Shall we work down from the top picture? This is like shooting fish in a barrel.
- bright chrome grille teeth; should be satin finish
- car has build date of 22 March, '56 and by then the duotone paint line was well established as meeting the front wheel arch and curving back to the edge.
- top seems to be a cloth version; should be black Everflex
- bottom riveted lip of back shroud to boot floor should be brush painted dull black
- rear bumper over riders missing.
- front sidelamps and rear tail lamps are later behive style; originals were flat style
- rear reflectors are later style common replacements, not correct early style
- dash is from a 6 cylinder with chrome 6 cylinder instrument pod ring. Note also the 6 cylinder style concave chrome plate in behind the grab handle, and they've mounted the fresh air pull cable knob in where the windscreen washer pump would be on the 6 cylinder dash.
- no steady springs for windscreen.
- should not have contrasting seat and arm rest piping by March '56.
- seats (especially the backs)are an awful shape, with form and contour completely lost.
- demister vent strips should be body colour.
- steering wheel is the repro nonadjustable that has the wide(wrong)spoke spacing
- as previously mentioned, the 100 flash on the boot lid, let's add the M there in the 3rd hole, and drill some more holes to place the "Austin Healey" script over on the other side of the boot lid to balance it all.
- distributor cap is later squat rounded shape replacement and plug wire ends are non original style
- detailing engine bay should include painting the copper water pipe and fuel line dull silver (no big deal)
- chassis wiring harness running along chassis rail should be wrapped in black protective tape
- brake lines appear to be the after market copper alloy set, are very poorly formed and do not follow correct routing.
- the air duct hose should go right to the front and end up immediately behind the grill slats and should be held there by a 1" wide aluminum band fastened to the outer upper grill stud fastener.
- the front and rear shocks look to have been media blasted and left that way, where they should have black phosphate arms.
Some of my observations may seem overly picky, but for the prices they want, there's no excuse.