I see you every year at the Salt Flats with this setup. Always fun seeing a fellow Oregonian down there!
Mine is in progress -- a 1932 Model PB Plymouth roadster with a '53 Dodge 241 hemi shown here in the foreground:
Off brand huh,okay everybody with the SBs the Hemis and the Cadillac,Mopar,Buick nailheads in those Fords park em they are off brand.
I have some hens teeth but it has been a very long time since I saw an early morgan. My dad actually owned a '64 that he really liked. I don't think that they have changed the body style much over the years. About 3 years before my dad p***ed be finsished a restoration on a Lister Jag for a fella. That actually could be a lester Jag I have never seen it written down and a lot of times names get lost in the translation. Anyway if I were a rich man I would really like to have one of those. I think I could actually be content just getting to drive one one time. Anyway way off topic, nice speaking with you again.
Thanks guys for the compliments. Just a few facts . Not intended to high jack the thread. Car has a 3 inch chop on a homebuilt frame with 4 inch kick under the cowl and 6 inch kick in the rear with coil over shocks. Set up for 700R4/350 TBI combo from my ex high millage dayly driver. I know TBI is not traditional or appropriate for the HAMB. But A budget build, doing as much as possibly my self, I am retired. More pics in my profile album.
i'm happy with my 46 international. only problem i ever had with it is it's built to well. EVERY SINGLE bolt , nut and screw is machine threaded , EVERY ONE! half an hour to take off both fenders . *&^(*&%&*^!!!!
Maybe not that far off topic. The Lister Jag was a British hot-rod from 1957. The first ones used Jaguar DOHC sixes, but later offered 283 Chevy power (270 HP) as an option. The Chevy versions were $1000 cheaper than the Jag-engine versions, and were quite a bit faster to boot. Quite a few Listers are on the vintage racing circuits, and the V8 cars are loud brutes that still make good time around the tracks. Frank C.