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New TR7 shells

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RUDDY
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Postby RUDDY » 22 Nov 2009 21:32

When I asked they had 40+ new passenger doors and 8 new drivers doors, They also said they originally had 108 new TR7 shells !!

Cheers, Paul

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Dave Dyer
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Postby Dave Dyer » 23 Nov 2009 09:33

Hi Paul,

108 shells!!! That shows how bad my memory is! But thinking about it now, 30 shells wouldn't look a lot and there were a lot. A bloke from work could see them from his garden, so I went to look one evening (in my first TR7) and was told to leave by a security guard!! Fitchett eventually moved them into his large purpose built building where they were stacked a one end, floor to roof. He told me that he sold one straight away to a chap who was going to build it into a v8, Grinnall himself maybe?

Cheers, Dave

gslittle
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Postby gslittle » 23 Nov 2009 13:00

That's a very nice Triton green shell - it'll be nice to see the car finished if it hasn't been already. My favourite TR7/8 colour.

On the subject of the rhd/lhd split, for what it's worth I've had two wedges which have been converted from lhd to rhd, both by specialists. It didn't add much to the cost of the second one - the conversion being included in the cost (albeit in 1998) of £2k for a rust-free Californian shell including the doors, bonnet and boot lid plus preparing and painting with primer all of the affected areas.

I suppose what I'm saying is that it may not cost too much for one of the specialists who are well versed in the procedure to carry out the work on one of these shells before it is delivered.

Just a thought

Graham

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1979 TR7 TCT DHC 16V
Formerly...
1980 TR7 FHC
1980 Factory TR8 DHC
1980 Factory TR8 DHC Automatic
1977 TR7 FHC Parts Car
1980 TR7 FHC Parts Car

RUDDY
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Postby RUDDY » 23 Nov 2009 13:43

Spoke to Fitchetts this morning, all the remaining shells are RHD, he believes that of the original stock there were only 1 or 2 LHD amongst them.

Cheers, Paul

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Odd
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Postby Odd » 23 Nov 2009 18:07

OK,
thanks for checking on it Paul.

RUDDY
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Postby RUDDY » 10 Dec 2009 18:45

Well last weekend we had a delivery, decided to go ahead and purchase one of those 'new' shells. As I am having a few health issues at the moment a good friend offered to do the 450 mile round trip to pick up the shell.

I waited at my mates bodyshop and after many cups of tea Steve rolled up with the shell, as you can see from the pictures 225 miles did not remove all the dust that had gathered over the near 30 years storage. A quick inspection and there were a few dings here and there, quite minor, but no rust [:D][:D]

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Off the trailer and into the workshop,clean off some dust and positioned on the lift and castors welded to the skids for ease of storage.

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Then work begins, all the shells at Fitchetts had sunroofs and as I always wanted a non- sunroof TR7 it was time to remove the roof skin. At this point some people are of the beleive that it is a case of chopping the roof at the pillers, it isn't, the roof skin is no different to changing a door skin, simply a case of taking the time to remove all the spot welds and then take the skin from the frame .

This job I entrusted to the bodyshop guys, I didn't panic because the week earlier I had watched the same guy do this on an almost new top of the range BMW.

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Bye bye roof skin

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Very little paint was found between skin and roof structure so this was bare metaled and primed/painted before moving on to the next step

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And here we have the donor roof that will offer its skin

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A trial fit

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Then out with a very expensive piece of kit, I am informed this cost £26k, it was purchased recently when the insurance companies insisted on all welds being checked and verified. This machine is downloadable to a PC, the guys who use it have to put in their unique password, the machine calibrates itself to the car, does the spot weld and gives a pass or fail on the weld, this can be retrieved by the insurance companies if they want to audit jobs or if the car is involved in another crash and a weld is suspect etc.

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Next job was to remove the battery tray, as the car is gonna be V8 I am moving the battery to the boot.

I also have a pair of brand new doors and I hope to trial fit these over the next couple of days.

I am now torn between painting the car Java green or the red of the Works cars but no blue/white stripe on.

More pics info as work progresses.

Cheers, Paul

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Beans
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Postby Beans » 10 Dec 2009 19:44

Nice [8D], great to see you got rid of the hole in the roof [:D]

Same will happen with my FHC in the (hopefully not to distant) future

<center>Image
<font color="blue"><i>1981 TR7 FHC Sprint (better known as 't Kreng)
1980 TR7 DHC (my first car currently being restored)
In parts a 1980 TR7 PI DHC, 1981 TR7 DHC, 1981 TR7 FHC</font id="blue">
<font color="red">http://tr7beans.blogspot.com/</i></font id="red"></center>

tr7jim
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Postby tr7jim » 10 Dec 2009 19:53

Paul,

Do you think you can put this together for a article in the mag, looks like you will have full detailed restoration / conversion.

If you haven't got time can you send me the pictures and I will put something together about purchasing a new shell etc.

Looks excellant.

Jim

stricky
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Postby stricky » 10 Dec 2009 19:54

nice job there Paul [:)]

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'81 TR7 DHC
'79 TR7 V8 FHC

Photo's Here - http://s480.photobucket.com/albums/rr170/stricky1967/

Steve-LPS-Thomas
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Postby Steve-LPS-Thomas » 10 Dec 2009 20:41

Nice work.. what are you doing with the hole?

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Dave Dyer
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Postby Dave Dyer » 10 Dec 2009 20:52

Gosh, well done Paul, new shell.....lovely!

What sort of treatments are you going to use to keep it 'new' and are you going to strip it back to bare metal ?

Just come to mind, will this have to be a 'Q' plate, or can you keep the original reg, not sure how things work when doing a re-shell?

Cheers, Dave

stevie_a
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Postby stevie_a » 10 Dec 2009 21:09

<font color="maroon"><b>could put all new parts

and be a new 60 or 61 plate ...[8D]</b></font id="maroon">

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<font size="4"><font color="green"><i>If it's not broke don't fix it.</i></font id="green"></font id="size4">

RUDDY
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Postby RUDDY » 10 Dec 2009 21:11

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Dave Dyer</i>

Gosh, well done Paul, new shell.....lovely!

What sort of treatments are you going to use to keep it 'new' and are you going to strip it back to bare metal ?

Just come to mind, will this have to be a 'Q' plate, or can you keep the original reg, not sure how things work when doing a re-shell?

Cheers, Dave
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">

Dave, shell will be bare metaled and modern primers, sealers and paint applied.
Q reg does not come into the equation as it is a new service shell for an existing vehicle, Q is when a car is built from several used sources and full age/identity cannot be confirmed. Spoke to Robsport this morning for some parts and they have used a couple of these shells in restorations with excellent results.

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Chris Turner
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Postby Chris Turner » 10 Dec 2009 22:45

Shell looks superb, you cant get a better basis for a restoration. Even the best original shells will have some rust.

www.triumphtrs.co.uk
TR7 Premium
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TR7V8 rally car

FI Spyder
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Postby FI Spyder » 11 Dec 2009 00:20

I'd like that welding machine/tester. The original TR8's had the battery tray still in place. Is there any advantage to removing it? ie. better access to something on a UK car?.



TR7 Spider - 1978 Spifire - 1976 Spitfire - 1988 Tercel 4X4 - Kali on Integra - 1991 Integra
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