Potted History of 723 JOE: It was originally almond green with green porcelain interior, but that is long gone - I remember the stuffing coming out of the top of the back seat in 1973 when I was 4. My mother used the mini for a while until one of the headlamps fell through the wing, so it was laid up for 8 years until 1981/2 when my father and I started to restore / modernise it. Mom wanted a heated rear window and Mk3 back lights to make it look like a then new mini, so Dad cut and reshaped the back panel (sacrilege now we know, but back then they were 10 a penny...) It had a new front end, door skins and boot floor repairs, and was re-spayed Ford signal yellow with black mini special arches and those horrid bolt on wheel spacers and a beige vinyl interior from a later mini, we then added a set of 10" 1275GT rostyle wheels which looked a bit better but vibrated like mad.
I bought it of my parents in 1986 as my first car and set about Cooperising it with twin 1 1/4 SU carbs, LCB manifold and RC40 exhaust, a friend of mine was breaking a burned out Cooper S, I missed out on the engine and box, but bought the rest of the saveable running gear, so the mini has Cooper S 7.5 discs and extended rear drums and remote servo, all in preparation for fitting a 1275 engine and box. I also fitted an internal SPQR remote gear linkage which my uncle had in his minivan, unfortunately the original console was lost, but I still have the shifter which fits on top of the tunnel.
I used and abused the mini for a few years, battling tin worm and trying to keep it on the road on a students income. I took it off the road in 1988 when the passenger door burst open on a roundabout and pulled the hinge out of the A panel just before the MOT was due. I laid it up and started on rebuilding the inner and outer A post which then ran into the door step and inner and outer cill on the near side, and the bottom corner of the rear quarter. While I was at it, I decided to fit some spax adjustable shocks and on investigating the front shock mounting, found that the inner wing on the o/s was rotted out, as was the scuttle end and a panels leading to the door step and inner and outer cills. At this point I got distracted with other things and needed a more reliable and usable car, so the mini remained off the road.
Fast forward 28 years (gulp) and a few lockup moves, home renovations, marriage and 3 kids etc, and I have finally got around to picking up where I left off with the Mini. The number plate has always been its saving grace and motivation for keeping the mini, but now my two boys are interested in helping to restore it, there is no chance of selling it.
The last time I tinkered with the mini and started it up, the water pump and alternator had seized and shredded the fan belt, and with standing so long, the brake and clutch master cylinder seals had perished and dumped brake fluid down the inside of the bulk head, and the clutch lever / push rod had seized.
Over the last couple of weekends, we have removed the brake and clutch master cylinders and replaced the clutch master and slave cylinder, freed off the clutch arm and replaced the water pump and alternator with a spare off a 1275 engine I acquired, and with some fresh fuel, and a new battery the mini started up and runs a treat holding normal temperature and over 50psi oil pressure, and moved under it's own power for the first time in a long while. This may seem like a waste of time, as it is going to be stripped down to a bare shell, but I just wanted to get it running first.
Last weekend, I removed the remainder of the front end and some old patch / plating in preparation for removing the engine and front subframe. I had contemplated fitting a one piece steel flip front, but have decided against it based on safety / IVA / Originality etc.
It is going to be a slow and steady restoration, it's been 28 years in planning already!, but I will add updates as and when.
I have just ordered some scaffold and key clamp fittings to make myself a roll over jig which is a job for this coming weekend.
Here are some pictures of the deconstruction:




And one from the late 80's when it was last on the road.

Sorry for the long opening, but there is a lot of history with the car. Future posts will be more concise - honest!
Thanks for reading!
Edited by Richc69, 17 May 2016 - 06:24 AM.