Quantcast
Channel: Maximum Mini
Viewing all 1178 articles
Browse latest View live

Meet the Mini Robin

$
0
0
A nice little message from Adam Shelton came in recently. He writes: "Hello. My father recently purchased your latest Mini book and asked me to forward to you, some pictures of his mid engined Reliant Mini. It was built in 1994 with an 850 Mini engine and subframe." Thank you very much Adam. I have e-mailed you back several times, but the messages keep on being bounced. Do keep in touch though!

This Reliant Robin looks totally unsuspicious. But apart from being a pick-up, it's also a Mini derivative
Picture courtesy Adam Shelton 

Rear end says 'Mini Robin' and if you look really well you will spot Mini front suspension, too
Picture courtesy Adam Shelton 

Now, when you open that rear deck,, more will be revealed soon. Half of it is used as an engine bay
Picture courtesy Adam Shelton 

And it uses the power train from an 850 Mini. What a refreshing idea!
Picture courtesy Adam Shelton 


Le Mans Mini Marcos project: a new partner

$
0
0
After partnering up with Mini World Center in southern France for the mechanical side of the Le Mans Mini Marcos project (story here), I am now happy to announce another partner: Seventies Car Restoration in West Yorkshire, UK. This company, run by Peter and Paul, will be working on the car's body and return it into its full splendor, just like it was in June 1966. Apart from a passion for Le Mans, Peter has a Mk1 Mini Marcos himself, which he beautifully restored from scratch. I started a conversation about soda blasting with him and what followed was a lengthy discussion about all the pros and cons. Eventually we decided not to have it soda blasted, but have all the paint rubbed down by hand. By this time much of it has been removed and I receive a phone call from Peter regularly now, when he has found another piece of evidence of its racing provenance. Holes for the bonnet straps and the roof stiffener have come up, exactly like they should. Peter is exited every time. To speak in his own words: "This car is constantly talking to us!"

Some complications have turned up already, too. I knew the car's rear wheel arches were modified, but I hoped they had just been filled in. Unfortunately it now turns out that they have been altered quite a bit more. The original arches were in fact partly cut away, with new ones pop riveted over that and all of it filled in. They are probably beyond repair. And since the original arches aren't available, we need to find another solution. We think we found one, but it's not going to be too easy. More about that soon.

And so, work is in full swing. While Philippe Quiriere of Mini World Center, has started on the engine build, Peter and Paul have now exactly colour matched the original French Blue and Yellow that will be applied when the body is fully restored. There is a lot to do before that though, so expect plenty of updates. I am going over to Yorkshire soon to see the body in its bare gellcoat and discuss all the repairs that need to be carried out with Peter and Paul in detail. Stay tuned.

Paul (behind the car) and Peter with the Le Mans Mini Marcos just after I brought it over to their place in West-Yorkshire. They run Seventies Car Restoration as a team
Picture Jeroen Booij

By now, they have taken much of the paint off. If you look really good you can see that below the front arches there is more French Blue paint. Correct, as they were modified before the Le Mans 24 hours. At Le Mans Test Day in April '66 the arches were not yet so wide
Picture Peter Skitt / Seventies Car Restoration

Le Mans Test Day (3 April 1966) on the left and just before the start of the Le Mans 24 hours race (18 June 1966) on the right. Note the modifications carried out on the front wheel arches, together with some more changes
Pictures Jeroen Booij archive

Rear wheel arches are proving to be quite a bit more of a complication, though. They were heavily modified, partly cut away and with new ones pop riveted over them
Picture Peter Skitt / Seventies Car Restoration

This is what the original rear arches were like and that's how they will be once again!
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

How Hannu Mikkola came to drive a Heerey GTM

$
0
0
GTM-man Howard Heerey now lives in Australia, but shares some of his motoring snippets every now and then. And here's one I liked in particular. This is what he wrote: "Going in this lovely GTM to Helsinki in 1970 was an attempt to set up an agent in Finland. The guy I was trying do the deal with got Hannu Mikkola to come and have a drive. Hannu drove it, drank vodka and had lots of saunas, but failed to put a deal together. C'est la vie." Mikkola did well in that year, though, as he famously won the World Cup Rally...

Lovely Heerey GTM made it to Helsinki, Finland, in 1970. Colour is very 1970s too
Picture courtesy Howard Heerey

What happened to 'BRE 242J' afterwards? DVLA database doesn't recognize it. 
Note it's left hand driven
Picture courtesy Howard Heerey

Gunnar Palm and Hannu Mikkola (right) after having secured the World Cup Rally title, also in 1970
Picture Pinterest

Heerey GTM at Harewood

$
0
0
More Heerey GTM today! Richard Hawcroft wrote: "Hi Jeroen. It was the Harewood hillclimb last weekend and the engine in my Mini wasn’t quite finished, so I went in my GTM. It is an excellent car as it handles so well (dare I say better than a Mini…). Just lacking a little power as its only a 1071cc, with a bigger engine in it would have been a real flyer. I finished 5th, which was pretty good as all the cars in front of me had bigger engines, sticky tyres and limited slip diffs. I also drove mine there and home again, so that’s a moral victory! All the best, Rich."

Our man Richard in action with his GTM at Harewood last weekend. Better than a Mini..?
Picture courtesy Hardy Photography

Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (5)

$
0
0
I have told you that Peter and Paul of Seventies Car Restoration are now working on my car's body (click here) and give me a call regularly with their latest news. I was curious how the state of the doors was and was not disappointed. I also wondered if anything of the old number 50, painted in black onto the white racing roundels could still be traced, and Paul did his very best to search for that. Peter wrote to me: "Paul has traced it, lining it up with the door edge for recreation as it was. On the passenger door you can clearly see the remains of a 'five' and a 'zero'." Well… clearly may be a bit of an exagaration, but with some good will, you can indeed see that some of the lines of the '5' and the '0' are still there. Finding them back completely would be impossible as the roundel wore a different number several times after Le Mans, too. I have attached some historical photographs below in chronological order to show you the racing numbers it used in its early days.

