Car owner feedback for Rush
easy to build with a lot of fun, it had a pinto engine and tuned it with several thing so, it drives great!!byebye golf gti...when it was finished, we had a holiday in england and the reactions where great!!a duthman build a british car and having a holiday in england, whoww!!!1200 miles and totally no problems ,but times come by and kids are coming so...yep, we had to sell it.....but maybe in the future..another one..or a cobra?????bye Michael
Owner michael zoet has added that it took 250 hours over 8 months to build at a cost of £12,500.
V8YOB is built from all new parts so hence the high build cost. Its simply a wonderful car to drive especially on the track. The factory are really easy to deal with and very friendly but sometimes let themselves down by giving out the wrong parts. All in all if I had to do it all again it'd be another Rush. See www.v8yob.com for some nice rush pics.
Owner bob green has added that it took 300 hours over 12 months to build at a cost of £19,999.
good build manual, plenty of help from manufacturer if required. car handles beautifully and really looks the part
Owner dave cawood has added that it took 300 hours over 36 months to build at a cost of £8,000.
The Dax Rush is a kit requiring more builder 'input' than a Caterham or Westfield, but much less than a lower-budget kit. I would guess that 97% of the build is described or supplied by DJ Sportscars, with the remaining 3% needing builder innovation and creativity. This was exactly what I wanted and I thoroughly enjoyed the build (excepting the usual kitcar range of skinned knuckles, oil down the neck, temporary frustrations etc.). Every Dax Rush is different. If you want the chance to personalise your car and build a top-quality kit, this is the Se7en-alike for you. The finished article is well thought-out, tough and very, very fast (3.9 litre V8)! Would I build another? Probably, but I'd have to sell my current one first and I'm not sure I can bear that :-) See http://listen.to/V8Dax for the full story.
Owner Duncan Hurst has added that it took 400 hours over 8 months to build at a cost of £15,000.