drove a TR6 yesterday....
#2
Just come back from the Nurburgring where the German TR owners club had the track booked for 2 hours to themselves. After all these years they are still gorgeous cars.
The only thing i remember about owning them is that a lot have had the engine changed to the Stag engine and that makes them considerably less desirable.
Gary K (number 2)
The only thing i remember about owning them is that a lot have had the engine changed to the Stag engine and that makes them considerably less desirable.
Gary K (number 2)
#3
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eh? stag engine. TR6 big heavy 6 pot with extremely long stroke. Stag has a V8, can't understand how or why you would want to fit one, plus if that was the case they'd fit a Rover v8 as it's far more compact (no OHC's) and reliable.
My mum used to have one when I were a nipper. Although really it was my dads toy, but my mum used it daily. I still remember fantstic noise it made when I were squeezed into the back in a booster seat.Was alledgedly in quite a high state of tune by the time they sold it some somthing more practical - uprated pistons, flowed heads. In the winter they used to dump a few large chain links (the type so large you can't lift) in the boot to keep the back end down
My mate just bought one last year too, unfortunatly it's a US spec, so no fuel injection (stromburg carbs - oh dear), and ultra low compression ratios, so it has alot less power than the UK ones. But hes now building a new uprated engine for it, couple it with 3 webber DCOE's and it'll be a cracker
Far more fun to drive than anything thats built nowadays. Even if it's not the quickest thing on the planet. I'd have one tomorrow if I had somewhere to park it!
My mum used to have one when I were a nipper. Although really it was my dads toy, but my mum used it daily. I still remember fantstic noise it made when I were squeezed into the back in a booster seat.Was alledgedly in quite a high state of tune by the time they sold it some somthing more practical - uprated pistons, flowed heads. In the winter they used to dump a few large chain links (the type so large you can't lift) in the boot to keep the back end down
My mate just bought one last year too, unfortunatly it's a US spec, so no fuel injection (stromburg carbs - oh dear), and ultra low compression ratios, so it has alot less power than the UK ones. But hes now building a new uprated engine for it, couple it with 3 webber DCOE's and it'll be a cracker
Far more fun to drive than anything thats built nowadays. Even if it's not the quickest thing on the planet. I'd have one tomorrow if I had somewhere to park it!
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still remember fantstic noise it made when I were squeezed into the back in a booster seat
Gary
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Aparrently it was a squeeze, booster seats back then were probably no where near (or safe) as big as the ones about these days. Plus it was the law - that daft law about having kids in the front seats was still in force IIRC
Fuel injection in the right hands is OK, they gained the bad reputation because no one at the time knew how to set them up properly In terms of performance they were better than the carbs. The demise of 5 star fuel probably had a bit of an effect on it too. They need to be converted to use unleaded apprently (metering unit as well as the cylinder head).
Fuel injection in the right hands is OK, they gained the bad reputation because no one at the time knew how to set them up properly In terms of performance they were better than the carbs. The demise of 5 star fuel probably had a bit of an effect on it too. They need to be converted to use unleaded apprently (metering unit as well as the cylinder head).
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I owned one of these myself a few years ago.
It was a US import that I rebuilt, and it was a great car.
Mine was the carb version being from the US, but the UK fuel injected versions were notoriously troublesome as the fuel injection was a mechanical system, and apparently underdeveloped.
I understand that conversions are now available that eradicate the problems, in which case you would have a belter of a car, especially in 150BHP form.
I think there is a bit of confusion here between Stags & TR6s - It was the stag that had the problems, and the commonplace solution was to stick a TR6 engine into it - Not the other way round.
Happy hunting if you decide to go for it - at least you can forget the depreciation blues!
John.
It was a US import that I rebuilt, and it was a great car.
Mine was the carb version being from the US, but the UK fuel injected versions were notoriously troublesome as the fuel injection was a mechanical system, and apparently underdeveloped.
I understand that conversions are now available that eradicate the problems, in which case you would have a belter of a car, especially in 150BHP form.
I think there is a bit of confusion here between Stags & TR6s - It was the stag that had the problems, and the commonplace solution was to stick a TR6 engine into it - Not the other way round.
Happy hunting if you decide to go for it - at least you can forget the depreciation blues!
John.
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Nice one guys, yes and a tax exempt one would be nice! Just had to renew the tax on my mk2 cortina 1600e, 12 months tax sir, that'll be £0.00, why thank you!
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#9
took my spitfire out yesterday
Down to the festival of speed.
Early morning damp roads from edenbridge via crawley, horsham A24/A29/A27.
Loads of roundabouts and RWD
Fantastic fun.
There is a link here:
My Spit has the same 6pot 2L straight six shoe horned in.
Stage 3 Head, Fast road cam triple webber 40's, free flow exhaust.
Transmission sorted with comp clutch and box
Suspension sorted and uprated Wilwood brakes - so not much of the trademark tukking up under braking.
Oh what a noise at full chat!
I'm sure it would go well into 3 figures, but its fekin hairy!
All i need now is a limited slip diff and were really into the the power slides.
And the girlfriend likes going sideways!
Early morning damp roads from edenbridge via crawley, horsham A24/A29/A27.
Loads of roundabouts and RWD
Fantastic fun.
There is a link here:
My Spit has the same 6pot 2L straight six shoe horned in.
Stage 3 Head, Fast road cam triple webber 40's, free flow exhaust.
Transmission sorted with comp clutch and box
Suspension sorted and uprated Wilwood brakes - so not much of the trademark tukking up under braking.
Oh what a noise at full chat!
I'm sure it would go well into 3 figures, but its fekin hairy!
All i need now is a limited slip diff and were really into the the power slides.
And the girlfriend likes going sideways!
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And the girlfriend likes going sideways!
cheers
Gary
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