Le Mans test on 3 april 1966. The Mini Marcos already wears its famous number 50
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Monza 1000 kms on 25 april 1966. It's Number 51 in this race. It came 26th overall
Picture Eric della Faille / Jeroen Booij archive

Le Mans 24 hours on 18 and 19 june 1966. Number 50 for it's most famous race
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / through Enguerrand Lecesne

Here in the 1000 kms of Paris at the Montlhery track on 16 October 1966 - number 17
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / through Enguerrand Lecesne

The 1000 kms of Paris a year later in 1967, now with number 34. Shortly before being sold
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

This is the same right hand door as seen above, with the '5' of '50' lined out, click for bigger
Picture Peter Skitt

And this is where the '0' of '50' is placed. Look good and note that some of it is still there…
Picture Peter Skitt

And the same door again, now with all the paint taken off. Apart from one crack it's in a fine shape
Note filled holes for side lights to illuminate the racing number during the night
Picture Peter Skitt

And a nice bonus image. The original bonnet strap on the left. The holes to have it fitted were revealed by rubbing off all the paint layers and are clearly visible on the car now (right)
Pictures Jeroen Booij archive / Peter Skitt


Earlier articles in this series:
Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (2) - Holes for lights and details
Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (3) - Petrol tank, roll bar, pedals

How Mike nearly became Unipower's works driver

$
0
0
With Le Mans about to start, I thought it was a good idea to offer you another 'Minis at Le Mans' story. Now, as I didn't want to bore you with yet another Mini Marcos tale (many more to follow, mind you), I wanted something else. And that's when I bumped into Mike Mitchell. Mike is a 73 year old Brit living in France, who very nearly became a works driver for Unipower. This is his story how he told it to me. Enjoy!

"I met Piers Weld Forester in 1968 when we were both doing a race at Malory Park. I was racing a Formula Vee for a company I worked for at the time, called European Cars. On the next patch to us was this guy wearing a huge sombrero accompanied by a girl with very large chest. He was racing a Unipower. Amazingly, it was his first race and he had all sorts of problems, many to do with breaking wheel studs as he was still running the standard black MOWOG items. We sent him off 'round the paddock to scrounge some and he came back with four which we fitted, one to each corner. My two mechanics helped him fit them and that was the start of a short but beautiful relationship. I was living in Kensington at the time, he was living in Chelsea and we bumped into each other frequently. He was a nephew of the Marquis of Ormonde and the family had a considerable fortune, to which he had access. But all he wanted to do was race."

"The family knew he was a bit of a lad and they thought running a company would keep him out of trouble. They fell for Universal Power Drives and it was bought. What they didn't know was that they were building this motor car, too. And as soon as Piers took over he started building three works racing cars. I was then offered a works seat to do Le Mans, Spa, the Nurburgring and the Targa Florio. The timing was perfect, as I wanted to get out of Formula Vee because the races were all so short. Now, in those days there were some famous names coming out of Formula Vee, Nikki Lauda and Helmut Marko for example but I badly wanted to go endurance racing so this was quite an opportunity."

"And so I got over to Park Royal, where the first of three cars was being built, had a look and made sure I could sit in it. If I remember correctly it was using a 1293 Broadspeed engine with the world's shortest exhaust pipe, which gave a shattering sound. It was always a bit of a problem to get in, with the gear lever in the right hand sill that got into your trouser leg. The car was an orangey yellow and the bodywork was very thin, with criss-cross carbon fibre matting everywhere. I was there long enough to have a good look around but unfortunately I cannot remember too much of it as my memories are all about the car itself. As far as I remember it was the only car there, though. The building had a corrugated iron roof and the sound of the car revving inside it was simply shattering. Piers drove a roadgoing white GT40 and at about that time he was run into from behind in the Cromwell road by a clown in a Mini who wanted to race him from the Gloucester Road traffic lights. Trouble was Piers stopped at the Beauchamp Place lights - and the chap in the Mini didn't, took out all the rear body section and the very expensive exhaust system! Good memories, still wish I had said yes to Piers!"

"However, my then-wife, who up to that point had quite enjoyed my low level motor racing, suddenly decided that this was all getting too serious and started kicking off big time to the extent that I had to choose between her and what I hoped would be a full time career racing rather than part time. Stupidly, I chose her! The next season the Unipower Team all went to Europe, but in the event they had a terrible season dogged by bad luck and hampered by the fact that the car was a bit heavy despite the very early use of carbon fibre reinforced bodywork. There were unreliability issues and I think one of the cars got written off by a mechanic before the Targa Florio started. I felt really sorry for them, also because I felt if I'd been there they might perhaps have done a bit better. Piers Forester really was a great chap, who sadly lost his life on a 750 Suzuki at Brands in, I think, 1977. I didn't hear that he died until a week or so afterwards."

"Unfortunately I don't have any pics, I was very busy at the time both working and racing so my contacts with Piers were occasional, either when we met in Peter Jones, at a circuit or when we were planning for or talking about the next season. As I related my then wife scotched my plans so I never drove for them, nor did I see them race as all four events were in Europe and would have required taking some holiday to go to. We kept in touch for a few years but drifted out of touch when I moved from Kensington to Redhill and started a family. By then he too had got married, to the very beautiful Georgina Youens, a model who was tragically killed shortly after in the Paris DC10 crash in 1974. Piers was a really great guy, unique, the sort you only meet once in a lifetime but a bit of an adrenalin junkie, I miss him to this day."

