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Posted
5 hours ago, wuvvum said:

I'm imagining that Cressida de Little in her Delage is going to be quite impossibly posh.

She must be alright if she has been named after a classic Toyota.

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Posted

But Corolla de Little. Cressida Delage.

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Posted
Just now, RichardK said:

But Corolla de Little. Cressida Delage.

That’s her sister.

Posted
On 26/01/2025 at 17:35, HMC said:

I think it’s probably more about an over engineered hull (through ignorance rather than intent) than inherent rust resistance.

When Austin first road tested prototype versions of the previous A50/A55 (the ‘cowhip’ model) which was their first car of this size with a unitary structure, the bodies failed with lots of cracks. Funnily enough Spain was considered the best place for this arduous ‘colonial’ testing!

So lots of additional strength was added in traditional 1950s manner i.e. more steel, the thicker the better.  Practically another chassis was welded underneath the original floor pan. 

The Farinas were restyled versions of these earlier cars, hence the A55s always looked a bit over bodied - the body shell was a little wider but still on the same track as the earlier car. The A60 had a wider track so looked better and was considered a much more sorted car to drive - the A55 Farina was more along the lines of ‘I like to understeer, do you want some, more than some, or a complete shitload’?

One of the reasons Farinas survived until the introduction of the Marina was that fleets loved them. They didn’t like 1800s at all, certainly not the early 64-67 ones. Fleets also liked Minors, despite the antiquated image, for example 2 drs were a very popular early ‘panda’ car for many police forces. 

Posted

A60s were known 'tech'. Transverse, cable gears, soft suspension? Not for serious cars, only for mini ones.

Posted

I took the a60 to university today. I was a bit brave in the sense i hadn't tested its ability to not boil over in stop start traffic, nor do a longer journey. Plus I had 2 teenage schoolgirls to drop off en route, so it wouldn't just be me that was late, if some HERITAGE crept in and we ended up at the roadside. But it felt like a car that had been driven and looked after. So a took a chance on it rather than the 75.

I think my passengers were mildly amused by sliding about on the rear bench whilst scrolling on their phones as we made our way over roundabouts with a bit of body roll. But we all got where we were going on time. 

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Posted

With a week to go the the exmoor trial ive been getting the 12/4 ready for scrutineering.

AFFF Extinguisher. marked tow points, spill kit, additional throttle return springs etc. I decided the crew (kids will be bouncers for the hill climbing) needed extra motivation (and weight) so ive gone to get takeaway  pizza.

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Posted

Its an unlikely entry, in a class (2a) mainly populated by 3.3L ford model As (basically twice the displacment) But its all about having fun and making memories and, I suspect , in a minority in that its being driven to and (hopefully) from the event.

This is  the herefordshire event- which looks a bit less muddy and less cold.

 

 

Posted

I dislike that intensely; motorsport where a class is supposed to be roadgoing/roadworthy populated by trailer queens. Offroad trialling was full of it the one time I had a go, thoroughly offputting.

Posted

I was taken by the line, in the vid above, 'of course it's not about the [extreme] value of our cars, it's just we treat them as enjoyment...'

*Slight paraphrase but struck me as NOT break it = bus home 🤔

Looks muddy!!

🚙💨

Posted

Ive now got the “buff form” that confirms its eligibility, and its standard configuration. 

I also needed to finish prep- nothing extreme but necessary to pass scrutineering. All sorted and just doing some final checks before we set off early tomorrow….

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Posted

Some paving slabs in that rear trunk may help traction!

Herbert Austin would be proud.

Surprisingly large rear window for an early 30's car.

I note you have a 'smokers hatch' in the roof too!

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Posted
On 08/02/2025 at 17:27, HMC said:

Its an unlikely entry, in a class (2a) mainly populated by 3.3L ford model As (basically twice the displacment) But its all about having fun and making memories and, I suspect , in a minority in that its being driven to and (hopefully) from the event.

This is  the herefordshire event- which looks a bit less muddy and less cold.

 

 

She's rather nice 🍆

  • Agree 2
Posted
38 minutes ago, HMC said:

Um which way?

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Or maybe 1967?

Best of luck anyway. I note not everyone is wearing wellies...may be a rash act 😂

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Posted
1 hour ago, HMC said:

Scrutineering : LEVEL UNLOCKED

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Amazing. Best of luck

Posted

This austin is suprisingly capable despite appearences…..  we all had great fun so far, here im sorting the exhaust after i crushed the back of it

 

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And just stopping for a quick bite to eat

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Posted

If you get stuck you could copy the wheeze used by Johnny Mills in "Ice Cold in Alex" and wind it backwards up the hill with the handle in reverse gear. Probably.

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Posted
16 minutes ago, somewhatfoolish said:

If you get stuck you could copy the wheeze used by Johnny Mills in "Ice Cold in Alex" and wind it backwards up the hill with the handle in reverse gear. Probably.

Works in forward gears as well, just double check the ignition is off as you wouldn't want to be running yourself over.

  • Haha 2
Posted

We seemed to get appreciation for not taking a typical trials car, and for how incongruous it looks when it was being eased up avery rocky and muddy  hillsides in Exmoor

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Posted

Memories are made of this. Some school bragging rights there 👍🤗

Herbert Austin was the son of a farmer from Little Missenden Buckinghamshire and spent 10 years working in Australia. So understood machinery needed to be tough.

Austins - right up to the mid-1950's were really tough cars. Yours is the epitome of his design approach.

Looks fantastic with a bit of mud from use too.

Fab photos.

Posted

This looks an interesting read. Not a book I've come across before.

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Posted
2 hours ago, HMC said:

We seemed to get appreciation for not taking a typical trials car, and for how incongruous it looks when it was being eased up avery rocky and muddy  hillsides in Exmoor

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That looks like a load of fun.

Nice to see old stuff being used and enjoyed!

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