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Showing posts from 2010

Vintage Thing No.78 - Pinto powered Imp

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At a holding control on the 1999 Land's End Trial. Note Siva Llama in the background This car resembles VT No.49 in many ways but has a Ford Pinto engine. Listed as a 2-litre in the entry for the 1999 Land's End Trial, it was built by built by Martin Harry to be driven by his wife Julia and boy did she give it some stick! It proved to be very effective and impressed me when taking my Siva Llama out for the first time. I don't know it's constructional details as we were running late and pushed for time when we eventually caught up with it. I have a feeling a Beetle gearbox was used and someone told me it also used Beetle rear suspension. Not seen on the hills for a while, I believe it stills exists way down Camborne way and will one day take to the hills again.

LVVS 2010 open day

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What have you got in your shed? Other people's work-in-progress is always fascinating Ever since dropping in on this pioneering society's museum last year, I've wanted to visit their open day when they open up the big doors and drive their buses all around the city of Lincoln. Not only that but a load of their mates bring their buses and coaches over as well. In the end I got a good deal on rail travel (two singles were cheaper than a return and way cheaper than driving up) and went up for a couple of nights to get my fix and see the Imp in the cathedral. As a supporter of lost causes, I was very pleased to see that someone else cares about the Austin Gypsy. The Lincoln Vintage Vehicle Society have been setting the standards of commercial vehicle restoration for decades. Looking around their workshops was particularly interesting for me. There was an early Austin Gypsy with rubber suspension - later ones had cart springs and fell victim to BL's post-merger rati...

A visit to Sammy Miller's Museum

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On my way back from the Goodwood Revival I thought I'd drop in on Sammy Miller's museum at New Milton. I'd been to the old one (at Old Milton?) years ago and thought I'd be there half a day. In the end I was there all day and could've stayed longer. There's so much to see. This Moto Guzzi is just one of the treats in store at Sammy Miller's Museum It was as I was examining this lovely Guzzi - even before entering the museum proper - that a chap in a blue coat asked me to lend him a hand in the workshop. Of course, I knew it was Sammy. Even if I hadn't, he'd been racing bikes at Goodwood a couple of days earlier in leathers with his name across the shoulders. I think he was working on the recently re-discovered works Ariel and just wanted me to rest it on some axle stands while he lifted it, so I naturally obliged. I could also see he was busy so didn't try to distract him with idle banter. That's the way I am when I wanna get on but as ...

2010 Goodwood Revival

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At  a very early age I was dropped on my head in a Ford Anglia like this so it's a mystery why I don't have one of my own. My parent's car was 119FBP. If this car had been re-registered I wouldn't have recognised its it significance. It's taken me a while to get my thoughts in order about the 2010 Goodwood Revival. I enjoyed it very much and adapted to my self-appointed role of 1950s cad with relish but there was something about the event that left me with a sour taste in my mouth. I reckon it was the split paddock with its exclusion zone penetrable for people on various corporate entertainment deals and members of the Goodwood Road Racing Club. Not being part of either, I found myself barred from some parts of the paddock. Hooray Henries and Henriettas could freely waft stylishly in and out and not take the slightest interest in the rolling sculpture around them. They fact that they were there was all that mattered. Merchant bankers could catch up with conta...

Vintage Thing No.77 - 1947 EMC 350

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Similarities in layout to the Trojan split single are clear but the conrods of the EMC 350 aren't designed to bend. I've written about Trojan engines on this blog before, wondering if they could have had any sporting potential. I've a soft spot for two strokes and supercharging them sounds very exotic - almost impossible - and something to crow about if you can do it right. Dr Josef Ehrlich came from Austria and settled in post-war Britain to develop his take on the DKW blown two strokes that had made such an impression before the war. Unlike the Trojan, which used a flexible single vee-shaped conrod for the two pistons, Dr Joe used a stiffer one with an articulated link that allowed the pistons to travel happily in their separate cylinders without the need for said spindly vee-shaped conrods to flex. Based in Isleworth in the London borough of Hounslow, EMC never entered quantity production but were available from 1947 to 1952. After that Dr Ehrlich concentrated on...

