skeet2low8
Freshman Member
Offline
I have a 1959 TR3A which I purchased for $2,200., to go to college, in 1964 with 6000+ miles on it. I drove it for 3 years and it now had 26,000 miles on the odometer. But, it was now 1967 and all my friends had muscle cars. So, I parked the TR3 in my folks garage, bought a 67 Camaro Super Sport and a succession of SS396's, Boss 302's and numerous Corvettes and there the Triumph sat for 25 years. My dad retired, sold his house and so I moved it to my garage where it sat for another 10 years. One day I saw a TR3 drive by and my wife said "Look at that cool car". I said I have one of those and she asked where? I said in the garage! She said that pile of junk is one of those? So, I became motivated to restore the car. I took the whole car apart, cleaned, sandblasted and repainted most of the little bits and pieces. Had the frame dipped, under coated and started to put all the suspension back on and ended up with a rolling chassis. Then I started looking at the hundreds of other parts and I soon realized I was never going to get this thing back together again, there was just a giant pile of parts. I had an old school friend who owned a Ferrari repair shop, I knew he only worked on Ferrari's but asked him if he knew somebody who could put it back together for me. To make a long story short, he said he would do it. He did restore classic Ferrari's and had great body people. The original estimate of Approx. $8,000. went out the window quickly when one of the sills had to be remanufactured, then a new floor, then a new battery box, the bottoms of all four fenders, new upholstery, carpets, new chrome wire wheels, soft top, windshield re-chroming, etc, etc, etc. Anyway $21,000. later, I got the car back, it looked better than when I bought it! His suggestion that I never take it out on the road because it was a "Death Trap" (single braking system, leather seals in the hydraulics, etc.) was ignored and I drove it a total of 17 miles. It has sat in my garage ever since, 9+ years. Well, I have decided to sell my last Corvette and get the Triumph back in action. I am now old enough that an old care may suit me better.
Now for a couple of questions; aside from the 9 YO gas in the tank, if memory served me, there were a couple of small issues I remember with the car. First the fuel pump seemed to fail, in that the carb's would frequently run out of gas. So, I removed it to rebuild it (never did). First question, should I rebuild the original, buy an aftermarket one from Moss/somebody or go with an electric one which one person suggested.
Second, I did notice when I got the car back, that, from the back, the drivers side is slightly lower than the passengers side. Looking at the clearance from the fender to the tires in the rear, there seems to be about 5/8-3/4" difference from the left side to the right side, with nobody sitting in it. Is this a tired spring, a shock issue or something else? From reading your forum, it seems adding a spacer will lower and not raise the level of the sagging side of the car?? And, there seemed to be mixed feelings about the replacement springs available on the market today. Any realistic suggestions would sure be appreciated.
Third and last question, I always had to start the car with ether as the choke did not seem to allow it to start. If it ran for 10 min., it would re-start very easily. but, if it sat overnight, the choke would not start it. What kind of adjustment might I be looking at here?
Whatever suggestions anyone might have would be greatly appreciated. There is a British car place in southern New Hampshire, Rye I think, which might be my best bet to square everything away, but I will soon have the most expensive TR3A in existence if I keep having other people do all the work.
Best regards to you all, Charlie G.
PS: please feel free to reply to >skeet2low8@verizon.net<
Now for a couple of questions; aside from the 9 YO gas in the tank, if memory served me, there were a couple of small issues I remember with the car. First the fuel pump seemed to fail, in that the carb's would frequently run out of gas. So, I removed it to rebuild it (never did). First question, should I rebuild the original, buy an aftermarket one from Moss/somebody or go with an electric one which one person suggested.
Second, I did notice when I got the car back, that, from the back, the drivers side is slightly lower than the passengers side. Looking at the clearance from the fender to the tires in the rear, there seems to be about 5/8-3/4" difference from the left side to the right side, with nobody sitting in it. Is this a tired spring, a shock issue or something else? From reading your forum, it seems adding a spacer will lower and not raise the level of the sagging side of the car?? And, there seemed to be mixed feelings about the replacement springs available on the market today. Any realistic suggestions would sure be appreciated.
Third and last question, I always had to start the car with ether as the choke did not seem to allow it to start. If it ran for 10 min., it would re-start very easily. but, if it sat overnight, the choke would not start it. What kind of adjustment might I be looking at here?
Whatever suggestions anyone might have would be greatly appreciated. There is a British car place in southern New Hampshire, Rye I think, which might be my best bet to square everything away, but I will soon have the most expensive TR3A in existence if I keep having other people do all the work.
Best regards to you all, Charlie G.
PS: please feel free to reply to >skeet2low8@verizon.net<