Is this the exhaust that Mike saw in the Unipower factory? He wrote: The exhaust, as I remember, came straight out in the centre, down from the manifold then back under the bodywork and a little turn up
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

The Unipower works racer at the factory in London in early 1969. Mike Mitchell was offered a works seat and saw and heard it there "with the world's shortest exhaust pipe, which gave a shattering sound"
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

A while later the works racer is seen at Le Mans test day on 30 march 1969. Piers Weld Forester is seen here standing beside the car in light overalls
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Next race: Targa Florio on 4 May 1969. I think that's works driver Andrew Hedges in bare chest
It's the same car as was used for Le Mans testing
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Targa Florio again. Unfortunately the car was crashed by a mechanic in practice and never started the actual race. The first of a series of disappointments for Forester and Co.
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

And then there was the Le Mans 24 hours race on 15 june 1969. Trouble again, as the Unipower GT did not qualify for the race. Full story here
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Seen here prior to the Le Mans 24 hrs. Note massive spot light for adequate lighting during the night stage. It must have been a different car than the one used on Le Mans test day and the Targa Florio, when it was crashed. Or did they rebuild it?
Picture Beroul / Jeroen Booij archive

Next stop: Italy. For the Gran Premio Mugello on 20 July 1969. Piers Forester now co-piloted the car with Swiss Dominique Martin. They came 46th overall. Note filled hole for the spot light
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

This shot is definitely taken at the Nurburgring and probably during the 500 kms race of 7 september 1969. But it looks to be a different car again. Who knows more?
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

A rare photograph of Piers Weld-Forester, taken in 1976, a year before he was tragically killed
Picture Gualtam Etheridge

Daily Mirror headlines on 31st of October 1977; the day after Piers Weld-Forester was tragically killed at the age of 31 in a crash at Brands Hatch. His wife Georgina Youens (middle bottom) died three years earlier at 22 in a terrible plane crash
Picture Jeroen Booij archive


A little tribute to David Ogle

$
0
0
The idea was to post this little snippet on 25 May, with the reason being that it was exactly 55 years since David Ogle passed away on that very day. But then I forgot. So, here it is, quite a lot later then it was meant. I have added a small piece from The Autocar magazine, too, plus a rather sensational newspaper clipping about Ogle's death, showing an actual photograph of the burning car in which he found death. It's the only photograph of the accident I have ever seen, and in fact the only one of that specific car, too. As you may know the SX1000 in question was in fact the prototype Ogle Lightweight GT, a road/racing version of the SX1000. Moving images of David Ogle driving his Mini based beauty here.

David Ogle in what has to be a prototype chassis for what became the Ogle SX1000
Picture via Autopuzzles

Obituary from The Autocar. The same issue contained a full driving test of the SX1000
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Sensational newspaper clipping on Ogle's death, showing the actual burning car in which he was trapped
Picture Jeroen Booij archive, via Paul Fleetwood

Jeremy's Jem at the Nurburgring

$
0
0
I was sent another picture of Jeremy Delmar-Morgan racing his Mk1 MiniJem at the Nürburgring 500km in September 1966. This must have been an exiting race with several more Mini based cars participating (more about it here). Delmar-Morgan finished second in class (up to one litre) that day, going home as the best of the Mini derivatives. I wonder if there is anyone who knows more about the car. What engine did he use, what colour was it and... does it survive?

Taking over a duo of ordinary saloons. And is that a blue flag for the Minis?
Picture Veit Arenz

In the famous Karussell bend, a picture that made it to MiniJem advertisements (here)
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Newly unearthed picture: Delmar-Morgan finishing 18th overall and 2nd in class on the race
Picture Jeroen Booij archive



Mini Surfer Moke found?

$
0
0
It seems that a rare George Barris built 'Mini Surfer' Moke survives in the US (click here to find out what they are about). Last week, the owner of what appears to be one of them contacted the Moke forum, witing: "Hello, I am new to this forum and I was hoping to get some more information on a vehicle. I have what appears to be a Mini Mike with candy stripe paint and surf board. I was told that it was made for the Beach Boys or their record company by Barris Kustom. There is a Barris sticker on the windshield. Can anyone give me more information on the Mini Surfer Mokes? Are there any other Mini's out there like mine? I will try to provide pictures once I clean it up."

He did post one very dark and sketchy picture, which does at least show the Barris Kustom window sticker and a tiny little bit of the car. Could it be one of supposed five built for the Beach Boys themselves, or one of 20 cars to be given away in a raffle? The stripes on it seem darker then expected, but who knows..? More to follow soon, hopefully! By the way... I happen to be going to a Brian Wilson gig on Monday, so if I do get to bump into the great man by any chance, I might just ask him more about them..!

A terrible photograph, but it does seem to show us what is a rare survivor of the Mini Surfers!
Picture courtesy Mokeclub.org

That's the sticker in question. It seems that George Barris had glass made to measure 
Picture courtesy Ebay.com

And another recently resurfaced picture of the Mini Surfer Moke. I guess this was one of the 20 giveaway cars that were raffled in a special Beach Boys radio competition
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Trading card showing the Mini Surfer, with some more information about them
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (6)

$
0
0
Another nice little clou of the Le Mans Mini Marcos' racing heritage has been unearthed by Seventies Car Restoration this week: the wing mirror mystery! While sanding down the left hand front wing the holes for a mirror came to the surface. However, it seemed that it had two different mirrors at some point. I took a dive into the archive to find out more about it, and you guessed it: it made sense. Have a look for yourself with some nice pictorial proof. 

Sanding down the left hand wing unearthed four filled-in holes. What were they for?
Picture Peter Skitt

Wing mirrors, obviously. But did it have two mirrors then? It did, carry on to below to find out
Picture Peter Skitt

Le Mans test day on April 3, 1966. The car does not wear a mirror on its left hand wing
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

And again, now clearer. This is taken on the same day: Le Mans test on April 3, 1966
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Three weeks later: Monza 1000 kms race on April 25, 1966. There is now a bullet mirror on the wing
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

June 18, 1966: on the weigh bridge before the start of the Le Mans 24 hours race. Mirror is still there
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

But then - in the pit street just prior to the race: the mirror is gone and the holes are taped off
Picture Philip Hazen / Jeroen Booij archive

And the whole 24 hours race is driven without the bullet mirror on the car's wing
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

4 months later: Paris 1000 kms race on October 16, 1966: no mirror, holes are filled and painted over
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

1967: the car has been repainted in 'Bleu Ciel' with an orange stripe and still there is no mirror
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

But… in 1975, prior to being stolen, it does wear a new wing mirror with particularly large pole. This one is placed differently, slightly higher up the wing and further to the front. It fits in perfectly
Picture Michel Tasset / Jeroen Booij archive


