british-cars
[Top] [All Lists]

Forwarded: TR4a parts for sale

To: british-cars@autox.team.net
Subject: Forwarded: TR4a parts for sale
From: montnaro@ausable.crd.ge.com (Skip Montanaro)
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 93 15:41:46 EDT
>From rec.autos.antique. Please respond to the phone # in the ad.

   Newsgroups: rec.autos.antique
   From: rmarks@ecdcsvr.tredydev.unisys.com (Richard Marks)
   Date: Mon, 13 Sep 1993 14:13:03 GMT
   Distribution: usa
   Organization: Unisys Corp. Tredyffrin PA


   I have lots of very good condition Triumph TR4/4a parts for sale cheap.
   I sold the car, and would like to sell the parts.

   I have 3 transmissions (2 good) (not OD).  1 head. several rear half 
   shaft assemblies.  A 2 cubic foot box full of SU pieces. A box of
   front and rear hubs, bearings, and seals. A box of electrical parts
   including a distributer, rear lights, misc plugs, connectors, etc.
   3 starters (unknown condition). A box of pistons and rods (mixture of
   86 and 87mm). Another box of misc engine parts. A seat, a steering
   shaft and wheel.

   I have too much to price each part, but please call, all is cheap.
   I live in Bryn Mawr, PA.

   Richard Marks
   (215) 525-8993 home till 12 midnight

Skip (montanaro@crd.ge.com)


From  rwg1@cornell.edu Tue Sep 11 11:46:42 2001
From: (Roger Garnett) rwg1@cornell.edu
To: (British Cars) british-cars@autox.team.net,
Date:          Mon, 13 Sep 1993 16:57:17 
Subject:       Racing at The Glen, & Empty Wallets

Last weekend, I drove at Watkins Glen, at a BMW club school in my '86 
Civic Si. The weather was great, and I got smoother, faster, and actually 
started passing cars. I had fun running right with an MR2, and I bested 
last year's times by 15 seconds. A good weekend.

This weekend was the annual vintage races at Watkins, and I went as crew 
on Steve Morrison's Ginetta G15. The weather started out cold and wet, 
but got better. The crowd was light, the racing was good, and we spent 
less time working on the car than last year. But the car did brake, we 
fixed it, and finished in one piece. My budget, on the other hand, did 
not.

The race

The Ginetta was getting a bit tired this year, and is ready for a full 
rebuild. Steve took 1st overall 2 years ago in group 1 (under 1300cc), 
quite a feat with it's rear end 998cc Hillman Imp engine against the 1275 
Mini Coopers, 1296 Spitfires, etc. Last year, it was a second, despite 
rear wheel bearing problems all weekend, caused by a warped trailing 
arm/hub. This year, the tyres were too old, the engine getting tired, and 
the competition hot. We had a minor problem Saturday morning when a front 
wheel bearing destructed, but all was well by afternoon qualifying. 

After setting a fast lap 4 seconds behind the leaders, which put us back 
in 10th starting position, the Ginetta failed to come around for the 
checkered flag. Waiting back in the paddock, I got reports of the car off 
at the wall in the boot. Oh-oh. After more waiting for the car to come in 
on the hook, I was just about ready to go and buy some red racers tape to 
patch the fiberglass body back together. The truck finally showed up, and 
there was no body damage! But, it seemes that the transaxle had taken 
leave, and the car wouldn't even roll. After a short discussion, I was off 
to Ithaca to pick up a spare tranny, while Steve started pulling the 
driveline. By the time I got back, all was out, and there was diagnosis- 
The crown wheel in the differential had broken, making a lovely mess. We 
started putting it together again, and were done by 9:00.

Group 1 races tend to be amoung the best, and Sunday afternoon was to be 
no exception. They came through turn one 4 wide! The second place car, 
the very fast Kent Bain Spitfire (larger than 1300cc!?) got off on the 
outside, and came right back on in the middle of the pack, directly in 
front of Steve! I don't know how, but they all made it by, and came 
around for a second lap almost as exciting as the first, led by Bob 
Tarswell's ex Trans-Am super-fast mini. By halfway, Steve had gained 3 
positions, and was gaining on 2 more, dispite lack of limited slip in the 
replacement transaxle. But, that was to be all, as the exhaust broke off 
in the middle on that lap, resulting in mucho loss in power. He still 
finished 7th, with the pipe dragging along behing. Kent passed Bob's 
mini, and brought home his Triumph in first.

My budget

I just went to crew. Really. I've been driving the Honda to get the hang 
of things, with plans to find and build a car so I can go racing in a 
couple of years. My Peerless GT has such potential, but will take quite a 
while to rebuild. But, we all should know that there are times (usually) 
when you can buy a car complete with lots of Trick Racing Stuff already 
bolted on a lot cheaper than buying the parts seperatly, right? I really 
like the odder stuff, but have a need for something that's affordable to 
keep running. A race track is about the best place to hear about race 
cars for sale...

The owner had just moved up to a Lotus 7, and she made a deal to sell it, 
to one of the faster mini drivers who's son was interested in racing. He
thought this well built item with a good history would be just the 
thing.  In the meantime, owner #1 blew the previously reliable engine at 
Mid-Ohio. Oops. Forget the crank and block, but many important parts were 
salvaged. The deal continued, with the mini drivers' engine builder to 
make a new engine, at least as good as the last, if not better. But, then 
the son decided to quit college, and with that went the offer of a car 
from dad. Time to unload. Enter me. I know the mini driver, and have met 
the previous owner and seen the car run a couple of times in Canada, and 
at the Glen. Altho I'm very familiar with the technology, I hadn't 
planned on anything so close to a turnkey car, but the deal was just to 
right to pass up.

So, pending a trip to Toronto for final inspection, we will soon be the 
owners of a Real Race Car (TM, Scott Fisher), a 1959 Frogeye Sprite. For 
anyone who knows (Jim F?), it's the Light Blue, ex Nancy Turnbull #111. 
It's right-hand-drive, with well set up suspension, and a set of Dunlop 
tyres It'll have a fresh 948 engine, (built to 998, 13:1 compression, 
with a Formula Jr. 11 stud Head, scatter cam (to work with that A-Series 
siamesed port layout) and various other goodies. 

I still have to scrape together funds for the car now, and more by next 
year, for a few modifcations (like a higher roll bar, and maybe a new 
seat), a better trailer, a drivers suit, drivers school, race entry fees, 
and more.  So, my budget is shot, and then some. 

            Welcome to Wayward Sports Car Racing.

      ________________________________________________________
      Roger Garnett           (Roger_Garnett@cornell.edu)
        "The South Lansing Centre For Wayward Sports Cars"
      "All donations of stray, orphaned, odd, neglected, etc.
       sports cars and bits in need of a good home accepted."
        "The drop off bin is right there- behind the barn..."



<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • Forwarded: TR4a parts for sale, Skip Montanaro <=