The padded headlining is a typical Pininfarina touch and the treatment of the wooden cant rails is very similar to the Fiat 130 Coupe, while the airplane-style cladding around the recessed switchgear, warning lights and ventilation outlets still looks classy.
Once inside, you are conscious of the extra width compared with a Silver Shadow, and the all-round vision is excellent.
The Rolls-Royce Camargue’s substantial switchgear
Taking in the commanding view along the hood, all that you touch and operate has a smooth yet solid action, and this makes the Camargue a restful and reassuring place to be.
The windows work silently, the air conditioning has already decided on the appropriate climate and the smell of the leather is glorious.
In many ways the Camargue is the most pleasant to drive of all the Shadow-era Rolls-Royces.
The barely audible engine has massive torque for authoritatively silky acceleration that is enough to give this big car a confident feel in traffic, but it is not so aggressive that occupants – or onlookers – are alarmed.
The Rolls-Royce Camargue’s smooth gearchanges go mostly unnoticed
Once ‘D’ is selected on the electric quadrant you forget about gearchanges – you can’t feel them any more than you can hear the wind rustling around the door apertures.
When you get used to the light – but not vague – steering, it is possible to drive the Camargue ambitiously up to a limit set more by a requirement not to become conspicuous than by the limits of the car.
The brakes are superbly powerful and predictable, and the self-leveling ride is soft but not sloppy.
You can hear the tires working quite hard on most surfaces – Rolls-Royce never got to grips with this in the way Jaguar did – but the essential balance of this supple-riding car and its resistance to understeer and body roll up to quite high limits is impressive.
It is as happy to hurry as it is to cruise or potter.
The Rolls-Royce Camargue’s widened back end boosts cabin space for rear-seat occupants
The idea of a Bentley incarnation of the Camargue was considered (they were tested with Bentley grilles prior to the launch), but the model was not a return to the Bentley Continental market.
In a post-Fuel Crisis world of blanket speed limits, 120mph in total luxury was deemed sufficient.
The emphasis was on effortless comfort, with speed only an element as far as it made life for the driver more pleasant, rather than being an end in itself.
It was not intended to be a hardcore driver’s car, but a personal luxury environment for those Rolls-Royce customers who drove themselves.
And in that the Camargue succeeded.
Images: Max Edleston
Thanks to: Steve Prevett; WD Wins
Factfile
Rolls-Royce Camargue
- Sold/number built 1975-’86/534
- Construction steel monocoque, with aluminum panels
- Engine all-alloy, ohv 6750cc V8, single Solex four-barrel carburetor
- Max power/torque not disclosed
- Transmission three-speed auto, RWD
- Suspension independent, at front by double wishbones rear semi-trailing arms, self-leveling; coil springs, telescopic dampers, anti-roll bar f/r
- Steering power-assisted recirculating ball
- Brakes powered discs, vented at front
- Length 16ft 9½in (5118mm)
- Width 6ft 3in (4950mm)
- Height 4ft 8½in (1435mm)
- Wheelbase 9ft 11½in (3035mm)
- Weight 5100lb (2313kg)
- 0-60mph 9.6 secs
- Top speed 120mph
- Mpg 11-15
- Price new £29,000 (1975)
- Price now £90,000*
*Price correct at date of original publication
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Martin Buckley
Senior Contributor, Classic & Sports Car