Like this? Mores in this series here:

Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (2) - Holes for lights and details
Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (3) - Petrol tank, roll bar, pedals
Analyzing the Le Mans Mini Marcos (5) - Racing numbers and bonnet straps

Maximum Mini is back in print

$
0
0
So many people have asked me if a reprint of Maximum Mini was on the roll, but so far I all had to disappoint them. But the good news is that I can now tell you it's there! Eight years after being published the reprint has now arrived. It's a soft cover with matt paper used inside and also smaller in size. Dimensions now are 225 x 225 mm rather then 256 x 256 mm of the earlier books. Why? Other then Maximum Mini 2 and Maximum Mini 3 it's not my own publication - like the original Maximum Mini book of 2009 Veloce Publishing is behind this one, too. I must say was rather skeptical about it when they told me the news of a softcover reprint, but now that it's here I do quite like it. If you are not prepared to pay hundreds of pounds/dollars/euros for the original Maximum Mini but would like to read it, this is the book for you. It certainly is cheap. If you do want to complete your collection and want to fit them in with the other volumes and are prepared to pay more, contact me. I may just have one or two of the very last hardcover books left...

Maximum Mini reprint is a softback with matt paper inside and is smaller in size
Picture Jeroen Booij

It doesn't fit in with the other volumes of Maximum Mini, but all the info is there
Picture Jeroen Booij

The 2nd printing comes from Veloce and is part of their Classic Reprint Series 
Picture Jeroen Booij


Dutch Scamp-ish shorty is a mystery

$
0
0
An interesting message this morning from Ramon Goutziers. He wrote: "Hi Jeroen. I was wondering if you knew anything about the Scamp I just bought. We bought it a couple of weeks ago but unfortunately do not know much about it. The car's nose section has been cut off and the bonnet is missing. We were wondering if you knew anything more about the car in question. Have you ever seen it before or do you know who previously owned it?  There is no registration. Best regards, Ramon.

Well. The answer is yes and no. I do have a picture of it in the files that was sent to me years ago by Roald Rakers. He, too, didn't know more then that it was supposedly built in The Netherlands in the 1980s. We do see the original nose of the car on it, which could help Ramon reconstruct the car. It does also certainly seem to be (short chassis) Scamp based, although it could be a copy, too. So there we go. Any more information will be much appreciated by Ramon and myself!

Short chassis'd, Mini engined and supposedly Dutch built. But what exactly is this car?
Picture Ramon Goutziers

The car's nose was cut off and the bonnet is missing. That didn't withhold Ramon to buy it though!
Picture Ramon Goutziers

Mini engine in its original subframe. Unfortunately there is no registration or history file
Picture Ramon Goutziers

But… this picture shows it how the bonnet looked when it was still there. Who knows more?
Picture Jeroen Booij archive via Roald Rakers

Marples' Mini under the block

$
0
0
The famous hatchback Mini Cooper 'S' of the late Postmaster General and Minister of Transport MP (1959-1964) Ernest Marples will be auctioned on the 26th of this month by H&H Classics at the Imperial War Museum in Duxford.

Marples wasn't a particularly loved politician. He owned a civil engineering company which was heavily contracted to redevelop the motorways of the UK while being Minister of Transport, too, leading to 'Marples Must Go' painted across motorway bridges (that his company built) throughout the country as well as car decals. And there was more. A love for prostitutes, or so it is believed; the introduction of his much-hated double yellow lines and the killing off of the British railways in favor of motorways. In 1975, Marples, who had by then been made a baron, fled the country in rather a hurry... because of tax evasion.

By that time he'd traded in his Mini for a Renault 5 at Lex Garage in Maidenhead. It was rather special, though. At the London Racing Car show of 1964 Marples spoke to John Cooper and told him he would only buy a Mini if he was able to carry his golf bags or the wine stock he took from his personal vineyard in France in the back. With a request from the Minister of Transport being difficult to ignore, John Cooper organized a meeting between Marples and Alec Issigonis to assess the feasibility of the request. But Longbridge already had the prototypes. Three of them, no less, with two of these using fiberglass rear doors and one (the Marples car) with a door made in metal. Originally it was a Morris Cooper 'S' with Surf Blue paint. Once being transformed into a hatchback, it was an Almond Green Austin registered '963 LOP'.

As said, Marples kept the car until 1974 when a new registration (KMG 840B) was put on it. Lex Garage sold it for £75 and several owners followed. By the late 1970s it had been repainted metallic blue with wide rally style wheel arches fitted and the front and rear valances deseamed. And there was a badly repaired damage at one opt the rear wings, too. Mini enthusiast Alan Meaker restored it and it was ready in 1995. The car is now estimated to sell for £70- to £80,000. Worth it?

The 'Marples Mini' as offered by H&H Auctions. It's a 1964 Austin Cooper 'S' with hatchback door
Picture courtesy H&H Auctions

Photographing the interior was never easier thanks to that rear door… Originally the car it was Surf Blue and Morris-badged. Also note padded dashboard rail and heater
Picture courtesy H&H Auctions

This is the car in 1995, when restored by Alan Meaker, still wearing the number it got in 1974
Picture MiniWorld magazine / Jeroen Booij archive

This is how Alan Meaker bought the car. Repainted, deseamed, with wide arches and slot mag wheels
On the right hand rear wing a badly repaired damage was found
Picture MiniWorld magazine / Jeroen Booij archive

Ernest Maples with the car in 1964. He was still an MP at the time, but a very controversial one
Picture The Autocar / Jeroen Booij archive

An Austin Mini htchback in Longbridge. The same car or another? Door trim and hinges are different
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Three hatchback Minis were made in Longbridge, two with fiberglass rear doors; one in metal
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Help me finding the right side-flasher lights

$
0
0
Okay, I need a little help from you lot. By now I have sourced all the correct lights for the '66 Le Mans Mini Marcos. But there is one exception, and it's the side flasher light on the car's front. I'd examined them carefully from historic images and drew the conclusion they had to be Citroen HY / DS Break sourced. These lights were made by Seima and the part number is 189 or 189B. I found a new old stock pair and bought them. But only when they arrived and fitted them on the hole in my car, it seemed to me they were too big with their 7.1 centimeters diameter. 5- or 6cm seems more like what they should be. I've asked some Citroen people if they know of a smaller variant - they don't.

