Saturday, April 5, 2008

...forgot

Ah yes, the donor parts. Well, late last year I bought a Suzuki Swift GT for RallyCross:



After much consternation over trying unsuccessfully to get the car roadworthy (due to a multitude of undisclosed issues by the previous owner), I bought a WRX (!) and put the Swift up for sale. Rallycrosser? Check. Family hauler? Check. Fun daily driver? Check. Lotus? Che... oh no, wait.


The Swift rolling chassis leaves my possession tomorrow, but I pulled a few things for my use on the Seven first: the radiator (tiny, should be a nice fit), the coolant overflow tank (also tiny... heck the whole car is tiny), and the new battery (tin... well, smallish actually) that I purchased late last year.




4/5/08 - Cleaning my garage space, and removing some donor parts

The past week was a wild one in terms of me and Sevens... but let's rewind a little bit. About 6 years ago, I discovered Ron Champion's book, Build Your Own Sports Car for as Little as 250 UKpounds and Race It! With a title like that, how could I go wrong? It was purchased, read, drooled over, re-read, fantasized about, and obsessed over. Note that none of this energy actually leads to a running, driving car. During this time, a donor (1981 Toyota Celica) was purchased, moved during a house move, and sold without any sports car being built. Other cars of interest I owned during this time include an '88 Supra Turbo, a '68 Mustang GT/CS, an '86 MR2, an '88 MR2 Supercharged, a Dodge SRT-4, a '69 Mercury Cougar XR7 convertible, a '97 Z3, an '02 SVT Focus, a '92 Miata, a '92 Suzuki Swift GT, and an '07 WRX (that's the daily driver now). So it's not like there is or has been a lack of interesting transportation... but they're not a Seven, and they weren't built by me. Strangely, once I became posessed of the notion that it is possible to build your own car, it became something I had to do. A life goal, if you will.

So here we are. Finally I have a little money in my pocket, a clear garage spot (though I used to have a 960 sq. ft. shop at our previous home, I failed to take advantage of that), and far more mechanical aptitude and understanding than when I first got The Book in the mail 6 years ago. What I have less of is time. What a Seven needs is time. It is possible to build a Seven for next to nothing if you have a lot of time. Since I don't, I will be "buying time" by buying pre-built components where possible. With this in mind, I was perusing the various Lotus and Seven haunts last weekend. I chased a lead on a wrecked Birkin S3 (one of the well-known Seven clones), but ended up letting that one go for various reasons. No sooner had I sent the seller of that wrecked car the Dear John email, but a private message notification appeared in my inbox, informing me of a message waiting at locostusa.com. Within minutes, I was buying a car. Well, the start of one anyway -- and a very good start at that: TIG welded chassis, completed front and rear A-arms, and full Miata running gear. A builder from Nebraska decided that he didn't have the time to finish his Seven project, and would rather have a nice, complete Miata sitting in the drive instead. He may be the smarter man -- we'll see. All I know is that I'm very excited. Expected shipping date: 4/14.