Concours Standards
-
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Wed Mar 06, 2002 4:14 am
Concours Standards
Hi Kids
Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one
international standard, or is it regional? "TC's Forever" is very
informative, but I'd like to know stuff like whether certain nuts, bolts,
clips are cad plated, painted, etc. Am I an Originality Cop? Heck no- I
just like to restore my car correctly so that any of you looking at it will
be impressed with its correctness.
Thanks!
Martin Johnson
TC3586
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2001 4:10 pm
Re: Concours Standards
----- Original Message ----- "Hi Kids Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one international standard, or is it regional?..............." Martin Johnson TC3586 Keith Martin, editor of Sports Car Market has much to say in the July issue of his excellent magazine regarding "internationally accepted standards" of restoration. I will quote a portion of Mr. Martin's editorial. ".......... For example, an American restoration generally includes a chromed gas tank and a car that breaks down 50 feet into the Mille Miglia. A Japanese restoration will feature stunning paint, a perfect interior, and a highly detailed engine that's missing its crankshaft. An English restoration is a pile of rusty bits, slathered with bondo, painted with a broad brush, and topped off with a British Heritage Trust Certificate. And an Italian restoration begins with a scrap of metal from a hidden Swiss junkyard, often containing the chassis number of a missing Ferrari or Alfa competition car of the '50s and '60s. After a liberal sprinkling of large-denomination Euros, suddenly a complete car appears, which is then smeared with instant patina". In short, there are no standards. A "restoration" is what you think it should be and what your buddies think it should be as is amply demonstrated by the wide range of opinions expressed within the small framework of this odd little group. Only bear in mind that there is no such thing as an "original restoration". Your car is either original or it is restored - it can't be both. A totally original car retains the paint, upholstery, and everything else that it left the factory with. A "sympathetic restoration" is one that retains as much as possible of a car's originality and seeks to refurbish only the minimum necessary to keep the car trim and roadworthy and only to the original standard. A "full restoration" is to be avoided and should only be a last resort due to its highly invasive and historically destructive nature to be visited only upon cars that have been so ravaged by time and use that no part of their originality can be salvaged. I shall endeavor to refrain from any comments regarding the installation of various Datsun, Chevrolet, Volkswagen, Nash, Kelvinator, Hoover, spaniel, dachshund, Boeing, or any other odd bits which an owner may decide needs to be attached to his MG. Squire Badger
-
- Posts: 165
- Joined: Sat Feb 03, 2007 10:55 pm
Re: Concours Standards
Hey!! What's wrong with the J 79 (with afterburner) that we put in the TC
racer??
The guys at the drag strip love the "patina" it leaves behind........
Best,
Ray
----- Original Message ----- From: "BADGER" mrbadger@cox.net> To: "MG-TABC" mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 2:27 PM Subject: Re: [mg-tabc] Concours Standards > ----- Original Message ----- > "Hi Kids > Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one > international standard, or is it regional?..............." > Martin Johnson > TC3586 > > Keith Martin, editor of Sports Car Market has much to say in the July issue > of his excellent magazine regarding "internationally accepted standards" of > restoration. I will quote a portion of Mr. Martin's editorial. ".......... > For example, an American restoration generally includes a chromed gas tank > and a car that breaks down 50 feet into the Mille Miglia. A Japanese > restoration will feature stunning paint, a perfect interior, and a highly > detailed engine that's missing its crankshaft. An English restoration is a > pile of rusty bits, slathered with bondo, painted with a broad brush, and > topped off with a British Heritage Trust Certificate. And an Italian > restoration begins with a scrap of metal from a hidden Swiss junkyard, often > containing the chassis number of a missing Ferrari or Alfa competition car > of the '50s and '60s. After a liberal sprinkling of large-denomination > Euros, suddenly a complete car appears, which is then smeared with instant > patina". > In short, there are no standards. A "restoration" is what you think it > should be and what your buddies think it should be as is amply demonstrated > by the wide range of opinions expressed within the small framework of this > odd little group. Only bear in mind that there is no such thing as an > "original restoration". Your car is either original or it is restored - it > can't be both. A totally original car retains the paint, upholstery, and > everything else that it left the factory with. A "sympathetic restoration" > is one that retains as much as possible of a car's originality and seeks to > refurbish only the minimum necessary to keep the car trim and roadworthy and > only to the original standard. A "full restoration" is to be avoided and > should only be a last resort due to its highly invasive and historically > destructive nature to be visited only upon cars that have been so ravaged by > time and use that no part of their originality can be salvaged. > I shall endeavor to refrain from any comments regarding the installation of > various Datsun, Chevrolet, Volkswagen, Nash, Kelvinator, Hoover, spaniel, > dachshund, Boeing, or any other odd bits which an owner may decide needs to > be attached to his MG. > Squire Badger > > > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > >
-
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Wed Mar 06, 2002 4:14 am
Re: Concours Standards
Thanks Carl, Badger et al.