What I did got hold of in the meantime is a better detail shot of the car back in 1966 with a clearer image of the side flasher in its big (rubber?) holder. That may help. So there we go - what do you think these lights were sourced from?

I was convinced the Seima 189B was the right side-flasher light for the car. Not so sure anymore now
Picture Jeroen Booij

This is what it looks like originally. Pretty similar looking to the one above, but it seems smaller. 
Oh, the big holder is a bit of a mystery, too, or is that just tape?
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Le Mans pit street on June 18, 1966. I believe the car must have used transparent flasher 
lights glass with orange lamp bulbs in it
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

This is the original hole to fit the right light. Who can tell me what has to go in there?
Picture Peter Skitt

Lavish Pavesi Mini turns up in the US

$
0
0
An unusual Pavesi Mini, turned up in the US last week. The car comes with the Pavesi signature filler cap, wooden dashboard and console but has quite a lot more frivolities, too. There's an interior that's all trimmed in a wild paisley pattern, from the seats to the doors, the armrests, the lower dashboard rail to even the full headlining. And there's an awful lot of burr walnut wood trim, too. From outside we see an unusual chrome strip and built in (and no doubt electrically operated) antenna. Supposedly a diplomat's or ambassador's car from South-Africa, the Mini turned up in Oregon recently with the same garage that has a Ranger Cub (read here). More information is welcome!




Another variant of the Pavesi Mini console in a 1970s Mini Cooper. Pavesi loved burr walnut
Picture Jeroen Booij

The same car, now with the dashboard over its full length. The clocks are placed differently here
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Thgis is another Pavesi Mini with another wooden dash, but it comes closer to that of the Oregon car
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

And here's another that's even closer, with the radio centrally placed and even more gauges. This car also has the full console 
Picture Balilla Registro Italiano (but you'd seen that)






The sun seekers (1)

$
0
0

I'm off for a holiday for some time, but not without leaving you with no Maximum Mini stories. So here's a little series on Mini based sunshine cars that I wrote some years ago for Mini Magazine. Enjoy!

Apart from the obvious Volkswagen based Beach Buggy, the Mini proved to be a great base for a fun car too. Jeroen Booij looks at the best-known Mini derivatives for sunbathers; only to find out they all came from the south coast. Evidently not a coincidence.

First there was the Beach Car. An open top Fiat 500 or 600 named ‘Jolly’ with pastel paint job, wicker seats and a roof like a Wall’s parasol. They were totally distinct from the Beach Buggies that came much later. Beach Cars were there to carry rich people from their hotel or yacht to the Mediterranean beach or boulevard, and back. They oozed an atmosphere of Brigitte Bardot, Monte Carlo princesses and Cannes Film Festivals of the sixties’ heydays.
A Beach Buggy, of course, is for burning up and down dunes. More Steve McQueen then Grace Kelly; macho instead of elegant. The two are miles apart. But other then the coachbuilt Fiats or the Volkswagen based buggies, the Mini could be both. Styled by BMC’s chief stylist, Dick Burzi, an official Mini Beach Car went into limited production in Longbridge. No more then 16 were built, with most going to more suitable climates. Survivors are rare.

The south of England still sees of course slightly less sun than Barbados or Florida
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

John Reymondos' beautifully restored Mini Beach Car prototype at the beach in Greece
Picture John Reymondos

This example of the Beach Car series was a Motor cover car and was used by the Queen!
Picture Jeroen Booij

Another Mini Beach car on Monaco plates. It still resides in southern France today
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

And its interior. Note colour coded telephone!
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

But then there was the other side of the scale, as the Mini proved to be a terrific base for a Beach Buggy too. When the American Beach Buggy craze reached the UK in the late sixties, some folks decided to come up with a design for the home market, based on the good old Mini. Funnily they were all created on the south coast. First of them was stylist Barry Stimson, who’d happened to have seen a Volkswagen based Myers Manx buggy in Canada when he was there in 1968. He immediately liked it, saying, “I thought it was so refreshingly different so I decided to design one myself. Not Volkswagen based but around the Mini.” In the plane back to England Stimson made a first sketch and back home in Chichester he started working on a prototype. He rented a hangar in Brighton and started on a tiny budget. Stimson: anything that vaguely had the shape you needed was used. The headlamp pods were moulded from a bra.” When the first Stimson Mini Bug was finished in early 1970 the result looked surprisingly like his early sketch. Reactions were quite overwhelming and the little Bug even appeared on national television. Under the car’s doorless and roofless fibreglass body lay a simple square tube frame to which the Mini’s front subframe was mounted. The rear used the Mini’s trailing arms and motorcycle coils springs and damper units, while the floor was plywood. It was sold as a basic kit less engine for £170 and a complete car was offered from £295. Initially the car was offered with a low perspex windscreen as an extra, but when this was found illegal a more conventional glass screen was offered.
The famous first Mini Bug sketch that Barry Stimson made on the plane
Picture courtesy Barry Stimson / Jeroen Booij archive


From the Stimson photo books: traveling with the Mini Bug prototype to France
Picture courtesy Barry Stimson / Jeroen Booij archive

Sheep do not stop a Stimson Mini Bug on its way to southern France!
Picture courtesy Barry Stimson / Jeroen Booij archive

And plenty of attention for the car in the villages, too
Picture courtesy Barry Stimson / Jeroen Booij archive

