Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts

Monday, 19 December 2022

I'll be home for Christmas in a Jiffy

Got the Christmas shopping sorted? Thought of the Christmas crackers, the candles? brandy sauce? tooth picks? You may need to get some final preparations done to the car also, before embarking on the journey to family or friends. Colin McMullan took this picture last year in Portrush, Northern Ireland, while on his way to the MOT station with his Indespension Jiffy. Did he pass the test? Of course he did. Safe travels for now.


A Jiffy in snowy surrounding in Northern-Ireland's very north
Picture Colin McMullan

Tuesday, 25 January 2022

Status 365 - let's register them

When a Status 365 is being offered for sale it causes a bit of a storm in my mailbox, which was the case last week. Thanks all for letting me know! Maximum Mini-fan, 365-Owner and overall good guy Richard Hawcroft was one of them and he also sent me a list of cars he knows about. We compared it with what I collected over the years and thought we'd share the information here. 

Richy wrote: "As far as I know, the last time a Status 365 was taxed for use on UK roads was 1995! A proper registered Status seems to be a rare thing. Maybe you should put a shout out on your site to see if anyone has photos, reg numbers etc. It might wrinkle a few more out the woodwork!"

Good idea. Indeed it does seem that quite a few Status 365s were bought but never built. Apart from Richard's info and mine I also found something in Status boss Brian Luff's old files, which I copied years ago, giving another few records: two of them in one and the same place: Newtownards in Northern-Ireland plus one in Bridgewater, Somerset. I'll see if I can find out more about these, too. Meanwhile, if you have more information on any of these cars or on any other Status 365, please let us know.

UPDATE 1 - 10:30 - First result in! The owner of the empty shell that’s seen with the Scamps, John Keith Halliday, drops a line. It is properly registered as a 1977 Status also. Reg: 'PJG 291S'. Thanks John!

UPDATE 2 - 26 January 2022 - The owner of 'ALJ 517K' calls in, too. He writes: "Hi Jeroen, Status 365 'ALJ 517K' is in my garage and might even see the road one day if I ever find time and bother. It does drive, but still wants a lot of work before it'll go on the road. So let's call it a project for now"


'AMH 415A' is a Status 365 that's for sale right now. Again
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Ebay

'ALJ 517K', also seen for sale several times in the last decade
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

This is supposedly David Paden's car and registered '7445 GZ'
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

'BUT 18B', a mystery rally car as raced by a Peter Banham in 1976
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Cars & Car Conversions

'OO 5973' is owned by Colin Carvel of Cornwall and is mid-engined!
Picture Jeroen Booij

Previously on the road but not anymore. Gerard 'Gez' Hughes' car
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Gerard Hughes

Kevin Murray did a wonderful job in restoring his car!
Picture Tony Bucknall

An empty shell, seen on Ebay in 2016. Where is it now?
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Ebay

'SMJ 487R' is the car of Richard Hawcroft, properly registered as a Status
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / Richard Hawcroft

Factory demonstrator, brochure car - once seen with registration 'THS 553'
Picture Jeroen Booij archive / The Filby Files

This shell has never been built - it's owned by Tim Harber now
Picture Jeroen Booij archive/ Tim Harber

Unknown shell seen in a garden with two Scamps! Who knows more?
UPDATED: Owner: John Keith Halliday, registration: 'PJG 291S'
Picture John Keith Halliday

Newtownards, Northern-Ireland supposedly hides two more Status 365s
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

As there is one in Bridgwater, Somerset also, registered 'NWO 824R'
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Wednesday, 13 May 2020

Jola and Grimes Autotest Specials

Autotest champion Alastair Moffatt - who recently purchased MoBi-One - found some more interesting Mini based vehicles in his photo files. He wrote:

"Hi Jeroen. I found these pictures of an autotest car named Jola, made in late 1970s and running a Mini 1430cc engine in rear on fiddle brakes so a handbrake for each of the rear wheels to do a handbrake turn. It got stripped in 1999/2000 and all the suspension and subframes plus engine went into an ABS Freestyle as you have in one of your books. It shows it losing a wheel at the Royal Dublin show ground in 1998 on a international event."