Vintage Thing No.76 - 1937 Levis 600 twin port

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Restored with only a brochure as reference material this Levis 600 has a pushrod tube that masquerades as a camshaft drive At the 2010 Great Dorset Steam Fair, I heard a great story about this very rare bike. The owner and restorer was looking round the autojumble at the 2009 show for Norton parts and saw a curious oil tank that might have been a Norton one. He asked the vendor about it and he said that it that it belonged to Levis 600 and that he had the whole bike under the bench - not the bench at home but the bench at the show. Levis are often confused with jeans manufacturers and the parent company latterly traded as Leviss to avoid this although this was long after motorcycle manufacture had ceased. Founded by the Butterfield Brothers in Old Station Road, Stechford, Birmingham, in 1911,  Levis were TT winners in 1922 with a 250 two stroke and went on to build a range of ohv four strokes in 30s until World War 2 ended production. They were always pretty rare machines and...

Vintage Thing No.75 - Mr Jo-jo

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If Mr Jo-jo does not still exist, something very similar ought to be created. Photo provided by Phil Peters. Back in June 2008 I waxed lyrical about Mrs Jo-jo , probably the most highly developed of all Brooklands Austin 7s. Last week, Phil Peters got in touch about Mr Jo-jo. He'd been given a photograph of it by an elderly friend and neighbour and liked it so much he's put it on his blog . In his search for info on Mr Jo-jo he found my comments on the distaff side of the equipe but all I know about Mr Jo-jo is what I've been able to glean from The Austin 7 Source Book by Brain Purves, in which a copy of this very photo appears. Mr Jo-jo was an Austin 7 Gordon England Cup model, Gordon England being an aviation pioneer and Austin 7 racer who subsequently offered his own sporting bodies on the baby Austin chassis. The Cup model was a very neat Austin 7 two seater introduced in 1925 and named either after the Goerges Boillot Cup at Boulogne or the Rudge Whitworth Bi...

Vintage Thing No.74 - the Pogwit Special

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A fine example of the Fiat 126's contribution to motorsport These photos spilled out of an avalanche the other day and the memory of a day during the summer of 1985 came flooding back. While I was a student of Industrial Design Transport at Coventry Lanchester Polytechnic, the UK's motor city held various motorsport events, including autotesting. I was on my industrial placement working for John Mockett the motorcycle designer and during one weekend the sounds of engines having their nuts revved off floated across the city. "I must go to it," I said to my mate Geoff and he, too, responded like some brave Ulysses as if captivated by the sound of the sirens softly singing. We followed the sound to the city centre and found an autotest going on under one of the peirs for the Coventry inner ring road, a ring road notorious for being cited by its designer as an example of how not to design a ring road. In case you didn't know, autotesting involves ragging you...

Vintage Thing No.73 - Nova

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If you ever doubted that the seventies were not sensational, then you probably weren't there. The first time I ever saw a Nova made a hell of an impression on me - one came into the harbourside car park in Falmouth when I was a student down there and raised its canopy to allow the driver to take his ticket from the barrier machine. No other vehicle had a "door" like this and, even after Lamborghini has popularised the scissor doors among the Max Power brigade, I think the Nova remains unique. Rolling sculpture - I think there's provision for a handle to lift the roof from the outside but electric operation looks really flash. Obviously this owner's confident her system works Of course, I knew it was a Nova - that's the original Nova, not the Vauxhall or Opel variety. they came later and I don't recall the same fuss over the name that Ford and Dutton created when both manufacturers wanted to call their cars Sierra. I'd already poured over num...

The Fire Drake Files No.4 - McLaren tandem cylinder compound

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Colossus is back together again at last. I just love all that ironmogery on top of the boiler. For the last 18 months, whenever I’ve passed through South Petherwin on my way to Launceston, I’ve noticed a traction engine in a yard and workshop. One day I went slowly enough to see a nameplate on its smokebox door – Colossus . Like any steam engine, it had a certain presence, especially confined within four walls and looking over a gate. At the Great Dorset Steam Fair, I was delighted to come face to smokebox with Colossus and to find out what a remarkable engine it is. Its most striking feature is the tandem cylinders on top of the boiler behind the chimney. Most traction engines have them side by side, which makes for a more compact arrangement. I’d only ever seen tandem cylinders before on a conversion of an old single cylinder Fowler ploughing engine. The idea of souping up some great lumbering leviathan by strapping on another pot and making it more efficient, powerful and ...