Gee thanks for the rabid attack. For your information I have not put the car up on Ebay as I type this.
Second, as of 14 days ago I had no intention of selling my Midget. I had every intention on finishing the project. What happened was that I was visiting with a 90 year old World War II veteran--he was the brother of my father's best friend who was killed in combat in Italy in August 1944. I was there to scan some photos of his dead brother as part of a research effort I'm doing on my dad's combat outfit. Whether you believe this or not I could care less.
He happened to mention that he had an "old car" in his garage that he wanted to junk or donate to charity. He had gotten this car years ago and had started restoring it but he would never be able to finish it. I asked what kind of car was it--he said a 1968 Ford Mustang. He didn't even want to show it to me because it was COVERED with boxes and stuff and he didn't think that I would have any interest in the car.
Well, it turned out to be a great car and even then, I did not think that I would change courses and dump the MG for the Mustang. After researching the costs and other considerations for a week, I decided to take the Mustang. One of the decisive factors was that my friend would sell the car for a "token" price.
I decided that I would probably never get an opportunity like this again so that's the reason.
On the issue of engine builders, I wanted to rebuild my engine to a relatively high level of quality since I intended to run the car at time trials at tracks like Willow Springs and Buttonwillow. I've been doing this for years with my Acura with a local sports car club. Willow Springs is a very fast track and I needed an engine that could survive this kind of driving.
If you go to the Seven Enterprises website and ad up the machining costs for their services you'll see that to do everything desirable to a 1275, the costs will run you more than $1000.
https://www.7ent.com/page.cfm?pageid=48
Then add the cost of a Weber DCOE (well over $800), or the HIF6 kit from Seven Enterprises ($550), Maniflow headers from APT ($279), then you start to run up quite a tab.
Now I realize that you can get your 1275 rebuilt a lot cheaper at Joe's Block Welding but I don't want a low buck rebuild.
The prices I was quoting for the Ford 302 parts were straight from Summit Racing and Jegs--check them out. They are NOT the "cheapest" parts or prices. The price of the fully blueprinted block was for a DSS Racing product:
https://www.dssracing.com/cncblocks.htm
They're selling these at their Ebay store for $625 and it's another $135 to ship it to California. This is NOT the cheapest block you can buy. If you want CHEAP, you can buy a complete 302 rebuild longblock for well under $2000. I was not quoting that kind of junk prices.
I'm not comparing cheap generic Ford parts to the most expensive high-end 1275 parts. I'm comparing things at the similar quality and convenience levels.
I did not begin the project with no planning or cost and time estimates. But the cost of completing my MG compared to a '69 Mustang, it was a no brainer.
And then there's the finished product. I'd have a nice 80 HP Midget or a 325 HP Mustang with all the bells and whistles than I would most certainly be able to lab Willow Springs at a faster pace. I was hoping that I could build a Midget that would lap Willow in the low 1:50s. I currently can go 1:48 all day with my daily driver Acura with street tires.
After talking to Tom Colby at Speedwell, it seems that it's not going to be easy to unload my project quickly. I put a lot of time and effort into my MG project. Whenever possible, I used aircraft fasteners for everything--I bought them from Aircraft Spruce. I put a lot of effort and care into everything.
If this opportunity of 1968 notchback Mustang did not arise, I wouldn't be here at all. I would be ordering a MIG welder to finish up the small body repairs. I came here just to see if I could find someone who would like to get a nice relatively rust free, clean and well equipped (from a suspension standpoit) '74 Midget.
I only went into details about my saga because that's what message boards are for. The issues I'm confronting are common ones. Maybe someone else who's thinking about starting a Spridget project might get some useful information from my experience. I'm sorry if my posts bugged you.
Tell you what I'm going to do. I'll make life easier for everyone. My car is not for sale. I'm going to part it out on Ebay.
Have a nice day.