Not too sure that Leyland Cars had yet decided where the GT Badge should be located on the front grill .. because the Swiss brochure has photos of the GT Badge in two different locations
You have to admire the engineering skills and its practically all British Leyland parts, transverse mounted engine and front wheel drive just like factory Mini 1275GT's !
You have to admire the engineering skills and its practically all British Leyland parts, transverse mounted engine and front wheel drive just like factory Mini 1275GT's !
It's still no what I like, when I open a bonnet I'd like to see an original Mini engine in it, that's all.
DOWNTON Mini is what I like a lot.
Collecting 60th wooden steeringwheels.
If every Mini was standard it would be a boring world (sadly some shows are heading that way with rows of identical purist factory restoration jobs)...the huge variety of owner and aftermarket mods over the years are all part of what have made Minis so interesting for so many years and engine swaps have been part of that rich history with the Lotus Twin Cam, Ford BDA, and Imp engines, etc grafted onto Mini gearboxes and less interesting to me but for today's younger Mini enthusiasts....Honda V-Tec's conversions are now the most popular but quite rightly rarely carried out on rare or early Mini variants which might upset the purists amongst us.
As said the Mini 3500GT above is a very clever piece of engineering and uses another of Issigonis gearbox in sump transverse designs...I am also following with interest forum member 'Roger Mcnab' in Australia who is currently building a similar Rover V8 Mini (inspired by the one above) in the 'Our Cars & Projects' section of the Mk1 forum. Rover v8 in mini clubman (Roger Mcnab) :- http://mk1-forum.net/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=18661
surfblue63 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 17, 2021 5:19 pm
Someone left a deposit on that, are they mad?
Also a bit of doctoring on the pictures
Body number here
gt1.jpg
Body number gone?
gt2.jpg
Says he spent £2k on the interior, so now only making a profit of £11k insted of £13k as surely it's only worth around £10k, or am I missing something ?. Surprised he didn't buy the Black Tulip one that was on Ebay recently, didn't sell at £15k reserve, he'd already have it up for £25k if he had.
Grille was the same on later cars, as was interior. Steering wheel is the same except for leather cover, no fancy badge to find. You'll need a set of 12" wheels and the correct wheel covers, or try finding a set of GKNs. I have a set of 12" allycats in my shed, ideal for that late '70s early '80s look.
On the plus side: right wheels, steering wheel, and instruments
But it is certainly not an early 1970.... fuel tank, rod change box, seats, switch panel, lack of rotodip hole in rear bulkhead etc all suggest a later shell / car.