By 1972 Barry Stimson found it time for a second model and suddenly there was the Stimson Safari Six: a twelve feet long six-wheeled pick-up, based on the Mini too. According to Stimson it was a bit of a mix between Mini Pick-up, Moke and Traveller but also Range Rover and Renault 4! It was offered for sale in 1972 at £800 all in, which meant it was even fitted with a hood that covered not driver and passenger plus the complete rear end. Like the Mini Bug, the Safari Six was based on a tubular chassis to which a Mini engine-subframe and the fibreglass body was attached. Body panels were colour impregnated in ‘pirate red’ or ‘golden yellow’. The rear four wheels used Mini swinging arms with Girling spring/damper units. It had a zip-up side screen that could be used as a door for the driver. Stimson used the Mini’s standard windscreen for the Safari Six, but placed it in a new frame to which the weather equipment could be attached with push buttons. With twelve extra inches the rear track was considerably wider then that of a Mini helping the designer to create a large pick-up rear deck with fold down bench seat and lockable under floor ‘boot’. Unfortunately, the Safari Six had been a rather big investment for Stimson and after only a few were made the company went to the receiver. The rights for building the car were taken over by a Welsh company that planned to relaunch the car with Ford Fiesta- or Peugeot engine but it never happened.

The Stimson Safari Six in its natural habitat: on the beach with at least one bikini clad girl
Picture courtesy Barry Stimson / Jeroen Booij archive

And this is the Safari Six from Maximum Mini 1. I found the car at a Buckinghamshire farm
 in 2005 or 2006. I wonder if it's still about?
Picture Jeroen Booij

Caroline and Barry Stimson in August last year with Barry's new camper. Very sunny people indeed!
Picture Jeroen Booij

The sun seekers (2)

$
0
0


I'm off for a holiday for some time, but not without leaving you with no Maximum Mini stories. So here's a little series on Mini based sunshine cars that I wrote some years ago for Mini Magazine. Enjoy!

Apart from the obvious Volkswagen based Beach Buggy, the Mini proved to be a great base for a fun car too. Jeroen Booij looks at the best-known Mini derivatives for sunbathers; only to find out they all came from the south coast. Evidently not a coincidence.

Not too far from Barry Stimson’s workshop, another two Mini derivatives with bold Beach Buggy styling were conceived at around the same time. From Poole came Neville Trickett’s more traditionally styled Siva Buggy. Trickett had been responsible for the sporty MiniSprint in the mid-sixties. By 1970, however, he came up with his Mini based Buggy. It hadn’t gone unnoticed to him, too, that Volkswagen based Beach Buggies were becoming a hit and as an answer he made his own version. For the price of £195 the customer bought a kit to build one himself. It included a fibreglass body and a steel tube chassis frame that carried most of the Mini’s suspension. Radius arms were lengthened while the Mini’s suspension trumpet cones were shortened. Headlights and rear lights were included too. The complete front subframe with engine from a donor Mini could be bolted in, and some more Mini-parts like instruments, pedals and wheels could be re-used. Bucket seats, a flat windscreen in an aluminium frame and black vinyl hood all were extra’s, as were 13-inch wheels that gave the Buggy a better appearance then the Mini’s standard 10-inchers.

A great example of the British-built Siva Buggy in typical seventies fashion
Picture Siva Moonbug Skyspeed register

And another in 'Beach Patrol' livery. Pity it was photographed on the tarmac though!
Picture Siva Moonbug Skyspeed register 
The Siva Buggy was marketed by Skyspeed limited of Feltham
Picture Jeroen Booij archive


These two drawings come from the rare British brochure
Picture Jeroen Booij archive


Trickett was soon fed up with his Buggy customers and decided to have the car distributed by a motor accessory company who offered it as the Skyspeed-Siva Buggy. They sold quite a few before the moulds and production rights were sold to Euromotor in Amsterdam who had been Siva-importer for some time. Euromotor started building cars offering them as the Siva Moonbug. By now purple had become the standard colour with other colours available for extra money. They carried on production until 1976 when a fire destroyed the Amstelveen (close to Amsterdam) premises and the original moulds.
Dutch-built and Dutch-registered Moonbug was built under a license in Amstelveen
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

This is another Dutch car, found much modified on a Dutch scrapyard in the 1980s
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Extract of the even rarer Dutch brochure of the Siva Moonbug
Picture Jeroen Booij archive


Then there was illustrator Mike Jupp, just further eastwards along the south coast. Jupp was asked to design a car in 1969 that had to be based on Mini-mechanicals and was supposed to be a beach buggy-style fun car too. He liked the idea of what he now calls a ‘Juppmobile’ and started drawing. Intrigued about World War II-machinery he says he was influenced by the Volkswagen Kübelwagen and Schwimmwagen so perhaps it is not surprising the Nimrod he designed had some similarities with amphibians. The Nimrod-name derived from the famous Nimrod fighter planes. Together with carpenter Ray Jay of Hunston he started working on a prototype from his parents farmhouse, but when he was half way finished the men who had come up with the idea for the car withdrew from the project, leaving Jupp and Ray behind with nothing but a half-finished car. The two now decided to put it on the road themselves. It wasn’t until 1972 that it actually was ready. The ladder frame chassis came with a floor of plywood while the roll bar was made from a scaffold tube. The fibreglass body was an open two-seater with high sills and no doors. Between the windscreen and the rear screen there was a bar to give the body a bit more strength and a black vinyl roof was attached to it. Headlights and rear lights came from the Hillman Hunter and a Minivan petrol tank was fitted. Jupp admits that he wanted to give the car as much ‘Beach Buggy looks’ as he could and designed chunky rear mud flaps to add to the impression of wide tyres! Jupp took delivery of the car and even drove it to Transylvania in 1974 with a trailer behind it to carry tent and gear. When a friend asked for a second car Jay began to think about limited production, eventually building another four Nimrods. Years later the car was offered again in 1979 by Nova Cars, but it is unknown whether they ever sold any cars. Nigel Talbott and his company ‘T.A.C.C.O.’ in Wincanton did build a few another two years later, but it is believed not more then fifteen Nimrod were build in total by 1986, by which time the car had disappeared.

