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Category: Magazine

MARK J. McCOURT, SENIOR EDITOR

1999 9-3 COUPE SAAB

It's a bittersweet victory. After nearly two years of serious searching, I've found a replacement for my 25-year-old daily-driver 900, which will be leaving my care after nine years. I've kissed a lot of proverbial frogs in this search--seriously inspecting nine Saabs--but this Scarabe Green hatchback was a prince. I'd set up an alert on cars.com for 1999-2002 9-3s with manual transmissions, and I called immediately when this base '99 Coupe appeared, with 56,688 miles, in the used car lot of a Honda dealer in West Chester, Pennsylvania. I dealt with the friendly Michele, who agreed to take the car to Sports Car Service in Wilmington, Delaware, for a Saab-specialist inspection; it got a clean bill of health, with no rust to be found.

My father, Dennis, traveled with me to look at this one-owner 9-3, and we agreed that it was even better in person than pictures led us to believe. One ding on the roof, two small paint scuffs and the usual missing cloisonné on the Saab-Scania trunk emblem are all that separate this car from appearing virtually brand new; the tan cloth interior shows no wear on the seats or dash. I couldn't believe my good fortune. The only issue is that almost everyone who has seen the car has asked the same question: "So, now what are you going to buy to use in the winter?"

Special thanks to Linnea Krajewski for accompanying me on many test drives, to Don Wollum for advice, and to my father, this magazine's editor and Kevin Leonard for their patience and unwavering support. Here's to the next decade of Saabing.

DAVID LaCHANCE, EDITOR

1968 2000 TC ROVER

As I'm fond of saying, there's nothing like a deadline to make things happen. With our 11th annual Hemmings Sports & Exotic Car Show approaching, I decided that I'd bring the Rover. Which meant that I finally had to do something about that rear door.

The Rover is largely original, and still bears the marks of a couple of long-ago accidents. The back door on the driver's side had been damaged and repaired 40-plus years ago, and the ancient filler had long ago begun to crack and flake off. I'd thought about having the door repainted, until one day last year my friend and fellow Rover enthusiast Earl Moffatt offered me a presentable door off a parts car.

Though his door was April Yellow, just like my car, its glass was tinted, and my car's is not. So I had to swap over the window mechanism from my old door to the replacement. It turned out to be not terribly difficult, and my fears of endless, unsuccessful adjustment evaporated when the replacement door clicked shut with perfect gaps the very first time.

1968 2000 TC ROVER

The Rover has been subjected to partial resprays over the years, and so my new door is probably a perfect match for at least one of those April Yellow panels. As it is, it's an enormous improvement over what was there before. Thanks, Earl.

*THE FLEET*

STAFF MEMBER

VEHICLE - RUNNING YES/NO

RICHARD LENTINELLO, EXECUTIVE EDITOR

1955 TRIUMPH TR2 - NO

1960 TRIUMPH TR3A - NO

1967 TRIUMPH GT6 MK 1 - YES

1968 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE MK 3 - NO

2013 MINI COOPER - YES

DAVID LACHANCE, EDITOR

1968 ROVER 2000 TC - YES

1970 ROVER 3500S - NO

1987 BERTONE X1/9 - YES

1978 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1500 - NO

1993 MERCEDES-BENZ 190E 2.3 - YES

MARK J. MCCOURT, SENIOR EDITOR

1980 MG MGB - YES

1991 SAAB 900 S - YES

1999 SAAB 9-3 COUPE

2000 VOLVO C70 COUPE HPT - YES

2013 VOLVO C30 T5 R-DESIGN - YES

NANCY BIANCO, MANAGING EDITOR

1967 VOLVO 122S WAGON - YES

TERRY SHEA, ASSOCIATE EDITOR

1969 SUNBEAM ALPINE GT - NO

1974 1/2 MG MGB - NO

2002 BMW M COUPE - YES

JEFF KOCH, ASSOCIATE EDITOR

1989 NISSAN S-CARGO - YES

2002 SUBARU IMPREZA WRX - YES

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