1966 Bevan Austin A40:-
https://www.facebook.com/bevanimp/
1960's/70's Mini Racing Photos
#226
Posted 29 July 2019 - 09:42 PM
#227
Posted 05 August 2019 - 07:56 AM
(Photos: Mrs Allen)
From Morris Mini Minor 848cc to Twin engined Jag Mini 2950cc.
"In 1960 Gordon Allen bought Morris Mini Minor Registration Number 620 AXE for his wife to learn to drive in. At that time he had an engineering and tool making business and his spare time was spent on modifying engines, mainly for motorcycles. He enjoyed owning various cars but favoured Jaguars. His wife did not take to driving and the Mini became little used. Having driven the Mini, Gordon got to like it and admire its driveability (of course he would!). Naturally the driving experience is enhanced when more power can be added, so various tuning parts were fitted, mainly from Alexander and Speedwell. Gordon’s thoughts then turned to racing the Mini and so in 1961 a number of saloon car races were entered...."
More details and photos here:-
https://twiniminis.com/
Edited by mab01uk, 05 August 2019 - 04:11 PM.
#228
Posted 25 September 2019 - 09:54 AM
ive spent all morning reading through this section i love it
#229
Posted 21 October 2019 - 07:50 PM
Copied a few years ago from my collection of old Mini VHS tapes.......
Mini Special Saloon Car race at Brands Hatch from the BBC 'Driving Ambition' TV series shown in 8 episodes one hour long in 1984 and repeated on UK Gold a few years later.
Later known for his Mini Miglia, Peter Baldwin was the 'real' driver of his own Ford BDA engined race Mini. Other 'real' race drivers of the time include Ginger Marshall and David Enderby.
"Eight-part serial about a middle-aged housewife who is obsessed with making her mark in the man's world of fast cars. Script by Paula Milne. BBC1 tx 1984/03/03 - 1984/04/21 (Sat) 8 eps. x 50 mins."
Episodes
* A class of their own (21/04/1984)
* Big torque (14/04/1984)
* The thin red line (07/04/1984)
* The Late breaker (31/03/1984)
* Manifold depression (24/03/1984)
* Five O'Clock shadow (17/03/1984)
* Dream Machine (10/03/1984)
* A little differential problem (03/03/1984)
Edited by mab01uk, 21 October 2019 - 07:52 PM.
#230
Posted 21 October 2019 - 07:53 PM
Ginger Marshall's Mini Clubman Estate leads off the line (Imp engine on a Mini gearbox), this is 1976 it is a Forward Trust up to 1000cc Special Saloon race, the 850cc Imp was on pole but didnt win."
Ginger's brother was the mechanic. They had had 5 special blocks cast which included the block itself and the adaptor to fit the Mini box
http://www.startline...1/terrapin2.htm
#231
Posted 21 October 2019 - 09:45 PM
"VJB 39 - 1960 time-warp Mini, extensively raced at Silverstone between 1973 and 1975, on the track for the first time in 42 years at the Blyton Mk1 Action Day in 2017
The Mini Works:-
https://www.facebook...?type=3
https://www.facebook...?type=3
Cool looking '70's race Mini and a great photo !
Great bit of video in link below......of how I remember free formula race Minis sounded in the paddock during the 'unrestricted' 1960's and 70's era.
Turn up the volume!
https://www.facebook...=PAGES_TIMELINE
Edited by mab01uk, 21 October 2019 - 09:45 PM.
#232
Posted 27 October 2019 - 08:39 AM
#233
Posted 07 December 2019 - 05:45 PM
Neville Trickett's Minisprint racer
Mini-Sprint GT - May 1967 - MotorSport Magazine
Stewart and Ardern transform the Mini bodyshell
When the Mini was introduced most people thought a family saloon car could not be made any smaller if it was to seat four people in reasonable comfort, but someone always has to prove public opinion wrong and the first to do so, we believe, was Neville Trickett. His idea of lowering the car has been put into production by Stewart & Ardern Ltd., the Morris distributors, who skilfully cut the body in two places to reduce overall height by 4 1/4 in.
In fact the demonstration car is 5 in. lower than standard since the Hydrolastic suspension has been dropped, and it drew as much attention in the street as some exotic American cars we have been testing recently – not presumably because it is so startling, rather because it is obviously a Mini … but different. There is a definite trend toward "personalised" popular cars and this one might well catch on in limited quantity despite a large price label which reflects the amount of surgery done on the bodywork.
The basic Mini-Sprint conversion, which costs £335 onto the price of a Cooper or Cooper S, involves cutting the body above and below the waist-line, taking out a depth of 1 1/2 in. at each level and increasing the rake of front and rear windows. The Mini-Sprint GT conversion costing £400 takes an extra 1 1/4 in. from above the waist, making a total of 4 1/4 in., removes all the welded seams which stand proud of the normal bodywork, replacing them by butt or lapped joints which present a neater and smoother appearance. Perspex is fitted in all side and rear windows (the back side-windows no longer hinge outwards) and of course the doors, wings, and boot-lid have all been cut to size. Included in the specification are an acrylic paint finish, in any colour, rectangular Cibie headlights, a small diameter leather-trimmed steering wheel and column rake adjustment.
This is obviously a very sizeable operation and the workmanship is extremely good; it is not possible to see where the cutting has been done. However, despite special optional front seats and rear seat trim, we did not feel that the general appointments of this car lived up to a £1,000-plus price tag and would prefer to spend some of the money on Radford treatment such as nice, well-fitting carpets, soundproofing, electrically-operated windows, an instrument console and so on to make the car feel more luxurious.
Wind noise has been slightly reduced by the elimination of seams, but the 1275S engine in the demonstration car was such a rough, noisy unit – as they all are – that it feels an exciting experience anyway to reach 100 m.p.h. which we estimated to be the maximum speed, an extra three or four miles an hour deriving from smaller frontal area and slightly reduced weight.
Lowered suspension adds to the overall effect but while improving the high-speed handling, it was not ideal for roadwork as the Mini-Sprint was really harsh on bumpy roads and the front wheels sometimes hit the wheel arches. The wheels, incidentally, were magnesium alloy with 4 1/2J rims costing £70 for a set of five.
Individuality costs money and with a car like this it is hard to assess a reasonable price. Considering the work involved the cost is undoubtedly justified, especially since the bare bodyshells can be bought for £230 or £260 depending on the conversion and built up from there, and while we can think of better ways of spending up to £1,250 this is very much a matter of taste. – M. L. C.
https://www.motorspo.../mini-sprint-gt
#234
Posted 09 December 2019 - 07:21 PM
From Dec 2019 Classic & Sports Car magazine...
More Here:-
http://www.theminifo...otos/?p=2452165
"Gordon Allen is something of an engineering adventurer. His various achievements over the years in the pursuit of engineering enjoyment and motor sport pleasure include designing and constructing a two-cylinder, twin-overhead camshaft racing motorcycle engine, constructing upon Mini gearboxes two four-cylinder, 1.5-litre alloy block engines fitted with adapted Jaguar twin-cam cylinder heads and placing one in each end of a racing Mini, making his own eight-port alloy cylinder head for a Mini complete with his own fuel-injection arrangement and now his latest trick is to adapt a Ford-BDA cylinder head to his own designed arid manufactured block and crankshaft assembly to create a 16-valve, five-bearing, dry-sumped, racing Mini engine. Several Allen BDA-engined Minis are racing successfully, including that of Peter Kitchen, in which Allen has an interest and which I was fortunate enough to try at Silverstone last year (but that's another story).
However, constructing engines is really a hobby for Allen, who runs Allen Tool and Engineering Ltd., from Slough Trading Estate (Slough 23782). It is a hobby which led him by chance into the manufacture of crankshafts and his small engineering works is becoming widely known in competition circles for the quality of his nitrided steel crankshafts machined from solid billets. Many leading engine builders use his crankshafts in Formula Two, Three and Atlantic Ford BDA engines, but his manufacturing capabilities spread far beyond these modern racing realms into vintage and historic crankshaft manufacture. He can make any crankshaft so long as it is not too big for his machines and provided a drawing or preferably an actual example (even broken) of the crank required is available.
https://www.motorspo...23/gordon-allen
Edited by mab01uk, 09 December 2019 - 11:45 PM.
#235
Posted 09 December 2019 - 10:46 PM
From Dec 2019 Classic & Sports Car magazine...
" One of the most interesting cars competing in Irish saloon class events is undoubtedly the 'Complan Mini' - sponsored by Glaxo Laboratories (Ireland) Ltd., and driven by Alec Poole. Highlight of a successful 1970 season was a dramatic victory at the I.M.R.C. meeting in the Phoenix Park, when after being left at the start, Poole provided the driving thrill of the year in coming through the field to win by almost 2 seconds. The 1.3 litre turbo charged Mini has a power output of 180bhp, runs 13" wheels with 8" front rims and 7" rear rims, can touch 140mph on the straights, and has an overall weight reduction on the standard model of 2.5 cwt. "
More info and photos on the Complan Turbo Mini here:-
http://www.theminifo...otos/?p=3343892
Edited by mab01uk, 09 December 2019 - 10:55 PM.
#236
Posted 09 December 2019 - 11:33 PM
Pluck of the Irish - January 2014 (MotorSport magazine)
"The old adage that 'nice guys finish last' isn't strictly true, but they rarely finish first. To succeed in motor sport at a high level requires steel-plated self-belief. That and a certain clear-eyed ruthlessness. But there are exceptions. Reeling off a list of Alec Poole's, achievements in motor sport is met with a look of playful incredulity from the man himself. That and a shrug, as though his career has been one long lucky streak. As a former works BMC driver, one with a British Saloon Car Championship title on his résumé, he has every right to brag, but instead appears baffled by the attention."
More here:-
https://www.motorspo...128/pluck-irish
Edited by mab01uk, 09 December 2019 - 11:34 PM.
#237
Posted 14 December 2019 - 06:09 PM
#238
Posted 21 December 2019 - 01:38 PM
#239
Posted 23 December 2019 - 07:34 PM
#240
Posted 24 December 2019 - 04:28 PM
Edited by mab01uk, 24 December 2019 - 04:55 PM.
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