"And I got another car for you. Peter and Chris Grimes from Southern Ireland made this Mini Special from a cut down Mini from the late 1970s. Front subframe bulkhead and floor to just behind the seat were retained and then the rear end with a made up rear beam bringing it to the same wheel base as a Mini but with no overhang. In the photo from around 1998 at Birmingham, it was running a 1380cc Cooper 'S'. A very very light car with great vision all round. It won around 8 Northern Ireland autotest test championships and 5 British RAC/MSA championships plus 3 BTRDA championships.
It is still going today but now runs a Vauxhall Nova engine in a mini subframe on 14inch wheels."

Jola Special, run by Peter Jackson, used 1430cc Mini engine at the back
Picture Alastair Moffatt

Hmm... Royal Dublin show ground 1998 - when it lost a front wheel in the heat of the moment
Picture Alastair Moffatt

Wheel found. The Jola Special used so called 'fiddle brakes' for easy manoeuvring
Picture Alastair Moffatt

And another Mini based Autotest Special - the Grimes Special, which does survive
Picture Alastair Moffatt

Monday, 3 June 2019

The Kingfisher as a 4-wheel drive homologation special

‎The story below was posted online by Tom Wilkinson‎ last week and  I wanted to share it with you guys here as I rather enjoyed reading it. It's a nice little tale about the Kingfisher Sprint, or actually one very unusual version of that car dubbed the Kingfisher Turbo Sprint Coupe 4WD HS. He we go, in Tom's words:

"I’m not sure how we met our friend John, but he came up to the farm when we had our first Avengers. We would take him up the road, but John was a Hot Car reader (not Cars and Car Conversions, Rallysport or Motoring News), so he thought that when we were explaining it was a Group 1 Avenger, he got it into his head it was Stage 1 engine (remember those?), and was thoroughly shaken by his ride up the road. Now John was one of those guys who was always vague about his background, or how he earned his money, but always had a tale to tell about how qualified/experienced/knowledgeable/skilled he was, and his stories were always told to reflect that. One of the ones I do remember was how he’d been a snowmobile salesman in Vancouver and used to race them along frozen rivers with his mates. Personally, I thought he was a part-time script writer for Jackanory. Anyway, John bought a Lancia Delta HF Turbo 4WD, the forerunner to the Integrale. He regaled us with tales of how it had lost a little crispness to the handling when it underwent a RHD conversion, so he upgraded the turbo and put a Koni handling kit on it. He wasn’t so happy when Coke was on his way back from Newcastle one evening, and caught and passed him at Weldon Bridge and left him for dead going along the Coquet to Rothbury - in a bog standard Citroen Visa Diesel."

"So, when we got a phone call from John one day to go and see him at his new car factory in Rothbury, we were just a little bemused. It was at that time when there was another John, also making cars, but based in Northern Ireland, so you can imagine, “our” John was immediately nicknamed Delorean. Anyway, off we went to Delorean’s new factory where he’d bought the remaining assets of the Kingfisher Car Company (Roger King , the originator of the Kingfisher, had got into financial difficulty and gone into receivership). He was always the master of hyperbole, so he explained how he intended to market the “new” Kingfisher as a real performance car, and intended to build a rally version, the Kingfisher Turbo Sprint Coupe 4WD HS (the four wheel drive homologation special)
But Delorean being Delorean, it was going to be perfectly engineered, unique and ultra-competitive. (Please bear in mind that these were based on Mini 850s!). His plan, having researched the history of competition Minis was to create a twin-engined version, one in the front and one in the back, like the factory had experimented with for rallycross. Then he was going to turbo-charge both engines."

