It's literally been months that I've been meaning to start a thread...now's the time.
The cars:
Austin Healey 3000 BT7
My dad bought this car quite some time ago. Proper due diligence was not performed. For any Healey guys out there, it's (as far as I can tell) a BT7 from 1960, titled as a BJ8 with BJ8 doors, engine and transmission. Nonetheless, he drove it for a little bit, moved out of the country for two years, drove it a little bit, had my sister, drove it a little bit, had me, and stored it. I've been a car nut for as long as anyone can remember so I forced him to keep it all through my childhood. We even used to go on special trips to visit it once it gave up its spot in my parent's garage. High school came along and I got it running and used to putz around our neighborhood, stopping with the handbrake.
I then got serious and started a thread about the restoration here: Healey Thread
I got busy with our kitchen renovation this past summer and there isn't much action in the Motorsports section of BCF so I stopped posting there. There's a Healey specific forum that I've posted some things in, but I'm trying to consolidate. When I stopped posting pictures, I was working on the hinge pillars and sills. A lot has happened since then.
Copied from the old thread, here is the plan for the Healey:
Phase 1:
Restored to good "driver" quality level with some...racing...upgrades such as:
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Cage (not sure to what extent)
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Side exhaust
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Up-rated suspension components (again, not sure to what extent)
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Racing clutch, lightened flywheel
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Oil cooler?
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Other misc things such as racing seats, tow hooks, battery cut-off, etc.
I see Phase 1 as getting us to a point where we can take the car to open track days at Nelson Ledges, solo events, etc. where we can get our feet wet and don't necessarily need a fully "built" race car. I expect the car to remain in the Phase 1 state for a good amount of time, possibly getting some small upgrades along the way
Phase 2:
- Fully-built vintage racer- When we reach Phase 2 will be primarily dictated on (mostly) my financial situation.
- The engine is a strong runner, but certainly to be competitive we'll want to have it built into a true racing engine. This is not in the cards right now.
- Toyota 5 speed conversion?
- Competition components throughout
Since the last post on BCF, I've finished the sills, both hinge plates, both footwells, driver and passenger floors, tacked in the forward mounts for the rear leafs, replaced the rear crossmember and tacked the new side panels in place. Being able to stand on a floor board without it flexing was a moment I had to capture.
Old BMWs are very close to my heart. The car I bought myself in high school was an '85 E28 and I drove it all through college. My best friend from college drives an E21 and we made our going out money working on a few Callaway E21s and other vintage BMWs a local collector had.
Last year, I decided to sell my C10 and buy a car to race. I realized it will be quite some time before the Healey is actually a legitimate race car and I've spent entirely too much time watching racing and longing to be out there (save some auto-x and track days). This (ugly) E21 came up for sale near Columbus for something like $800. I hadn't sold the truck, had nowhere to put it, but was practically running to my car (on my lunch break mind you) to drive down and buy it. I call the guy who informs me it was purchased THAT MORNING.
Fast forward 6-8 months, the truck is sold, I'm cruising CL and what do I see? Yep! $1,500 later I was driving an unregistered, rough-running, loud as hell, green and yellow race car on 20+ year old tires across town. Sketchy. (Click on the picture for the video.)
It was prepped ITB and ran at Mid Ohio and in a number of other events from 93-96. My plan with the car is to clean it up and get it all prepped for vintage racing. I'll use it to get my competition license and develop my driving.
Most of the progress on the E21 has been cosmetic thus far although it is running a lot better after getting it to run on 4 cylinders consistently and enacting a bit of an "Italian tuneup". My competition school is in April, so I'll be making a pretty big parts order later this month or next and diving in. Day one:
How it looks now:
That's where I'll leave it for now. Clearly, I'm no master fabricator and I've never prepped a race car before so any tips, tricks, etc. are more than welcome!