And I thought I was the only one that liked this car??? /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
If you need a little more info:
The CBW 55B
Sometime during 1963, the Belgian stylist Jacques Coune met Sir Alec Issigonis to discuss the potentiality of collaborating with The British Motor Corporation to explore the possibility of using the design concept of the MGB Berlinette Coupe, for production at Abingdon.
Walter Oldfield who was then managing director of The Nuffield Press and a former confidant of Lord Nuffield, gave instructions for an MGB minus all the unnecessary trim to be delivered directly from the Abingdon production line to Brussels for Coune to build the coach work to his own design. This work was duly completed and the Berlinette delivered to Cowley for appraisal early in 1964.
Sir George Harriman, as chairman of BMC became personally involved and together with Issigonis, Sir Leonard Lord and MG's design engineer Sid Enever, drove the Berlinette for assessment over an extensive trial period throughout the summer of 1964.
The final decision was not to adopt the design in favour of the GT already conceived, and in fact introduced in 1965. Issigonis's recorded comments to Coune when advising him of his ruling was: "It looks too Italian!" A true statement as most of the craftsmen were from Turin, but possibly one of the most regrettable judgements the great man ever made.
Of the fifty six Berlinettes built only one was of particular significance. CBW 55B was the only right hand drive model to be produced. This acording to Coune was personally ordered by Alec Issigonis.
Without the backing of BMC, and their mass production advantages, Coune's manufacturing methods, although skillfully hand built, were not really a commercially viable proposition. The retail cost was ÂŁ1,300 against ÂŁ690 for the equivalent MGB. Ultimately therefore a total of only fifty six Berlinette's were produced, all of which were left hand drive models for the European Market. CBW 55B is one of only eight known to have survived.