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On Tour
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: New Mexico
Posts: 1,497
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I had a well sorted one.. Enjoyed it and moved on.
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The only the Japanese cars that interest me are Datsun's. 510, 240Z Again appreciate all the feedback. Probably not the car for me but will go give it a look.
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- 2018 Cayenne S 958.2 - 1988 Carrera 3.2 Coupe Marine Blue (SOLD) |
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Scott '78 SC mit Sportomatic - Sold |
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An old MG with a couple of SU carbs and a hot redhead chasing him may just change his mind... ![]() Throw in the blue raggid azz jeans for good measure. Amp up the stress level... ![]() |
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I read all the Miata posts here on Pelican and can't think it'd be a lot more fun than an old MGB, especially a rubber bumper one.
I've reached the point of wanting to drive more than wrenching on 'em. Here's another black one... http://albuquerque.craigslist.org/cto/5839635158.html
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Scott '78 SC mit Sportomatic - Sold |
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Zink Racer
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 3,982
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Jerry 1964 356, 1983 911 SC/Carrera Franken car, 1974 914 Bumblebee, a couple of other 914's in various states of repair |
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Clinton, NJ
Posts: 12,782
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I'm surprised nobody has mentioned a Datsun SRL-311, aka the 2000, roadster. 2 liter OHC 4 cylinder with 130 HP and a 5 speed,produced 1968 - 1970. More solid than it's British counterparts, very simple to work on, and nice handling.
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______________________________ Dave 1969 911T Coupe 1972 911E Targa |
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Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: bottom left corner of the world
Posts: 22,700
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I tend to side with the Germans. A nice Karmann Ghia would be nice.
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Team California
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I worked at a British Leyland dealer around the time that '79 MGB was new, I was in High School. Those were some awful years for British cars; as others have pointed out, they were very behind the curve in terms of dealing w encroaching regulations in terms of emissions, crash protections, etc.
I remember thinking that they'd really ruined the MGB at the time. They looked like schit w those bumpers, ran weak w the single carb and catalytic converter, etc. There is just no reason to buy that particular vintage, unless you're trying to make some seller really happy. Buy an older one, if anything, they are more common because they sold better. It's like the mid-year 911s, ('74-'77), before they all got so expensive. There was no logical reason to buy one when there were plenty of early cars and SCs, etc. around for similar $$ once you'd done all the repairs to the 2.7. ![]()
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Denis |
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The M GBGT V8 was a standard production car. The MGB roadster with a V8 was a Costello conversion, and usually had a more powerful version of the 3.5 V8(at least the 155BHP of the Rover P6) than the Landrover 137BHP fitted to the production GT. There were also of course the MGC and MGC GT fitted with the 145BHP seven bearing 3 litre straight six: they had a reputation for serious understeer but it could be carefully dialled out more or less.
An MGB GT is a significantly heavier car than the Roadster, so the accelaration suffers accordingly. New roadster bodyshells are sold in the UK;many of the cars here have beeen reshelled. There are still a lot of these real slugs available to buy here.
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1986 924S bought new. Now used for AutoX and street. Chipped, throttle cam, highflow filter in original airbox/snorkel, 14mm rear sway Hyundai Ioniq hybrid daily driver Vindicator Vulcan V8 spyder, street legal sports racing car (300hp,1400 lbs kerb weight) used for sprints on circuits, and hillclimbs |
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Double Trouble
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North of Pittsburgh
Posts: 11,705
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I just sold my 1974 MGB last week....
![]() Sold it to buy a nice 914. The B was fun, but a "city" car. At 60 mph you felt like it was was wound tight as a cheap watch. The teener is highway capable and actually likes it. The 5th gear makes a huge difference. Parts for MGs are everywhere and really cheap. the RB cars are really a different car. Emissions motor was even more anemic, ride height was raised for Fed specs, no sway bars made them really handle poorly. The list is long. There is a reason the RB cars are so much cheaper then the CB cars.
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I used to be addicted to the hokey pokey..........but I turned myself around.. 75 914 1.8 2010 Cayenne base Last edited by targa911S; 10-24-2016 at 04:26 AM.. |
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Double Trouble
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North of Pittsburgh
Posts: 11,705
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I used to be addicted to the hokey pokey..........but I turned myself around.. 75 914 1.8 2010 Cayenne base |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Charlottesville Va
Posts: 5,747
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SU's are not hard at all, if you don't mess with them once they're set right.
Agree with all of the above. I had a 70 b for a long time, and it was a fun enough car, you could slide it around at lowish speeds, but archaic. And without overdrive, a buzzbox. I did make a couple Pa-Va trips in it but at 3500-4000 rpm the whole way. The rubber bumper cars were both suspension and emission choked nightmares. A chrome bumper B is not a ball of fire to begin with.
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Greg Lepore 85 Targa 05 Ducati 749s (wrecked, stupidly) 2000 K1200rs (gone, due to above) 05 ST3s (unfinished business) |
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Double Trouble
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North of Pittsburgh
Posts: 11,705
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As Greg said, SU's are pretty easy to tune. no harder than webers. You need a Unisyn to get them right or have a good ear. After that you just leave them alone. You will see a lot of B's that have the single weber DGV downdraft conversion. Mostly because most mechanics dont know how to tune SU's. Mine had one on it as well. I found a nice set of SU's with the linkage and manifold for $200. Bolt on, tune and forget em. Float levels are really the hardest thing about the HIF4 carbs. You have to take the carbs off and invert them to adjust the levels. Leave it to the English...
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I used to be addicted to the hokey pokey..........but I turned myself around.. 75 914 1.8 2010 Cayenne base Last edited by targa911S; 10-24-2016 at 04:25 AM.. |
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Zink Racer
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 3,982
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My buddies GT is a conversion he did, I think he used a Ford 5.0. It is very clean.
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Jerry 1964 356, 1983 911 SC/Carrera Franken car, 1974 914 Bumblebee, a couple of other 914's in various states of repair |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: MD
Posts: 5,733
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I really like B's but as said, unless you want to back date try and start with a chrome bumper car. SU's took me a little while to figure out, and I still need some practice, but if I can do it anyone can. Keep them full of oil, overflow hoses checked... they just work.
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Double Trouble
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North of Pittsburgh
Posts: 11,705
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It's the damn SU fuel pumps that will eventually leave you stranded. The points, yes points, that stop working. You can bang the pump sometimes to get them started enough to get to a safe place. But the rule of thumb is the car will strand you some day.
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Vancouver,Wa.
Posts: 4,457
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The dominate factor for me was I was too old & burnt out to be working on cars.
I bought a Miata......the turbo on it eases the pain.
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JPIII Early Boxster |
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Team California
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I owned a 964 briefly last year but it needed significant $$ and time invested to be tight so I made the decision to cut it loose. No regrets. I'd rather have a 997, 8 ways from Sunday. The dollars/fun ratio of most air-cooled 911s has gone pear-shaped, unless you've owned it for a long time. Sorry for the hijack. A rubber bumpered MGB would be a car I would not enjoy driving. It falls into the category of vehicles that you only drive if the woman who owns it is really hot and wants you to drive. Like an old Camry that needs an alignment. ![]()
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Denis |
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G'day!
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Ha ha ha.....you sir won the Internet today! ![]()
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Old dog....new tricks..... |
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