The 88-89 800 Vitesse was fitted with a Honda engine, a good one at that. I'm also confident that the Pond Vitesse was modified to some degree. The exhaust wasn't standard, it's far to raspy, something that the production exhaust wasn't.Hi Nodge, I didn't realise the C27a was not an earlier version of the KV6 - interesting.
I believe that (supposedly) the Pond Vitesse was fitted with modified struts only - HOWEVER - the local traffic cops and also the armed response units (who were mates of mine) used a manual box special version of the vitesse 2.7 around that time. It was definitely modified from the 'public' version - it was certainly lighter (A hell of a lot of trim and weight was removed) and reportedly (by the cops) had been fairly well 'breathed on' in most departments - engine - suspension - brakes etc.
So, quite possibly Tony's car was 'production' but not 'public' production
Ref the tr6 and 200 Brake - amazing - it was actually incredible what sort of power outputs were being produced in the 70's and 80's. We had an A series demo at 'mini sport' - 1400 cc mini with 100 at the wheels - and still driveable - more or less. My Chevette had to be changed to single cam with the modded road rally regs in the early 80's that banned twin cams and more than 2 choke inlets. the Vauxhall 2.3 lump with Blydenstein head and cam - and twin 2" SU carbs produced 180 at the wheels - again still driveable. Coupled to a getrag box and G4 axle with LSD it was a total best.
As for sunbeams which i think (in lotus body trim) are one of the best looking cars made- when the regs banned twin cams we fitted the 2 ltr talbot engine with suitable head and cam, standard mods like flywheel skimming etc - on either split dcoes (using one choke from each carb to avoid flow biasing to the inner cylinders) they were incredibly quick and handled beautifully. There is something magical about rear wheel drive on road or stage, not exceptionally quick by modern standards but totally memorising to watch. You can't beat the smell of Castrol R and burning rubber along with the deafening noise of the cr&p hitting the sump guard and underbody...
I think I might have a few years on you (11 if the 68 is birth date lol) I stopped the paid mechanical work in 1982 and continued to do it as a hobby whilst I still had the rally cars.
I have been to the IOM twice only and both times on business for the health service. Due to limited flights and short meetings we had more or less the whole day(s) to ourselves. The local health service gave us a pool car to use and my partner was well into the TT stuff and went every year - so I got full tours of the circuits - excellent stuff. Not really into bikes, but would have loved to have been at the Manx rallies in the days of Pond, Jimmy McRae and Russel Brooks etc. All I managed was copies of the videos and in car suff...
I can believe that lots of excess weight was removed as the trim was heavy stuff. The rear seats weight a ton too, so those would have been missing.
What is interesting is the revs achieved by the engine. It spends lots of time over 6500 Rpm, jumping over 7000 Rpm as the wheels lift on humps. Something is amiss here, as the engine ECU limited engine speed to about 6600 iirc. So the tachometer was just as optimistic as the speedometer, or the ECU rev limiter had been tweeked. Interesting run to see again though.
Back when I was building modified cars, improving performance wasn't as easy as it is today. It was always tricky to optimise the carbs and ignition to the engine's requirements. With today's electronic controls, these important functions can now be spot on for the entire rev range, regardless of load or throttle position.
I have a 72 Hillman Avenger GT in my garage which I plan to restore, one day. The engine hasn't run for 20 years but is still free turning and rust free internally. That engine is running 1700cc with PowerMax pistons and a modified Tiger head. The inlets flow almost 100 ft per minute which gave a not to shabby 145 Bhp running twin 45s and big exhaust. I remember it took ages of dyno time to get it running acceptably through all conditions. When I get her running again, I plan on using a modern injection system. I'm sure it will make more power and be more tractable than carbs and a dizzy setup.
Yes I was born in 68. Nodge is my nickname
Last edited: