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tribute tvr bodyshells
so what donor car would fit under here? spitfire is an inch out so that seems the closest one .
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/I5MAA...Ccs/s-l500.jpg https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/TVR-Grant...kAAOSwvQ9c-Cbu https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/4iYAA...Cra/s-l500.jpg |
OMG, my first TVR was a Mk2 in white with wire wheels just like that one. Happy days (except for the VW torsion bar suspension). Had a TR2 engine with 2" ground clearance.
A shame that the shell won't drop onto an early Audi TT. TVR WB 84" Track 52" Audi WB 95.4" Track 60" |
And here it is...
http://i68.tinypic.com/adou1c.jpg http://i67.tinypic.com/99l18y.jpg Still exists but SORNed: Vehicle make: TVR Date of first registration: June 1979 Year of manufacture: 1960 Cylinder capacity (cc): 1991 cc CO₂Emissions: Not available Fuel type: PETROL Euro Status: Not available Export marker: No Vehicle status: Tax not due Vehicle colour: WHITE Vehicle type approval: Not available Wheelplan: 2-AXLE-RIGID BODY Revenue weight: Not available I definitely had it on the road in 1976. I sold it in about 1983 to someone near Ampthill, Beds. |
Lovely looking cars for sure
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There were a few about here,say within a 30 mile radius Of the 3 that I was familiar with one was owner by an autoshop proprietor in Kilmarnock, who had a friend with a 289 Factory V8, the third that I drove probably half a dozen time was one that a Sunbeam Tiger engine and box(again a 289) was stuffed into
Not a pleasent experience...But at you at least know the colour of Adrenaline. If you were going to use the shell I think it would be more than viable to use a MX5 ,as Tribute does on their MX250 OK who in now checking the wheelbases?? |
TVR = 84 inches
MX-5 89 inches (+ or -) |
5 extra inches in the doors wouldn't go amiss then
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I'd stretch it from the cowl forward
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I based the stretch from personal experience , although I'm 8 stone lighter, the knees are older...........lol
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Dimensions Checker
Easy to find exact (or close) dimension matches here.
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I did a quick check and it only took a few moments to confirm that the wheelbases of the 356 Speedster and Triumph Spitfire/GT6 are the same, but it also showed me that I could have used a 1990's Willys-Overland Interlagos*, which for some obscure reason I hadn't even considered! *I've just googled the Interlagos, btw, and it throws up loads of images of Brazilian built Alpine A108/110 replicas, which look pretty cool - https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C...VUsV3t-mYP2_M: |
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Hope that 610bhp engine is light though, the originals are well balanced; not tail-happy. |
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Darrian has produced top quality and successful motorsport cars in all forms for 30 plus years A pal ,who I haven't seen for years, has had about seven Darrians over the years |
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It got one eventually - Reliant took the design back in house and did what they did best (GRP monobody instead of Italian designed plastic panels) - and we got the mk2 Sabre (too little, too late)
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William Townes did a re-design car, it was featured in some Kitcar mags.I think Townes was getting the rolling chassis from Reliant.He already had the body moulds,and he had approached someone I knew to pull the lot together with a different engine.
Not unthinkable as he was producing the Railton |
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Towns did a lot of work on the SS1. Firstly the SS2 that was hoped to sell in America with a V6 engine
http://www.madabout-kitcars.com/foru...1&d=1562483264 As well as the similar looking Target which he offered as a kit with little to no success http://www.madabout-kitcars.com/foru...1&d=1562483320 Then he designed what became the production version, the SST (T for Towns). http://www.madabout-kitcars.com/foru...1&d=1562483320 And eventually morphed into the quite pretty Sabre - I’m pretty sure that if Reliant had introduced something like this instead of the long outdated Michelotti design, they would have sold many, many more! http://www.madabout-kitcars.com/foru...1&d=1562483320 |
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As an aside, Reliant also used the SS1 chassis for the MGF prototype - the V8 RWD PR2. The PR1 was M16 FWD by Motor Panels of Nuneaton, the PR3 was the K series FWD by ADC of Luton (that Austin Rover eventually proceeded with), the PR4 was a steel PR2 (never built) and the PR5 was a design excercise on a TVR chassis.
Reliant were the only ones to deliver a fully working prototype in the 27 weeks given by Austin Rover. http://www.madabout-kitcars.com/foru...1&d=1562483834 |
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