"He then sprang the big surprise: “And I’d like you two to drive it. I’d like one of you to do an English Championship, and the other to do a Scottish Championship. What do you say?” Well, we managed not to burst out laughing (and not wanting to scupper a deal that just by some remote chance, he ever got going), and started winding him up. “Can you fit it with Group 4 Minilites John?”
“No problem. I’ll get my engineers on it this week” (We were the only people in this lock-up unit!) “And can you fit Bilsteins too?” “I’ll ring the factory in Germany in the morning, and get them on it” “And can you design a high range/low range transfer box for it so we can have both a forest ration and tarmac ratio?” “I’ll ring Quaife in the morning” (I wonder if this was the prompt that caused Quaife to create their dual range gearbox!). After we’d run out of ever more outrageous questions, Delorean then says “So we have a deal then?” “Absolutely” we said, and he shakes our hands and tells us he’ll get his legal team on drawing up contracts first thing in the morning."

"As far as we know, the last we heard he was selling off job lots of moulds, resin and matting, and desperately trying to get out of the lease with English Estates. And we’re still waiting to hear from his “legal team”

This actually is a turbocharged engine in a Kingfisher Sprint. There's just one engine though...
Picture Jeroen Booij 

The very first Kingfisher Sprint, built in the Rothbury factory. Roger King is the man with the beard
Picture Jeroen Booij archive

Friday, 15 September 2017

Market round up (Summer 2017)

Time for another market round-up (previous versions here and here and here). What Mini based cars are offered for sale at this moment? I have made a selection, the majority of these ads have been tipped-off by readers. Keep them coming! Oh - and some more cars here.

GTM coupe, built up to look like a Cox GTM.  Previously seen on these pages. See it for sale here

Mk4 Mini Marcos in France, built up in Belgium with 1275 power. See it for sale here

Magenta, also in France. 1979 car. Rare to see it in a state like this. See it for sale here

Riley Elf 'Jolly'. Very unusual take on the Elf, found in Missouri, USA. See it for sale here
UPDATE January 2018: Can you believe this car sold in auction for $60,500 ?!

The Wolseley Hornet based Willson Special has been for sale for quite some time now. See it here

Rare RTV, ready to work on any farm or do any (slow) expedition. See it for sale here

Nimrod, also seen for sale here previously. Who will give it some love? See it for sale here

Stimson Trek. Probably the best possible example of the species? See it for sale here

Stimson Mini Bug. Nice Mk2 car in great colour. It's in Northern Ireland. See it for sale here

Also in Northern Ireland: a flashy Foers Nomad. One of 175. See it for sale here

Hustler Six, restored and looking very good, in Norfolk. See it for sale here

Scamp Mk2 dressed up as a military mobile drinks bar..! See it for sale here

GTM Coupe. Looks superb and I think it could be the (a?) works demonstrator? See it for sale here

Foers Nomad built up with most unusual side skirts and spoilers. See it for sale here

Mini Marcos Mk4. This one is in Italy and registered as a 1976 car with 1340. See it for sale here

Andersen Cub. 1987 car with 998 power, in Suffolk. See it for sale here

AEM Scout. Purple with cream leather. Brilliant for Summer 2018 already! See it for sale here

Wednesday, 15 January 2014

Building a Bug in 1971

Some of the best messages I receive here are from people who have owned or built Mini based cars in their heydays. The one I got from David Bellis, a retired Brit living in France, ticks both boxes as he built a Stimson Mini Bug in 1971 and used it as a daily driver for a while. He wrote: "Hi Jeroen. I've loved Minis for 40 years and the more unusual, the better! In 1971, my dad's friend ordered a red Mini Bug kit complete from Barry Stimson. I went with him to collect it from a farm in Emsworth, near to the South coast. Barry was working on the 6-wheeler when we arrived, was it called the Stimson Safari 6 or something, I can't remember (it was indeed!-JB). Upon our return, we decided that we would build one also. My father copied the chassis and incorporated a few strengthening mods, vastly superior to the original. He used thicker wall tubing and my dad could actually weld, unlike the chassis fabricators! I seem to remember the chassis was £125 and we bought the steel to fabricate one for about £10. At the time that amount of money would have put it beyond our budget."

