Monday, March 29, 2010

A Bit of History

Hi Everyone,

This is my story about completely restoring my TVR, and mating it up with a 2.3L SVO motor. But before I get into all that, a little history...

About 5 years ago, the summer before my senior year of high school, I bought my first british sports car- a 1986 TVR 280i, and it was just about the coolest car I could have dreamed of at the time:

Classic 80's wedge design, tubular chassis, German-build ford motor, fiberglass body, in-board rear disk brakes. It weighs somewhere around 2,500 pounds, has a 5 speed, leather seats, a top that drops, and of course the motor is bolted to the rear wheels, which is a strict requirement I have for cars I own.

The car was awesome, and I had a blast driving it. I learned how to heel and toe, hit apexes, kick the rear end out for some fun(so long as it was wet enough)- you know, all the things that Mom and Dad dread thinking about.

Of course though, the car is British, and it decided to break down... a lot. The clutch slave cylinder decided to go, brake pads wore down, the electrical systems were constantly faulting (damn you Prince of Darkness!!), my warm-up regulator went bad, the radiator started to leak, the front springs went bad, the chassis got cracks and broke... it was a nightmare. Anyone who has owned a TVR knows that finding parts for them is no more fun or easy as conducting mouth surgery on yourself.

But, I managed to fix it time and time again, doing my best to at least keep it road worthy for the warmer months. (I don't even want to get into how poor the heater and defroster work.) Still, it wasn't easy keeping up with it all, and even though some things would break and get fixed, the car as a whole became more and more dilapidated.

But even worse than that, I got behind the wheels of much faster cars, like S2000s, Corvettes, SLK350s, 350Zs, (even my Mom's Mini Cooper S was killing me off the line) and I quickly learned that my precious 280i is nothing short of a dog off the line. (It didn't help either when I bought a motorcycle and REALLY felt how slow my car was.) It was time for a change, a drastic one.

Which is where I am today, and yes, I PROMISE that most posts won't be this long, and that they will be filled with many more pics.

Briefly about what the plan is:

I have a new motor, a 1986 Ford 2.3L. I'll do a separate post on that alone but in short, it's getting mated to the TVR.

The whole car is coming apart. The body is coming off, and I'm replacing everything that I can, and fixing everything that I can't. i.e. new brakes, new suspension components, new engine, limited slip diff, new radiator, new engine management system, stripping the chassis and re-coating it, and so on and so forth.

So, stay tuned, give me tips if you have them, and please, PLEASE don't ridicule me too much for putting what's going to wind up being a small fortune into a car that many argue is not worth the time or money.

I know it's a TVR, and that they break, and that they don't even handle that well, and that I could just as well go out and buy an S2000 or heck, an MR2 or Miata or something and have more fun while spending less money and wasting less time. This project isn't about that. It's about a car that I've come to like very much over the years. It's about me learning a lot more than I already know. It's about preserving something that I think is worth preserving. Don't worry, I plan on buying the other cars too.

So for now, that's all.

3 comments:

  1. This is great! I'm a much better reader than I am an observer when it comes to cars. Now I'll have some slim chance of being able to follow what you're doing in that driveway on Readington every weekend!

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  2. TOO LONG. DID NOT READ.

    (I actually did read it though, good job)

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  3. Andrew is a jerk and then not one. Alanna, I appreciate the interest.

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