, just in case.

Jeep Wrangler Laredo CJ-7 surf board stow
Perhaps counterintuitively, the Jeep CJ-7 was actually more convertible than any other droptop in our group. Its versatility included removable doors, off-road-ready four-wheel drive, and the ability to carry a surfboard, hugely connecting us with the environment.James Lipman

Meanwhile, on the county two-lanes, the torquey 4.2-liter inline-six, nearly Thanksgiving-gravy smooth and backed by a five-speed gearbox, was a delight. It offers only 112 horsepower but somehow feels entirely competent, willing, and unhurried. Keep your speed in check, master the CJ-7’s dynamic hijinks, deal with the heinous wind noise (earplugs work!), and the day is as golden as those pretty Laredo stripes.

Jeep Wrangler Laredo CJ-7 info plate detail
James Lipman

This well-kept example, kindly lent by an anonymous private owner, celebrated a milestone, turning 60,000 miles old on our adventure, along the way benefiting from one excellent respray, an aftermarket audio system, stainless bumpers, and some museum-grade pampering. Dutifully carrying its surf cargo and with its Dana 300 transfer case ready for action—much more rugged action, if possible—the CJ was an outlier in our group, and it posed a question: What exactly is the attraction of a convertible, and why do we need one?

In 1943, Abraham Maslow postulated that humans are most basically driven to seek food and shelter, and when they’re assured, strive upward in pursuit of comfort, companionship, purposeful work, etc. But maybe, just maybe, some part of us always craves the wild and woolly physical world, and convertibles, like motorcycles and boats, let us level down on Maslow’s famous hierarchy to this more visceral place without having to live there full time. In our way of thinking, convertibles do exactly this—letting us sensually connect with the natural environment at a pace and with the control and security that we like. How’s that for deep?

Atypical within this group and a less polished road warrior, the Jeep is way more versatile than the other cars, none of which has a whiff of a chance of beating Baja or the Rubicon, whereas the CJ can whip those and Boston or Raleigh, too. Clearly, life is better with choices. Maybe that’s why nearly 380,000 CJ-7s were sold from 1976-86, explaining why the final-year CJ-7 Laredo model remains affordable at $11,000 to $32,600 in Hagerty valuation.

Time Capsule Corvette

1974 C3 Corvette Convertible rear three quarter
James Lipman

A windblown morning led to midday hunger for our crew, happily sated by a sandwich break in Los Olivos. Originally an 1860s stagecoach stop, the town has seemingly developed little since, with a flagpole still occupying the main intersection and a nearby dirt lot for parking. On the very soil that horse teams likely once trod, the third-generation Corvette awaited. And not just any C3 model at that. Owned by Dave Sprowl, it is a true time capsule, with only 11,000 miles on the odometer, completely original paint, interior, and running gear, and a National Corvette Restorers Society (NCRS) Chapter Top Flight Award to prove it. Even its configuration is somewhat rare; 5474 convertibles were built for ’74, or 15 percent of the total production run that year.

Significantly, 1974 represents the year that Corvette’s ancestral chrome bumpers disappeared forever, replaced by urethane covers over impact-absorbing beams. That was 50 years ago, though (yikes!). Derided at the time by purists who felt real cars deserved real bumpers, the so-called buggy bumper ’74 Vette looks epic today, we think. The design is aging beautifully and remains strongly emblematic of Corvette’s unique proposition: large and in charge, with over-the-top styling. Parked alongside new Teslas and Taycans, why, it absolutely stands proud. Our lucky test car, finished in its original Medium Red Metallic with Dark Red vinyl interior, was beyond striking.

1974 C3 Corvette Convertible high angle vertical
When the Stingray’s urethane bumper covers debuted for 1974, purists figured the world was ending. But they appear epic 50 years later, as does the rest of this third-gen Vette.James Lipman

Vectoring north onto Foxen Canyon Road, we were able to give the Corvette the boot. Two 350-cubic-inch small-block V-8s and a 454 were available in ’74, this one equipped with the 195-hp 350. Backed by a three-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic, it’s lively but hardly ground-pounding, as were some Corvettes of the previous decade. (A low point for Corvette output came in ’75, when the base engine wheezed out a mere 165 horses.)

