I'm not a prolific poster (see ID at left), but we might carry this thread a little further. I have re-read all the posts as well as Forums Intro & Guidelines by Basil. There seem to be a couple of strong contingencies of owners -- We all know of the Trailer Queens, generally restored by professionals at great cost to owners. Another high cost direction is the HP group, a me-too contingent focused on image of the Cad-Allard as well as work by Jim Hall & Carol Shelby. I admire Rick Neville's 2 year effort to get a Ford 5.0 into an AH 3000 (absolutely fantastic). Then we have the DIY "daily driver" contingent, a group in which most British Car Owners fall --
I march to a different drummer. Fascinated by evolution of the Marque(s), I gravitate to the prototypes which drove this evolution. Most were destroyed. A few made it into museums. I posted earlier that overall design concept of my AH was inspired by the early Continental Coupe, prototyped by Cecil Kimber at MG in 1930. The Bustle back & roof are an attempt to replicate those on the first AH LeMans prototype, which was superseded by the fastbacks which finished 123 after wind tunnel tests. (Bustle back held a 50gal gas tank, one key to the AH win). One post suggested a fastback but I considered it too difficult as I felt it would need an XKE style front end. I love the Arnolt Coupe which was a speculative prototype by Bertone when on the verge of bankruptcy & since my rear tended toward classic, I replicated the Arnolt bonnet to stay classic. Interesting that the Arnolt was in the early 50's when MG, Triumph, Singer, & others tried to follow the success of the XK120. Both MG & Triumph came back later to the more boxy body -- admitting that Bertone had it right. I think I am a member of a much smaller contingent, one which includes bugeye front ends on later Spridgets as well as the fiberglass 356 Porsche, Cobra, and other "authentic" replicas(not fiberglass "sportscar" conversions of the 50's era, but believe it or not, there even is a group of enthusiasts who focus on these) -- I feel there is room for attempts to re-capture the ambiance of some historical authenticity -- A few responses suggest some others might be closet members of this group with similar feelings.
BTW, one objective at this BCF is "fostering the British car hobby..." -- While I currently only have the Sprite, we have had a long series of others, up through an XK150FHC -- Our son still drives & shows the MGA he bought as a basket case for $100 at age 13. Now his son is driving & showing his Brooklands Green (cloth interior) MGBGT -- that's 3 generations of fostering the hobby -- can any of you guys beat that??