jdubois
Jedi Warrior
Offline
My new Spit is pretty darn original, but the more I poke into it the more I see places that could be put back. If some of you have been following my starter thread, you know I've been agonizing over whether the newly dead starter was the original one or not. But the two most obvious places to put back to original are the tires and battery. I discovered I can get reproductions of the factory Dunlop C41 bias ply tires and a Lucas tar top battery, but those two things alone would set me back $1000.
Another situation, the original carpets in the car are in tatters and really need to be replaced before they completely fall apart. But it looks like all the replacement sets use carpet with small rubber pads in the footwells, while this original set has all rubber mats in the footwells. I'm guessing the only way to get those would be to have them fabricated, and I'm sure that'd be a pretty penny.
Oh, and I have other puzzles too. Like the owners manual that I received with the car is the manual from a MkI, and the car is a MkII. Now, is that possibly what came with the car due to, say, the dealer not having the correct documentation, or possibly just a manual that got married to the car at a later date? And if it is the original manual that came with the car, should I keep it with the car or find a MkII manual?
So, I guess I just wanted people's opinions as to whether it's worth it to try and get a Spitfire as original as possible, or if it would be a futile waste of time with no real return.
Another situation, the original carpets in the car are in tatters and really need to be replaced before they completely fall apart. But it looks like all the replacement sets use carpet with small rubber pads in the footwells, while this original set has all rubber mats in the footwells. I'm guessing the only way to get those would be to have them fabricated, and I'm sure that'd be a pretty penny.
Oh, and I have other puzzles too. Like the owners manual that I received with the car is the manual from a MkI, and the car is a MkII. Now, is that possibly what came with the car due to, say, the dealer not having the correct documentation, or possibly just a manual that got married to the car at a later date? And if it is the original manual that came with the car, should I keep it with the car or find a MkII manual?
So, I guess I just wanted people's opinions as to whether it's worth it to try and get a Spitfire as original as possible, or if it would be a futile waste of time with no real return.
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 