"The red one was finished and registered UDJ 51, I think. We bought a 1965 Mini Van for £50 and then started the build. Everything was completely refurbished. As my Dad was a precision engineer, there was only one way to do everything - the right way! Hence the build took some time, but it must have been the best Mini Bug ever built. I remember wanting to have 6"x 10" Mamba wheels and 165 Rally Special tyres but we just could not afford them and therefore ended up with steelies and Avon Turbospeed crossplies. After completion we had an inspection at home by a local policeman, who approved the quality of the car and allowed us to make up our own chassis number. How times have changed. After over 40 years I can't remember the number but I think it contained part of our surname, probably 'BEL'. The car was then registered and given a current registration number XED 613K. This meant that it didn't need an M.O.T. for three years. In effect a new car! Amazing! Don't ask me how, but I remember the engine number as 8AM FAU H550725. It just came to me, how bizarre is that?"

"We ran the car as our only transport for about 6 months, but pressure from mum finally forced its sale. We last heard of it from an owner in Northern Ireland. As I was only 16 or 17 at the time and had not passed my driving test, I was not allowed to drive it. This small problem did not trouble me and I drove the car around Warrington in Cheshire, where we lived. Incredibly, I was never stopped as the car was hardly inconspicuous. I remember it being quite noisy but almost fast. The engine had been properly rebuilt and the car weighed almost nothing. The hood and side screens worked very well. Vision was good and virtually waterproof. We couldn't afford chrome headlamps and settled on some black ones designed for a farm tractor. The rear lamps were trailer items. The large sticker on the roll bar was our local tyre company Warrington Tyre Distributors. They gave us a discount on the wheels and tyres in return for some free advertising. I've tried to remember as much as possible and hope that I haven't bored you with too much detail. I would love to know where it is now. I may be nearly 60 but I love odd cars now as much as when I was 17! At the moment I am part way through scratch building a Bugatti Type 35 replica, and yes, the engine is in the front where it should be! This car is going to be my best yet (I always say that!). The only sad part is that my dad has Alzheimer's and can't help me, but I try to do each bit as he would have. On completion of this project I am hoping to build a beautiful MiniSprint. Neville Trickett lives quite close and will hopefully be doing the shell modifications for me. Keep up the good work!" Thanks very much David, and let's see if someone here will be able to tell us more about your car's destiny.


Unofficial Stimson Mini Bug chassis was, according to builder superior to the original
Picture courtesy David Bellis

Proud builder and his first car, built on a shoe string. Front lights were tractor sourced
Picture courtesy David Bellis

Local tyre company WTD gave a discount in return for some free advertising on roll bar
Picture courtesy David Bellis

The Mini Bug's dashboard in all its simplicity. What else does a fun car need?
Picture courtesy David Bellis

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Jim's jolly Jimini

Enthusiasts have been building Jiminis since the mid-1970s and carry on doing so to this day, as proves Nigel Lamb who finished his' last year. It prompted another reader to drop me a line about the example he built - back in 1977! Jim Meikle wrote: "Hi. I just thought that you may be interested in my Jimini - I say 'My Jimini', well, I have just sold it, after 36 years of ownership. I built it in 1977, from a 1963 Mini. It was originally supplied in bright orange from the factory - 'Jimini Automotive', based at Brooklands. It travelled in the removal van, when I moved home to Scotland. The current paint job was completed in 1983. It is now in Northern Ireland. It has been in use since 1977, and is still road legal. Hope you enjoy the pictures." I certainly do, Jim, thanks for these! Meanwhile, Nigel has decided to sell his car to fund another Mini based project. See the ad here.

Jim built this cheerful Jimini in 1977 and used it for 36 years. He now sold it
Picture courtesy Jim Meikle

After world's shiniest Mini engine, I can now present you world's most colourful!
Picture courtesy Jim Meikle
And that's how the shell came in in 1977. Note Mini donor '347 CMC' in the back
Picture courtesy Jim Meikle