MisteRTee
New Member
That coupe is sweet. Anymore pics? Rebuild in progress?
Here are a few more as it was when I had just collected it from Scarborough (that's on the north east coast). I travelled up overnight on the coach, arriving at 07.30 to be collected by Phil (the builder). After breakfast overlooking the beach, went & concluded the deal & drove it straight home, 300 miles!
The spec is/was:
All steel body (apart from rear fenders), fabricated chassis, 350/350, Jag diff + custom fabricated rear suspension, twin horizontal mounted coil-overs, twin custom SS fuel tanks, cream leather interior, folding fabric sunroof, chrome wires.
I've known the builder, Phil for a long time & he'd had the car for 17 years when he sold it to me. He built it completely from scratch over a 9 year period, making almost everything himself, even down to the bolts! Bolts? you say? Well, as dome-headed bolts aren't available off the shelf like nuts are, he made all his own so every bolt & even the washers (& some nuts) are hand made (& in stainless as well!) All very well, but you try finding a spanner to fit an odd-sized bolt head!
The rebuild didn't start out as such. I'd already had a new SS exhaust system made, the original was virtually straight through & resonated terribly. The new system snaked in & around the trans, fuel tanks & rear suspension with a few bends to alleviate the sound (which it does). At the end of 2009, one rear wheel was leaning in alarmingly, so we got it in to check it out. Turns out the wheel bearings had failed & had ruined the hub as well, so after stripping it all down we decided to check the rest over, found a few more problems & completely stripped the rear end.
This is the cantilever system for the rear shocks, see the cracks in the paint?
This is what we found when we removed everything.
Anyone got a Jaguar repair manual??
After a lot of thought, we decided to re-engineer the whole setup, removing the coil-overs & mounting them in the more conventional position on the lower arms.
(This is just a mock-up pic)
Also visible in the above pic, is the start of a major re-jig of the rear chassis. Because we removed the coil-overs, it was decided to alter the diff mount to completely lower the floor in the boot (trunk, sorry!). Whilst there, we also added an additional section of chassis under the boot floor & incorporated a tow bar (hitch) mounting. This is an under construction shot showing the additional chassis sections & the new crossmember mount for the diff.
Here it is all painted.
Since the pics, the diff has been changed twice & will now been again, as I have obtained & rebuilt & re-painted another trans, a TH 200 4R. As this is an overdrive unit, I recalculated the ratio needed & discovered I wanted a really rare ratio (4.27:1) which I spent two months searching for & finally found. So soon, the rear end will all be dismantled again & rebuilt, some final work on the hub carriers & that section will be all done! That's enough for today, the next installment will be soon.