You guys answered my questions.
Martin
-----Original Message-----
From: cederstrand@earthlink.net [mailto:cederstrand@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 1:20 PM
To: Martin Johnson
Subject: Concours Standards
Hello Martin,
On the West Coast, all judging at T-Series events is done by popular choice
by the attendees. You make a mountain out of a mole hill. Have a
beautiful paint job (original color not required), a clean engine
compartment and shiny instrumernts and you're there. Besides, at T-Series
events, held by T owners, most of the 'judges' will be TD and TF owners.
They couldn't care less about the shape of an original acorn nut on the 46
TC as compared to one from a 47 TC.
Most T-Series owners are more inpressed by TCs (goes for all T-Series) that
are driven than by trailer queens.
Carl Cederstrand / Orange, California
.
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Sat Jul 07, 2001 4:17 pm
Re: Concours Standards
I accept most of what you said, BUT my M Type had a diagonally cut 5 gallon can
for a 'boat tail' when the original wooden body must have been bashed in. The
instruments were Triumph and Stewart Warner hand painted dials. The yellow
paint was not quite what the factory meant when they wrote in longhand on the
Build Sheet, "BLUE" ...... The serial number was some long involved series of
numbers assigned by the Department of Motor Vehicles, when they couldn't or
wouldn't look in the proper place for the samped number on the frame horn...
Since it is one of the first to come to the USA, as a new car, I felt it should
be restored as original "as it was built" as possible.......... This took ten
years.........
I looked at your "odd bits" and agreed until you got to "BOEING" That cut
deep into my past, as I worked for them(McDonnell Douglas). Whatever they make
that could be added to an MG MUST be good........... Maybe the cars would
fly?????? How about a Supersonic MG? You know MGs have wings.....
HA! Gotchya!
BOB
BADGER wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----- > "Hi Kids > Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one > international standard, or is it regional?..............." > Martin Johnson > TC3586 > > Keith Martin, editor of Sports Car Market has much to say in the July issue > of his excellent magazine regarding "internationally accepted standards" of > restoration. I will quote a portion of Mr. Martin's editorial. ".......... > For example, an American restoration generally includes a chromed gas tank > and a car that breaks down 50 feet into the Mille Miglia. A Japanese > restoration will feature stunning paint, a perfect interior, and a highly > detailed engine that's missing its crankshaft. An English restoration is a > pile of rusty bits, slathered with bondo, painted with a broad brush, and > topped off with a British Heritage Trust Certificate. And an Italian > restoration begins with a scrap of metal from a hidden Swiss junkyard, often > containing the chassis number of a missing Ferrari or Alfa competition car > of the '50s and '60s. After a liberal sprinkling of large-denomination > Euros, suddenly a complete car appears, which is then smeared with instant > patina". > In short, there are no standards. A "restoration" is what you think it > should be and what your buddies think it should be as is amply demonstrated > by the wide range of opinions expressed within the small framework of this > odd little group. Only bear in mind that there is no such thing as an > "original restoration". Your car is either original or it is restored - it > can't be both. A totally original car retains the paint, upholstery, and > everything else that it left the factory with. A "sympathetic restoration" > is one that retains as much as possible of a car's originality and seeks to > refurbish only the minimum necessary to keep the car trim and roadworthy and > only to the original standard. A "full restoration" is to be avoided and > should only be a last resort due to its highly invasive and historically > destructive nature to be visited only upon cars that have been so ravaged by > time and use that no part of their originality can be salvaged. > I shall endeavor to refrain from any comments regarding the installation of > various Datsun, Chevrolet, Volkswagen, Nash, Kelvinator, Hoover, spaniel, > dachshund, Boeing, or any other odd bits which an owner may decide needs to > be attached to his MG. > Squire Badger > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Sat Jul 07, 2001 4:17 pm
Re: Concours Standards
How come the beautiful paint job ( with all four wings painted the same color,
not primer) and the aligned screw slots, no Phillips heads on the older
models, shiny chrome on places that were never chromed, and the neatly laid
out tool set, folded crocheted suede gloves on the steering wheel, win the
top prizes ??????????? I won't mention the at least three different
Whitworth hex heads for bolts that show up(then there is the chrome versus
nickel, versus cadmium, versus galvanized bolt heads)(whoops! painted also,
AND, ............no finish!)
