J - veeDUB
Transcription
J - veeDUB
f J \ / • - p lt'a lmpossible to give a fair and accurate d&Kription of any kit cor, os hs perform· ance on the road depends almost entirely on how well it's boon screwed t ogether and w hat spef:lol extras hove been added t.o lm· provo the engine, chauis or suspension. or Indeed, the interior. A large manufacturer's vehicles hove a certain corul&tencythey're either consistently good with variations or consistently bad w ith vetlations. Not so the specialist builder. p.af11cularly If t he base unit Is a Volkswagen. No way will t here be eny kind of consistent standard when virtuelly everything. from the engine to tho instrument panel, is choa.en by each Individual o.wner. And w ith that neat copout I shell drift into a comparison betw&en the ADD Novo, produced successfully by Richerd Oaks in t he wild:;; of Aeerlngton (how. do you do it, Stonley?), end the Group Six which John M itchell mekes in darkest Clortcenwell. As yeworl know, the VW kit boom Is In its death throos. No longer can you or I walk into a breaker's yard and come away with a Bug In an acceptab le &tot e of dilopidation for fifleen quid or so. These days you can think yourself lucky If you get any small chenge out of £60, and that for a wanked· out 1200. Getting yoursel f a chassis that's neither k lnked nor rusted through Is only t he first &tOp. Beach buggy builders generally choppod o bit out of the eha.ssls, but for an ordinary road car this is neither nee~ry nor desirable. What you do need t o reduce is the number of leaves In the front torsion bars. Dam.pors will almost een.atnly have to be replaced, with whatever takes your fancy. Hopefully. t he steering will respond to ed· Ju.st ment; If not you'll find yourt.elf paying another £30 or so f or a replacement . When you've sorted out all t he fiddly bits at eoeh corner. you then find yourself with two t ricky dooisions. One is which kit you're going to buy, about w hich more below. The othot is whether to have t he rough old bear's behind of an engintt renovated and tuned or to go right out and buy a fourcylinder Porsc::he motor. Either way you' re liable to part company with a larg&-al:r:ed handf ul of note:&. While most of the beach buggy companies have gone the way of all temporary fads, the engine tuners are still alive and well and doing a great deal of very profit· able business. A utoeavan are perhaps the boat-known. ond If t heir prices seem in~ credibly high. so ore those of VW GB f or ordlnt~~ry replacement spares. A tuned Autocavan engine, complete with twin 40DCOE Webers. for example, can co.st anything up t o about £476, depending on the condition of the m01or you hand over to them. This Is hardly surprising In view of the fact th.at the crank alone costs some £140 and the pistons and barrels about £88. The Nova in component form-which is the only way you'll buy it--eosu £990 In· cluding VAT, w hich means it's olready more expon.aive than a fair number of rouonably desirable small cars. Then you've got to get the chassis and engine. But you do receive quite a lot for your money, and the glass fibre is unquestionably of the highest .. quality. : In your box of bits you'll find the main f body section, headlights with perspex t covera, indicators, locking bonnet, locking ~ engine cover. side pockets, Inner wh&el .. orehos, fitted rear window, footwell. battery ~ cover. r&ar suspension mounting brackets, AUGUST 1974 t he roof section with windows installed. wiper with blade and motor (all from a OAF truck), hinging mechanism, lower front section, sills, dashboard, Instrument pod, steering wheel with boss. $Oats, a sot of five Wolfrace wheels (14 x 7) with German Ounlop SP57 tyre& (205 x 14 with o 70 per cent aspect ratio) plus tubes and wheel bolts, this sentence Is getting a bit long, let's have a new paragraph. That's better. Other bits include exhaust system with silencers, and fresh air vents end pipes. Extras you can buy are floor Md cockpit carpet sets (all reody for glueing). wheel adapters f or early chassis (so they can take the four-bolt wheels). fresh air elec1ric blower. halogen Bright Eyes headlamps, el~ric windscreen washer, sun· shine roof, and a roa.r louvre so thllt your rearward vlilon is even worse than usuttl (they were all the rase in 197 1 when tho Nova first wont Into production). At the time of writing, 149 Nova kits had been sold, and t o t hat number mu.at be added 40 Sterllngs, the US equivalent sold under licence over there. Not an earthshattering total perhaps. but still fairly lm~ prenive. Richa1d could have chosen two very difl'erant courses. He could have sold the cat a.s a fully·mode-up vehicle, but he hasn't the time to go chasing afler VW wreclts, and the resulting price would be ju&t too high to find any customers. outside of t he oeca.sional w ell-heeled village idiot. Alternat ively he could have t urned lt Into much more of a kit than it Is; why, for example, are the expensive who.ols and tyres included? The reason Is simple--every Nova Is a rolling advertisement for Richard, and If moat of them hobbled around on slily liHie skinny wheels and tyres. that'd be the worst kind of advertising Imaginable. The tvre~. incidentally, come ofl' t he larger Mereedes Benz models, end they c ost something like £50 each t o replece. However. they do lost quite a long time. Richard lent us a test model for a week, and it was one of tho.se unfortunate tales of woo right from t ho start. The main problem \'i'U In t he gear linkag.o-.e shortened vor· sion of the standard item. Basically, it didn't. end thltd gear was except iona.lly elusivo. The trouble was finally traced to t he Rewlnuts w hich aro supposed to hold t he gear lover mounting plate in place--well, that's one way of doing it. Aft8f these were replecod, goer-changing was slightly improved. ' The A utocavan two-litre w ith alngle Weber wa$ in f eet excellent, fal.rly smooth and much loss lik e a sewing machine than mo;t of those toys. I'd say it 's essontle.l t o have something at loMC as pokey as that in order to obtain satisfactory acceleration and cruising ability. 