Thursday 4 July 2013

What do you give a man that has everything?...A headache


Well Howard has a saying that you can never have enough of a good thing and I suppose that must be true. It would at least explain why having a classic car, a workshop, tools and a pile of car manuals would not be enough for someone with a desire to build something from the ground up.
So the day after we had decided to drive down the country to become the proud owners of a replica Type 35 Bugatti, we headed back down the country again to buy an unfinished kit car project . But I need to go back a step. I’m making it sound a lot easier than it was to decide on what we wanted to build or even if we should build at all but before we could track down an available kit car we had the difficult task of deciding what kit to choose.
A classic car and workshop was clearly not enough!

The Ronart W152
 hAlthough it was a difficult task it was far from unpleasant really, as it gave us an excuse to visit a variety of car shows and events looking for inspiration. When we had finished kicking tyres at a number of shows, auto jumbles and in car parks, we found ourselves at the Stoneliegh kit car show in 2007. After stroking the curves and sitting behind the wheel of what felt like hundreds of kit cars including a large number of Cobra and lotus 7 type replicas, we finally settled on a Ronart W152 

The car appealed to both of us instantly, and the minor practical obstacles of not having anywhere to store it at the time, neither of us having any experience of building a  car and not actually being able to test drive one of these before we bought the kit  were not enough to put us off. Nor was the prospect of owning yet another open top car in one of the wettest countries in Europe!

We managed to secure a Ronart kit at the rolling chassis stage and tracked down a suitable donor car  in the form of a Jaguar  XJ6, series 3, 4.2ltr with a manual gear box on ebay so our next project was underway.

The Ronart  is an ongoing (mainly winter) project which keeps us busy on  gloomy wet weekends. The body panels are now all in place and the component kit parts are  sorted and stored in the workshop. As some of the parts were missing and the ones that were there didn’t all have right part numbers on them, it gave us quite a headache while we tried to make sense of it all. It’s was a bit like trying to do a jigsaw when the lid of the box is missing!
 
 
That all seems like such a long time ago now but we did learn a valuable lesson which has stayed with us....Never tackle a job unless you are armed with a large mug of tea and a supply of biscuits!

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