This week sees the return of the police series based upon the activities of a
police inspector whose patch is Northumberland and Durham in the mid 1960s. There`s nothing better to evoke a past era on
screen than the director`s choice of cars of the period; more than any other
prop, well chosen vehicles inform the viewer immediately that they are being taken to times past. George Gently drives a 3 litre Rover and his sergeant an MGB and laterally a Ford
Corsair. The scenes around the police
station have various police Ford Zephyrs parked.
Over the years police forces have splashed out on various
high powered cars for their high performance capabilities. It is hard to believe now but in 1964 whilst
Sergeant Bacchus was tearing up theA1 in his MGB the Metropolitan Police were
cruising about in Daimler Darts. MGAs,
MGBs, various Jaguars and assorted Rovers and BMWs have been bought for
constabularies up and down the country. Arguably
their excessive costs could be justified by the circumstances of their
times. Cars used by everyone from
fugitives to families were progressively becoming faster. An expanding economy released vast increases
in government spending including the modernisation of the police. Police numbers, until the recent redundancies,
were twice the level of the 72,000 in
the 1960s. With spending restricted on all aspects of the law `n order
departments it is somewhat surprising, that even supposedly on loan for display only,
a McLaren Spider 12C decked in police livery is the feature of a publicity
shoot. The McLaren Spider 12C has a 3.8 litre twin-turbo engine with 600 brake
horsepower, surely enough to make even Jeremy Clarkson quiver. A police spokesman confirmed the car was on loan from McLaren for the motor show and would not be used on the roads. With previous history to go by
what are the odds some bright spark will suggest the car joins its predecessors
patrolling on the M1?