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I think I'm going to be sick.........??

Wow, the owner of the car didn't post anything on this site, but yet the car gets bashed. Looks like a nice car with some flames even I don't like, also looks like a car you could have a blast with, drive it anywhere and not worry about the Chev engine. Far better to drive and enjoy a car then to "dare I say it" cross the line and make it a trailer Queen. LOL
 
I'd love to have it! I have often thought about having a TR3 Rat Rod. My thoughts were to just buy a beater TR3 and just drive it as is. But this one could be a lot of fun if the engine is good. However, I would not pay $10k, but if it were for sale for $4k or $5K I'd certainly buy it and paint it with dark gray epoxy primer.
Regards,
Bob
 
Aye, honestly if the price point was about half of what they're starting it at, even I would be interested.

I've already been attacked for what I'm doing with my TR6, but, the way I feel about it is, unless you're paying for my restoration, you don't have any say in what I do with my vehicle. I'll never attack someone else for rat-rodding, or hot-rodding a car.

As far as I'm concerned someone keeping a hot-rod on the road is vastly superior than a rust-bucket in someone's back yard. That 4x4 TR3 is a good example. Many people would have scrapped it for a few hundred bucks in metal price. Far better to see it on the road and generating interest in cars from younger people than to be destroyed.
 
Looks like $10,000 was too much for the V8 TR3. Zero bidders and bidding has ended today. We'll probably see it on eBay again soon. I wonder if he will set the reserve at 10,000 again.
Regards,
Bob
 
This car has been on ebay multiple times. It had the same results each time. No bids, 10,000 opening bid, reserve not met.
 
Here's a TR3 Tow Truck, some of you should recognize Tom Householder's TR3 Tow Truck. I've not heard from Tom in many years, he had a very basket case Francorchamps TR2.
 

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May not be my taste, but only from a cosmetic view. Look at the quality of the workmanship. I love seeing this kind of mechanical and engineering creativity. What we can't see from the pictures really says more than what we can see. For instance the lack of rear beading. Did that come from just bolting the rear fenders on and body filling, or are they seam welded and properly finished. Did he modify the suspension and brakes?
This car could be a blast to drive and do well in a street surviors car show, while not so well at a concours event.
At the end of the day, are you having fun?
RL
 
Are there any known examples of "Targa", or "T" topped GT6's out there?
 
jsfbond said:
Are there any known examples of "Targa", or "T" topped GT6's out there?

A good friend of mine has a GT6 that he made into a Targa topped version. It's been in storage for quite a while and will ahve to see if I can get some photos but it might be a while before I could post them. He debuted his Targa topped GT6 at the VTR in Boulder, CO in 1991. I've known him for about 17 years and have not seen it on the road but it does exist.
 
I've also seen photos of a normal spitfire with a factory hard top that was modified into a targa style top. In fact that same top inspired me to work on a factory TR6 steel hard top conversion to targa top style, however since my TR6 will no longer be able to use the top, instead I'm selling an unmolested TR6 top instead of finishing my planned conversion.
 
It's not for me, however the concept is not that outrageous. Take a Sunbeam Alpine and drop in a Ford small block and you have a Sunbeam Tiger. A car that is becoming very desirable. The execution on the TR is not all that great and the paint is downright nasty! JD
 
jdvintage said:
It's not for me, however the concept is not that outrageous. Take a Sunbeam Alpine and drop in a Ford small block and you have a Sunbeam Tiger. A car that is becoming very desirable. The execution on the TR is not all that great and the paint is downright nasty! JD

Or there's also the AC Ace, when Bristol stopped supplying them with Bristol engines, some guy by the name of Carroll from the US got in touch with them with the crazy idea he had cooked up of putting Ford's new thin wall V8's into their cars...
 
Number_6 said:
Or there's also the AC Ace, when Bristol stopped supplying them with Bristol engines, some guy by the name of Carroll from the US got in touch with them with the crazy idea he had cooked up of putting Ford's new thin wall V8's into their cars...

The Ace
ACAce.jpg

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jdvintage said:
It's not for me, however the concept is not that outrageous. Take a Sunbeam Alpine and drop in a Ford small block and you have a Sunbeam Tiger.

Actually you just have a Sunbeam Alpine with a V8, and their respective values are quite different. There is more to the difference between a Tiger and an Alpine than just the engine. Same with Triumph TR7's and Triumph TR8's. A TR7 with a V8 installed is not a TR8.
 
Number_6 said:
jdvintage said:
It's not for me, however the concept is not that outrageous. Take a Sunbeam Alpine and drop in a Ford small block and you have a Sunbeam Tiger. A car that is becoming very desirable. The execution on the TR is not all that great and the paint is downright nasty! JD

Or there's also the AC Ace, when Bristol stopped supplying them with Bristol engines, some guy by the name of Carroll from the US got in touch with them with the crazy idea he had cooked up of putting Ford's new thin wall V8's into their cars...


Carroll wasn't as interested in the body of the Ace as he was in the Tojiero chassis underneath the body. They also made something like 26 cars that used the Ford Zephyr engine before Mr. Shelby showed up with the 260 V8.
 
I am speaking of the CONCEPT of taking an under powered English sports car and retro fitting an American V8. I am well aware that the mass produced version was further developed to accommodate the V8 motor. The first two original prototypes had their V8's retro fitted for feasibility testing in less than two weeks. To me that sounds like dropping a V8 into a car that formally had a smaller engine.
 
swift6 said:
Number_6 said:
jdvintage said:
It's not for me, however the concept is not that outrageous. Take a Sunbeam Alpine and drop in a Ford small block and you have a Sunbeam Tiger. A car that is becoming very desirable. The execution on the TR is not all that great and the paint is downright nasty! JD

Or there's also the AC Ace, when Bristol stopped supplying them with Bristol engines, some guy by the name of Carroll from the US got in touch with them with the crazy idea he had cooked up of putting Ford's new thin wall V8's into their cars...


Carroll wasn't as interested in the body of the Ace as he was in the Tojiero chassis underneath the body. They also made something like 26 cars that used the Ford Zephyr engine before Mr. Shelby showed up with the 260 V8.

Well, the body was Tojeiro as well!
 
Roger said:
swift6 said:
Carroll wasn't as interested in the body of the Ace as he was in the Tojiero chassis underneath the body. They also made something like 26 cars that used the Ford Zephyr engine before Mr. Shelby showed up with the 260 V8.

Well, the body was Tojeiro as well!

From what he (Carroll) told me during an event at the Shelby American Collection, he didn't care about the body design so much as the chassis design.
 
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