Wednesday, 18 May 2016

IMM 2016 - all of the rest

After yesterday's flood of Mini Marcoses and Midases, now over to the rest of the Mini derivatives that made it to the International Mini Meeting in Lommel, Belgium. Quite an eclectic mix of Mini variants! Oh - and missed the show, but want the book? Then simply go here.

Happy to have served you from my humble tent! On display some unique cars: a Barclay Minibug (left), the Twini Scamp (right) and a lovely little Schmitt behind
Picture Jeroen Booij

Mean Sonora BMC owner Louis Lempereur was one of many to buy the brand new 
Maximum Mini 3 book at the spot.
Picture courtesy Louis Lempereur


Proud owner Dylan Doek with the unique Twini Scamp he is now almost finished restoring. There'a a 998 engine in the front and an 848 in the back, just like it was built by McLaren engineer John Hornby in the mid-seventies
Picture Jeroen Booij

When the bonnets are closed the double rev counters and temperature gauges may give you a clue to its unusual mechanicals…
Picture Jeroen Booij

And another proud owner… Andre de Wit with his Barclay Minibug. Andre knows his Dutch Mini derivatives. He is currently restoring a Dutch-built Siva Moonbug, too
Picture Jeroen Booij

His Minibug could well be the only one surviving. A handful is believed to have been made, but I have never come across another with the Barclay name moulded in its bonnet. Nor has Andre
Picture Jeroen Booij

The Schmitt is owned by Bart Vanreusel of Belgium, but I forgot to photograph him with the car. But here is a shot of it that I took some years ago in Antwerp. Thanks for attending Bart!
Picture Jeroen Booij

Everyone who restores an early Jimini deserves my full attention. This one was just superb
Picture Roald Rakers

It came from Austria and was on display just two stalls from the Maximum Mini stand
Picture Roald Rakers

Mengers four-door Mini is one of three built by Dierk Mengers of Oldenburg, Germany. He was there, too, and collected his book from the Maximum Mini stand
Picture Jeroen Booij

This nice convertible Mini is not a Crayford Mini Sprint, but a one-off built in 1968 in Bexhill, East Sussex. The owner's son and daughter both have several Mini variants, too
Picture Jeroen Booij

If you look closely you may spot this car wears the same registration as the Jiffy pick-up featured in Maximum Mini 2. But then it's the same car
Picture Jeroen Booij

It was converted into a Jiffy Romahome by its new owner Ivo Krul. And, yes, he spent the nights in it, too. Ideal for an International Mini Meeting!
Picture Jeroen Booij

Dutch Domino Pimlico. It's only recently that I found out that these cars were actually built in The Netherlands, too. I think this is a British built one, though
Picture Jeroen Booij

A Mini Meeting would not be complete without Chris Westgate and his Mk1 Scamp. No doubt he liked to see the Twini Scamp being restored!
Picture Jeroen Booij

More Scamps made it over from the UK. Here a pair of Mk2s in panel van guise
Picture Jeroen Booij

But this was an even greater surprise! A rare Scamp six-wheeler with unusual body modifications
Picture Jeroen Booij

And talking about six-wheelers - Robert Asselbergh brought over his Stimson Safari Six project
Picture Jeroen Booij

He's owned the car for some years now, but hasn't found the time yet to start its restoration. One day…
Picture Jeroen Booij

A Phoenix Estate won't rust of course, but this one appeared to have done just that!
Picture Rolf Roozeboom

I missed it, but my old GTM Coupe came over to the IMM, too. Who owns it now?
Picture Rolf Roozeboom

And this Heerey GTM was spotted by everyone but me, too. Nice car!
Picture Thierry Quertain

Powder blue paint and Cortina rear light suit the car well, I'd say. Who knows more about it?
Picture Thierry Quertain

All the way from Austria in a GTM Rossa convertible. Well done sir!
Picture Thierry Quertain

2 comments:

  1. I own your old gtm now Jeroen, I contacten you shortly after I bought it last summer. You probably missed it because it was in the parkingspace, not the camping-ground

    Greets Harold

    ReplyDelete
  2. Does anyone know how much shorter the Domino Pimlico, Primier and HT models are compared to the original Mini?

    Thanks in advance

    ReplyDelete