BOB(out West)
Martin Johnson wrote:
> Thanks Carl, Badger et al. > You guys answered my questions. > Martin > > -----Original Message----- > From: cederstrand@earthlink.net [mailto:cederstrand@earthlink.net] > Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 1:20 PM > To: Martin Johnson > Subject: Concours Standards > > Hello Martin, > > On the West Coast, all judging at T-Series events is done by popular choice > by the attendees. You make a mountain out of a mole hill. Have a > beautiful paint job (original color not required), a clean engine > compartment and shiny instrumernts and you're there. Besides, at T-Series > events, held by T owners, most of the 'judges' will be TD and TF owners. > They couldn't care less about the shape of an original acorn nut on the 46 > TC as compared to one from a 47 TC. > > Most T-Series owners are more inpressed by TCs (goes for all T-Series) that > are driven than by trailer queens. > > Carl Cederstrand / Orange, California > > . > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
-
- Posts: 292
- Joined: Mon Dec 13, 1999 4:38 pm
Re: Concours Standards
international standard, or is it regional?...............">Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one
of his excellent magazine regarding>Martin Johnson >Keith Martin, editor of Sports Car Market has much to say in the July issue
portion of Mr. Martin's editorial. "..........> "internationally accepted standards" of restoration. I will quote a
junkyard, often containing the>And an Italian restoration begins with a scrap of metal from a hidden Swiss
and '60s. After a liberal sprinkling of> chassis number of a missing Ferrari or Alfa competition car of the '50s
smeared with instant patina". This actually happened: a Cobra crashed out on an Alpine hairpin and was reduced to a smoldering wreck. The car was rebuilt around the only remaining usable part - the chassis i.d. plate. As to concours TCs, there will never be one standard, all our cars are unoriginal now in various respects, and concours cars cannot be used as Abingdon intended. The only "concours" cars I will enjoy looking at this coming Sunday at Silverstone are the ones in the class for the previous day's competitors, usually including at least one K3, possibly a J4 or an R-type, several C-types, L-types, J-types & P-types. Strangely, the Ts never enter... ocTagonally TCRoger [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]> large-denomination Euros, suddenly a complete car appears, which is then
-
- Posts: 156
- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2007 5:44 pm
Re: Concours Standards
Oh, I don't know; BSF nuts, bolts and washers in aircraft-grade titanium
might be rather nice!
Regards, David Lodge
> I accept most of what you said, BUT my M Type had a diagonally cut 5 gallon > can > for a 'boat tail' when the original wooden body must have been bashed in. The > instruments were Triumph and Stewart Warner hand painted dials. The yellow > paint was not quite what the factory meant when they wrote in longhand on the > Build Sheet, "BLUE" ...... The serial number was some long involved series of > numbers assigned by the Department of Motor Vehicles, when they couldn't or > wouldn't look in the proper place for the samped number on the frame horn... > Since it is one of the first to come to the USA, as a new car, I felt it > should > be restored as original "as it was built" as possible.......... This took > ten > years......... > I looked at your "odd bits" and agreed until you got to "BOEING" That cut > deep into my past, as I worked for them(McDonnell Douglas). Whatever they > make > that could be added to an MG MUST be good........... Maybe the cars would > fly?????? How about a Supersonic MG? You know MGs have wings..... > HA! Gotchya! > BOB > > > BADGER wrote: > >> ----- Original Message ----- >> "Hi Kids >> Are published concours standards for the TC available? Is it one >> international standard, or is it regional?..............." >> Martin Johnson >> TC3586 >> >> Keith Martin, editor of Sports Car Market has much to say in the July issue >> of his excellent magazine regarding "internationally accepted standards" of >> restoration. I will quote a portion of Mr. Martin's editorial. ".......... >> For example, an American restoration generally includes a chromed gas tank >> and a car that breaks down 50 feet into the Mille Miglia. A Japanese >> restoration will feature stunning paint, a perfect interior, and a highly >> detailed engine that's missing its crankshaft. An English restoration is a >> pile of rusty bits, slathered with bondo, painted with a broad brush, and >> topped off with a British Heritage Trust Certificate. And an Italian >> restoration begins with a scrap of metal from a hidden Swiss junkyard, often >> containing the chassis number of a missing Ferrari or Alfa competition car >> of the '50s and '60s. After a liberal sprinkling of large-denomination >> Euros, suddenly a complete car appears, which is then smeared with instant >> patina". >> In short, there are no standards. A "restoration" is what you think it >> should be and what your buddies think it should be as is amply demonstrated >> by the wide range of opinions expressed within the small framework of this >> odd little group. Only bear in mind that there is no such thing as an >> "original restoration". Your car is either original or it is restored - it >> can't be both. A totally original car retains the paint, upholstery, and >> everything else that it left the factory with. A "sympathetic restoration" >> is one that retains as much as possible of a car's originality and seeks to >> refurbish only the minimum necessary to keep the car trim and roadworthy and >> only to the original standard. A "full restoration" is to be avoided and >> should only be a last resort due to its highly invasive and historically >> destructive nature to be visited only upon cars that have been so ravaged by >> time and use that no part of their originality can be salvaged. >> I shall endeavor to refrain from any comments regarding the installation of >> various Datsun, Chevrolet, Volkswagen, Nash, Kelvinator, Hoover, spaniel, >> dachshund, Boeing, or any other odd bits which an owner may decide needs to >> be attached to his MG. >> Squire Badger >> >> >> >> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > >
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests