In reply to David S. Wallens:
Looks like it would be fun for rallyx - all the handling of a Porsche with the ruggedness of a Jeep.
For the current price of a Speedster, someone got this: one of the 50 or so surviving Porsche 597 Jagdwagens. This light military vehicle was never fully put into production, so only 71 examples were produced between 1955 and 1958. This fine example sold at Gooding & Company’s Amelia Island sale for $330,000.
In reply to David S. Wallens:
Looks like it would be fun for rallyx - all the handling of a Porsche with the ruggedness of a Jeep.
You see I think there is a market for the Jagdwagens/Thing/Volvo C303 style vehicles.
I think it is a missed niche in the bespoke/kit world.
In reply to Flight Service:
Yeah I think the same thing about the mini-moke. Or less related the 500 Jolly.
nutherjrfan wrote: In reply to Flight Service: Yeah I think the same thing about the mini-moke. Or less related the 500 Jolly.
there is a Chinese complete mini moke being built right now (IRRC under the direction of an australian company). I wonder if someone could buy one sans engine and transmission, import it, fit a commonly available engine, make the brackets for popular drivetrain combinations (honda, toyota, nissan, VW diesel, hell maybe even a new MINI), and then sell the kit.
So the guy that designed the Beetle also made the 911, did he also design the Thing and this? Or is this something else "real" car guys will give me crap about for misidentifying?
I do like the wheel/grill though, and it looks like you could make all kinds of suspension travel available... Hmm.
Taking a second look, whats up with those wheels? VW style wheel studs that go over the whole hub?
In reply to Flight Service:
Bill Cox was importing Chokes and selling them out of NC.
Here is a link to an ad. Personally, I would be wary of doing business with Bill. People either love him or despise him, but it seems like a lot more fall into the latter camp than the former.
A friend of mine did some work on one of the Chokes. It required a good bit of tinkering and adjustments to make it actually road worthy and dependable, but they are a fairly accurate copy of an actual Moke.
T.J. wrote: In reply to Flight Service: Bill Cox was importing Chokes and selling them out of NC. Here is a link to an ad. Personally, I would be wary of doing business with Bill. People either love him or despise him, but it seems like a lot more fall into the latter camp than the former. A friend of mine did some work on one of the Chokes. It required a good bit of tinkering and adjustments to make it actually road worthy and dependable, but they are a fairly accurate copy of an actual Moke.
I also remember his markup after I found them on Alibaba for exponentially less money.
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