1974 C3 Corvette Convertible engine
The simple forms of the analog era sure look good on this NCRS award winner. Simple pushrods, a Rochester Quadrajet, and a crisp Turbo Hydra-Matic flat-out get it done.James Lipman
1974 C3 Corvette Convertible interior console gauges
James Lipman

Suitably poked, the C3 gathered up its skirts and hustled along the road with a satisfying V-8 rumble, and the shifts were quick and firm. So was the chassis, absent the tens or hundreds of thousands of miles that similar Vettes have covered over their half-century on our beautiful planet. Ahead, the long hood tapered away, like the flared bow of a WWII Royal Navy corvette plunging into big seas. And flanking it were the C3’s tall, angular fenders, directives from styling chief Bill Mitchell, who championed the prescient Mako Shark II design concept in 1965.

1974 C3 Corvette Convertible interior front dash full
James Lipman

Compared with the MG and Jeep, the Corvette felt super comfortable. Passengers sit low and tight inside, and the ergonomics are just right for real people—thank GM’s human factors engineering for that. The only negative worth reporting was felt when the road got bumpy. Here, as with most of our vehicles, the C3 suspension—the design of which debuted as the 1963 Sting Ray—pounded the ladder frame and body like howitzers shelling an enemy line. But forget that Teddy Roosevelt Rough Riders stuff for a minute; a winery suddenly appeared on the right. Hard on the brakes (no ABS till 1986), the Vette dived into the lot and we snooped quickly for deals on a case of pinot, a Santa Ynez Valley specialty. We didn’t score a case, but a nice bottle got stowed behind the seats for later.

Ordinarily, per Hagerty’s valuation, a ’74 Corvette with the base 350 V-8 might be found for $17,600 in good condition, with one in fair shape grabbable for $11,400. But up top, in #1 condition, with NCRS pedigree, think more like $50,200. You can bet we were careful with this one.

The USS Continental

Continental Convertible front three quarter
Styling through a premier left-coast neighborhood, the glacier-blue Continental positively commanded the scene. It has resided with one extended family since new.James Lipman

Never were American land yachts more ’60s than the fourth-generation, “JFK” Continental convertibles of 1961–67. Expensive, exclusive, enormous, and over-the-top luxurious, this example is also exceedingly rare. One of just 2276 built for ’67, it was sold new by a Downey, California, dealership and has remained within one extended family ever since. Thanks to 35 years of storage leading into the 2000s, it hadn’t even cracked 88,000 miles by the time our baby blues first beheld its platinum paint.

America was on top in this period, Ford was headlong in its Total Performance push, horsepower ratings were peaking, and emissions and safety regulations had yet to crater automakers’ autonomy. Moreover, with the nation mesmerized by space flight, power, automation, and convenience, the Continental went all in to deliver everything. Wealth meant being in command, and nothing said command like sheer size.

No company ever disguised a Rhode Island–size road train better. A masterwork of midcentury design, the Continental’s lines are crisp and reserved, the brightwork is tasteful, and the enormous square footage of generally flat sheetmetal appears graceful, despite the grandiosity.

Continental Convertible interior door panel details
James Lipman

In person, this convertible, owned by Montecito, California, real-estate agent Nick Svensson, looks beyond enormous. It fits by scant inches inside his garage near the beach, in a neighborhood where homes carry six zeros in their Zillow price profiles. In lending us the car, Nick—traveling at the time—allowed as how we might have to clean it up a bit. That basically meant treating the engine to a jumpstart, attaching the 2024 registration sticker, checking tires and fluids, and visiting a local wash/detail shop. Easy.

Continental Convertible interior doors open
After a boisterous and breezy day, midcentury design influences merged at the reimagined Skyview Los Alamos. With its center-opening doors, the Continental is a social creature.James Lipman

Underway, we quickly learned piloting this droptop dreadnought is an experience unlike the others. The driver confronts an interesting blend of grandeur and simplicity. Other than a speedometer and fuel gauge, there are no other instruments, per se, just discrete trouble lights that, one should presume, will illuminate in the event of distress in the engine room.

It’s a four-door six-seater, so flying solo for a time in the afternoon, we felt a bit like Sir Francis Chichester singlehandedly circling the globe in his 53-foot Gipsy Moth IV. The helm—er, steering wheel—responded to the lightest of touches, as did the accelerator and brakes. However, that body motion! Chichester complained about how his ketch sailed, and since he did the voyage in 1966–67, he might have well understood this Continental, for it pitched and rolled like a sailboat. Riding up the sweeping, fast State Route 154 out of town, and later on U.S. Route 101, it was indeed a magnificent machine. But on the winding backroads, the body heeled in the turns, porpoised over humps, and dived under braking. Yahoo!

