if it happens that infrequently perhaps it just might be a bad connection somewhere
I agree strongly with this suggestion - given your description of the quite sudden cut, I would expect the cause is of an electrical nature.
Why would it happen? I can only suggest my theory:
I think your 220 leads a slightly sheltered life doing less than 10 miles per week per annum?
Joking aside, that damp air you refer to (we have in Ireland too, good dense stuff, excellent for engine efficiency) get into our cars and causes "invisable" corrosion - in this case on wiring loom connections.
In a daily driver, the motion of the car causes a degree of movement which causes the connections to rub and self clean and prevent high resistance occuring. A simple example of this is the horn slip ring on the steering wheel, look at a well used car and the horn sounds better too.
The Japs used to grease the electrical connection (as grease is an insulator) and they have a great track record for reliability.
My view is that you have a high resistance connection at a critical point, I am thinking of the 24pin ECU / footwell area of the engine management. Maybe the Flywheel sensor connections, AFM 5 pin connector. There is a build up of resistance, which leads to heat and further resistance and further heat and the unit eventually fails to receive the inputs it needs to function. When the ignition is switched, the unit resets, the recent memory is wiped, the poor connection is still there but not sufficiently poor to prevent running. HOWEVER, in a long motorway journey, the literally billions of signals exchanged in an hour at a 200 lepton cruise will accrue to a point where you see the problem.
There are folk on here who could explain why better than me because they understand the ignition and fuel adjustments being made in the ECU.
I had the same issue on an intermittent indicator bulb recently, corrosion build up, clean and grease, prob solved. But that is not a critical connection.
What would I do? - either gently clean and lightly oil the ECU harness connections and under bonnet connections to devices / sensors, and use the car more. I am sure use would fix it. If you know a bad road pay it a visit or drive on the cats eyes for a few miles.
What would I not do, dont start pulling a good car to bits when there is nothing wrong with the bits.
Good luck.
George
944t