The Nimrod prototype being evaluated at Ray Jay's workshop in Hunston
Picture Mike Jupp / Jeroen Booij archive

Mike Jupp looking at the Nimrod he has owned for many decades now
Picture Jeroen Booij

And the same car seen where it belongs: on the seaside. Here towing a small hover craft!
Picture Mike Jupp

Nova Cars marketed the Nimrod for a while, but they didn't produce many
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

The sun seekers (3)

$
0
0


I'm off for a holiday for some time, but not without leaving you with no Maximum Mini stories. So here's a little series on Mini based sunshine cars that I wrote some years ago for Mini Magazine. Enjoy!

Apart from the obvious Volkswagen based Beach Buggy, the Mini proved to be a great base for a fun car too. Jeroen Booij looks at the best-known Mini derivatives for sunbathers; only to find out they all came from the south coast. Evidently not a coincidence.

The majority of the sun seeking Mini derivatives came from the UK's south coast. No coincidence?
Picture Jeroen Booij archive


That same year, however, the Mini fun car was given a new lease of life by Domino Cars Ltd of Southampton, once again in sunny Hampshire. The company was formed the year ahead by aeronautical engineer John Chapman and GRP-expert John Ingram. By 1986 they introduced their Domino Pimlico. A bit of a cross between the Mini Beach Car and a Mini based Beach Buggy! The design of the car came from Richard Oakes who did numerous kit cars before and Fibretech GRP that also did Beetle replicas built the car’s open body. The Pimlico was immediately recognizable as a Mini but came with lots of differences too. The body was completely seamless and came with high sills, no boot lid and no doors and a ‘T-bar’. It had large incorporated wheel arches; distinctive side skirts and ‘frenched’ rear lights. Simple doors that required external door hinges were available at extra cost but most customers ordered their Pimlico without. Standard, the cars were painted in a two-tone paint scheme. After the Pimlico-success the Domino-range was quickly broadened with more models. From a Hard Top version to a Pick-Up and from the Cabrio to a lightweight racer with space frame chassis and carbon composite body shell. Domino Cars and Fibretech went into receivership in the new millennium and the assets were taken over by Domino Composites, which changed its name to Composite Designs before going into liquidation in late 2007.

An early sketch of the Domino Pimlico. It became a best seller
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Thanks to an enthusiastic importer, quite a few Pimlicos sold in The Netherlands
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Although some went further abroad, to sunnier places, as well. This one is in Florida
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Life's a Beach! Some Domino Pimlico's even ended up with gullwing doors
Picture source unknown

There were plenty of others, too. Ranging from a Stimson Min Bug copy called the Luna Bug (this time it came from Portsmouth) and another from Scotland called the Dougal Bug, to the Cirrus – a buggy with a swoopy design of which a prototype was shown only once in public (in an incredible metalflake paint job) before disappearing forever. There were many more unofficial Beach cars built in small numbers from Portugal (Arco Iris Beach car) to the UK (Crayford Carnival; Tigmark Mini Millé), France (Fayard Mini; Jacky Mini Plage; Many Mégo Mini), Germany (L&H Mini Beach Car), Venezuela (Mini Cord Beach Car) and there was the unique Gran Turismoke from Australia and Ed Roth's Surfite from sunny California. Except from the Pimlico perhaps, all Mini based sun seekers mentioned here are all pretty rare though. Even the Stimson Min Bug of which reputedly 180 were built you don’t see on the roads anymore. So if you do know of one that’s been parked in a shed way too long, get it out before the summer is gone and the sun disappears again!

The Luna Bug turned up in 2013 (story here), only to disappear again very soon after!
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

The Cirrus Mini buggy remains another mystery. This is the only photograph I have of it
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Hot Car magazine

Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth's Surfite was a bit of a film star before it ended up in a museum
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

The 1998 Tigmark Mini Mille - 'the Mini Beach Car for the new millennium'
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Gyro-X to star at Pebble Beach

$
0
0
Pebble Beach, no doubt the world’s most prestigious concours d’elegance, will bring together another grand parade of prestigious four-wheelers on the 20th this month at the Californian golf resort with the same name. But there is always some unexpected stuff, too. Enter this year's class ‘American Dream Cars of the 1960s’ - all about future visions of days long gone, when the imagination of car builders went wild over shapes and technologies. And it's this class that will show a Mini derivative!

It's the Gyro-X, unveiled by Gyro Transport Systems, Inc. of Northridge, California, in 1967. Jeff Lane of the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville, Tennessee has set himself to the task of restoring this most unusual vehicle after having found it in a rather horrid state with VW power and without the gyroscope that made it such an attraction originally. I asked Jeff to write down something on the car and this is what he sent over:

"The 1967 Gyro X is the brainchild of Thomas Summers and Alex Tremulis, respected leaders in their fields - Summers a gyroscope expert and Tremulis with automotive styling and design.
In California in 1961, Summers formed Summers Gyrocar Company as a subsidiary of Summers Gyroscope Company, which made instruments for the aircraft industry. Summers’ passion and dream was to build a practical gyroscopically-balanced car. In 1963, Summers Gyrocar Company received funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to build the Gyro Stabilized Cargo Carrier. In 1965, prototypes were completed and tested. It is believed about five were built, then the U.S. Department of Agriculture withdrew funding. Meanwhile, Alex Tremulis, acting chief of Ford’s Advanced Styling Studio, was also interested in gyroscopically-stabilized vehicles. In 1956, Tremulis conceived the Ford Gryon, and in 1961 it was built as a concept car. Tremulis wanted to make the Gyron fully functional, but a quote of approximately $135,000 (that’s over 1 million dollars today) to build the gyroscope and control system, stopped that from happening. Ford’s Gyron was displayed at the New York International Auto Show in 1961, remaining on display at the Ford Rotunda in Dearborn, Michigan until November 1962 when the building burned down, destroying the vehicle.
Around 1966, Summers and Tremulis joined forces to build the Gyro X. Summers Gyrocar Company raised $750,000 (5.7 million today) and construction soon began. Tremulis styled the car, and the shop of Troutman-Barnes built the complete car minus the gyroscope and control system, which of course was built by Summers’ company. By early 1967, the Gyro X was completed and shown at the “Wonderful World of Wheels” exhibit at the New York International Auto Show. The task of commercializing the car then started, but met with no success. Investors sued to recover the money spent to build the car, and Summers Gyrocar Company closed its doors in 1970.
Once Summers Gyrocar Company closed its doors, the next several years were filled with lawsuits. Tom Summers and Alex Tremulis remained close, as well as enthusiastic about the gyroscopically-stabilized vehicle concept. Summers retained ownership of the car and continued to promote it. He developed numerous projects around gyroscopically-stabilized vehicles in order to get additional funding; none of this work went past the concept stage.
The Gyro X appeared in Nevada in 1975, and from there Summers became involved with some shady Las Vegas promoters who promised to put the car into production. By now the car is a three wheeler (two in back) and the gyroscope is most likely gone.
The Gyro X reappears in 1994 when a Las Vegas company uses it as collateral in a business deal gone bad, and entertainer John Windsor obtains the car in that same year. The car sat on his property until 2004, when he gets it running (still a three wheeler with no gyroscope). He sold the car in 2009 to an eclectic car collector in Houston named Mark Brinker. Brinker planned to restore the car, but after two years decided restoration was unrealistic. In 2011, Brinker sold the Gyro X to Lane Motor Museum.
Lane Motor Museum spent the next six years reconstructing the car to its original configuration. Agency Impianti, an Italian company, built the gyroscope and control system that make the Gyro X a functional gyroscopically-stabilized vehicle once more."