Continental Convertible engine
James Lipman

A monarch of motorcars, the Continental considers the driver’s inputs as suggestions more than commands, stamping its authority even upon its owner. Also, it doesn’t deign to ask permission to go where it pleases, to be early, late, or anything in between. It is the whole show, knows it, and arrives in style when it damned well pleases. It is, in a word, presidential.

Among our borrowed test fleet, the Continental drew the most attention, the most smiles, and evoked the most conversation. It’s that impactful and friendly. We found this meaningful since barely a third of the current U.S. population was alive when the car was new. For young and old, seeing it was like glimpsing a living, breathing brontosaurus. Is that even real?

Also unreal is the value. A fair example is $26,500, per Hagerty valuation, which rockets up to $108,000 for a ’67 convertible in concours shape.

Ignition Impossible

It might seem mean to note that in two days of driving for this story, only the massive Continental required anything but gas (a quart of oil topped up the big six-quart sump). And only the MG suffered a failure, ignominiously an electrical one. But that’s what happened as the pretty MGB went pop-pop-stop along a lazy backroad—its happy place—in mid-afternoon. On a dirt turnout flanked by a garage-size compost pile and a rusty ranch gate, an hour of troubleshooting by photographer James Lipman, Hagerty editor-at-large Aaron Robinson, and the author determined that the distributor rotor was mismatched to the cap. How the car ran until that point remains a mystery, but we knew the coil was robust because it nearly shocked Lipman out of his shoes while we investigated. An SOS to Moss Motors and the company dispatched its nearest employee with various rotors; oddly the one that fit came from his personal vintage Mini, but it sufficed, and we continued with nary a hiccup afterward. Better lucky than good.

The trouble put us behind the eight ball on time, but that’s classic for vintage trips. We thus pivoted to enjoy the remaining daylight in wine country before roosting at the Skyview Los Alamos, a restored 1959 motel poised on a hill above the old ranching community (population: 1839) and flagged by a classic illuminated MOTEL sign (creepily, like in Psycho). The motel was formerly in decline, but a few million bucks reportedly brought it up to boutique status, and the restaurant is good. Even better, the cars looked great in the lot—every one of them.

That bottle of pinot noir didn’t last long at dinner, but the convertible conversation certainly did.

MG-convertible-high-angle-rear-three-quarter
In convertibles we trusted—and are so glad we did. Comparing the battleship-size Lincoln with the MGB, the Corvette, and the Jeep took two days—but the lessons live on.James Lipman

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Comments

    I’ve owned multiple convertibles and targas. Currently my convertible is a BMW 128i. It’s a drivers car with the right amount of handling and feedback while still having desirable amenities and enough space for weekend getaways with a friend. With the M Sport suspension it’s one of the best handling cars I’ve owned and the normally aspirated inline 6 is the heart of a great sports car. I like the power of the turbo 135’s but the dsg transmission and turbo take away the more connected driving experience in the 128 for me. Overall it’s one of the most underappreciated enthusiast cars/convertibles out there and as such can be purchased for less than many would expect for such a great drivers car. The engine is well known for being one of BMW’s best and when I purchased it, it had the best reliability rating of any used BMW.

    My Dad was responsible for my convertible fever when he nixed my 16yo fever dream of buying a 1971 plum-crazy 383 RT Dodge Challenger with a white top and interior down at the local used car lot for $1,100. I ended up with a ’74 Vega that cost more ($1,400) and was a miserable hunk of junk. He said it was because the Dodge had “high miles” (~68,000)…yeah right!

    Anyway, I now own 2 verts: A ’96 Mustang GT that is my daily driver and a 1964 Corvair Spyder that needs a little work before I put her back on the road, and without a/c down here in Florida it won’t be convertible weather until Fall anyway!

    If you’re going to spend $18K on Vette convertible, there are better choices than a malaise era L-48 making less than 200HP, especially with a slushbox. I’m sure you can find an L-82 4 speed for around the same money. Yes, a 454 would cost more, but you might get lucky, especially with a slushbox. Or how about a C-4? You could find one for even a little less, would definitely make more power (especially later model LT-1s), have a lot more convenience features, better handling, better brakes and much better safety equipment. Its not that I don’t like the C-3 – the chrome bumper ones were awesome, and the L-82 or 454 malaise era is definitely a decent option, but a malaise era L-48 just doesn’t cut it.

    a Ford and a British Leyland get together with a CJ..sounds like the beginning of a bad joke;

    who in their right mind would touch one of those three?

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