"How a Gyroscopically-Balanced Car Works and Some Basic Specifications on the Gyro X
In the simplest terms, a large flywheel spins to balance the car. Sensors in the car measure its angle of lean, and when the car goes around a corner, a hydraulic ram moves the spinning flywheel on its vertical axis to change the lean angle of the car.
The 1967 Gyro X is 44” wide, 180” long, and 48” high. It is powered by a 4-cylinder, 80bhp Austin Mini Cooper S engine. The car was promoted as a 2-seater, but they would have to be two small people! The motor drives the rear wheel through a 4-speed transmission and powers hydraulic pumps driven by the engine. The hydraulically-driven gyroscope is in the front where one’s feet are.
Specifications of the Gyroscope:
1. Flywheel diameter is 17.1”
2. Flywheel weight is 230 lbs.
3. The flywheel must spin at a minimum speed of 2,400 RPM to balance the car, and its normal operational speed is 3,000 RPM. It takes about four minutes to spin the gyro to operational speed. Once the engine is shut off, it takes about two hours for the gyro to stop spinning. Spinning at 3,000 RPM, the gyro has as much energy as a 2,000 lb. car going 30 mph."

"Was the Gyro X Practical?
In theory, a gyroscopically-balanced car sounds great. In reality, it is a very complex system with a great deal of stored energy. If something goes wrong, it could be very dangerous. The 1967 Gyro X was a functional car, although it seems the high-speed stability was questionable. Even now, 50 years later, with more advanced electronics and a better control system, the car remains very complicated. The gyroscope and surrounding control system together weigh about 900 lbs., which includes three hydraulic pumps and 100 ft. of hydraulic tubing. It’s hard to see how this could ever be financially feasible as a mass market car."

Thanks so much for that, Jeff. Let's hope the car receives the attention as it deserves as this has been such a challenging restoration. For some original film footage of the car in movement, click here. Good luck to Jeff and the team of the Lane Motor Museum. The 'American Dream Cars of the 1960s' class boasts another 9 cars, all fantastic on their own:

the 1960 DiDia 150 built for Bobby Darin
the 1962 Studebaker Sceptre Concept Coupe by Brooks Stevens
the 1963 Tex Smith XR6 Custom Roadster
the 1963 Mantaray by Dean Jeffries
the 1965 Reactor by Gene Winfield
the 1965 Bugatti T101C Roadster by Virgil Exner/Carrozzeria Ghia
the 1965 Pontiac Vivant Roadster by Herb Adams
the 1966 Bosley Mk2 Interstate Coupe
the 1969 Farago CF 428 Coupe by Paul Farago

It worked! Gyro X prototype back in its heyday in 1967. Its restoration is a real challenge
Picture courtesy Lane Motor Museum

This is how the car looks at the moment, with under two weeks to finish it for Pebble Beach
Picture Jeff Lane

The Gyro X is known for its gyroscope, seen here as refabricated to the original specs by Impianti in Italy. Jeff wrote: "Even now, 50 years later, with more advanced electronics and a better control system, it remains very complicated. If something goes wrong, it could be very dangerous"
Picture Jeff Lane

But… what drives the car is a Mini Cooper 'S' engine, placed behind the seats
Picture Jeff Lane

The Gyroscope closer up. Once the Mini engine is shut off, it takes about two 
hours for the gyro to stop spinning
Picture Jeff Lane

The Gyro X under construction at Gyro Transport Systems, Inc. of Northridge, California
Picture courtesy Lane Motor Museum

With Alex Tremulis in 1967. He was a former designer of Duesenberg, Ford, Tucker, Cord and Chrysler
Picture courtesy Lane Motor Museum

Maximum Minis meet up

$
0
0
A lovely little meeting of Mini derivatives took place during the Cambridge Mini Chill last weekend. With GTM Rossas Mk1 and Mk2, a Peel Viking, Ranger Cub, Domino Pimlico, Heinz 57 Hornet, Sabre Vario and Whitby Morrison 'Batman' ice cream van, several of them having been seen here before, this was an excellent turn-out of 'Maximum Minis'. Let's hope we can show more of them at other shows, too. The photographs are all by Steve Hudson.

Mini derivative owners and their cars came together at the Cambridge Mini Chill last weekend
Picture Steve Hudson

GTM Rossa from Germany, Sabre Vario, Peel Viking, Ranger Cub and Batman ice cream van
Picture Steve Hudson

And there's more. Pimlico, Rossa Mk1, Heinz Hornet. What to choose? He doesn't know!
Picture Steve Hudson

Interest in Mini based cars clearly is rising. We should display more of them at shows!
Picture Steve Hudson


Viewing all 1178 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>