1 didn't get to grips with the handling terribly well during my spell In the ear. lt seemed to go round corners quite well, but I fell Inclined not to push things anywhere near the ultimate limits. One rea.son was that t he stoerlng felt slight ly odd whenever it was moved away from the d ead·ahoad position-straight line stablllty was excel· lent-end the beck ond seemed to be ready to perform ell manner of cunning littlo tricks. Obviously the koen priv·ote owner couJd tu.m it Into a chuekable liHie ca.r with a bit of care and attent ion In the r ight ploce.s. The otho.r reason for my caution wa$ physical discomfort. At six foot plus t here is no way I could persuade my various limbs and sundry related components to fit propor)y into the ear. I Imagine f or a shorter guy it would be fine, a.s the seats were undeniably high quality product s. The st eerIng wheel was squashed somewhere between my knees, and I was fu.st too tall to be able to relax properly. Evon w ith t he sun· roof off. 1 found it noceuorv to bond my neck. Round lefthand bends the driving mirror obscured my vision. and rasi1ing it would have cut the olready limited view t o the rear to virtually nil. The pedals wore also awtward, as thoy were stondard Veedub bits. The clutch operation was o sort of up-and ~over movement, w hich becomoa very uncomf ortable oftor a few miles, especially In town. What's needed there is a hanging-pedal setup such os is used In singl&-soator racing cera. Brakes were &tondord-lss-ue drums all 35 round, and pre.tty arorming they were. Stopping roquire<l o earefully·balnnced com· blnation of brute force and prayer. The use of discs at the front would (to #aY the least) be a desirable modification. The intorior of the cockpit as lt arrive.s is Ideally constructed for an e~~:cellont layout. There's plenty of room for as many lnstru· ments as you could wish for in your wildest imagination, ond a few more If you era in the habit of using hallucinatory drugs. There were plenty of dials end gauges on the test car. but unfortunately they d idn't all work. You may be thinking that if the proof of the pu..dding is In the eating, then there's something amiss In the state of Accrington, but having driven the car for a few days, I reckon the Novo has lot& of possl.bllltles if constructed properly, and that Richard Oaks, amiable chap that he Is, does him. self an injustice by employing an old nail as his demonstrator. On t he way up t o Accrlngton, returning the car, I was considering what sort of guy would be the ideal owner of a Novo.• having decided that on nearly oil counts it wouldn't be me. He'd have to be about 5ft 9Jn os an absolute maximum, and he'd need to bo a very good mechanic with experience of sotting up su.spension properr·y. lt would help if he was either on extrovert or even pe.rhaps a bit of a show·off, and an under· standing girl friond who took the pill every day would come in very handy, a.s there's no place for kiddywi.nka In one of thoso toys. He wouldn't own a big dog. and prob· ably not oven a small onct. He'd be a light traveller. Ha'd have lots ol P4tiGnce. Finally, he'd be very good ot spotting police speed traps.. I can't think of anyone offhand who fits this description exactly; Ric-hard Oaks him· self has e very nice wife, no klddles, but ho does have o medium-league dog. And he travels around in a Renault 17. However, there are et Toast 1 49 peopla In this cou.ntry who've decla.recl thomsolvfJS. to bo some· WhOle near that blueprint, and I'm sure there are ple-nty of others lining up and waiting. And don't get me wrong-f'm not really taking t he plss, I'm quite sure thM a lot of guys would get a great deol of pleasure out of driving and owning a Nova. A ll I'm say. ing is. include mo out. For the same reasons and a couple of d ifferent ones I wouldn't want a Grou:p Six either. A lthough it's much more capable of permitting the Introduction of my gangling frame in something remotely resembling comfort. it still ain't my klnda car. If I hact the choice, which one ro.rely does in these matters, I think I'd prefer to have my big accident In the Group Six.. as ono of ita features is the most massive roll cage I've ever seen i.n any vehicle other than a stock car. Incidentally. if you were unfortunate enough to roll your Novo you wouldn't bo trapped for ever by that canopy-which la ltaelf the centre of some controversy In this offlco--apparenlly all that's needed Is a hofty bash at the side window. John Mi1chell Is another very friendly character, who Is rather anxious to hido his light under a bushel as fer a.s building cera is concerned. Ho's the boss of a company which producea various substances ralated to w indscreen tints. spray·on things and so on. and he's e bit worried that his mates In the trade might extract the Mlchael If they knew he was Involved In such a relatively uncommercial field. John got Into the Group Six project via the most circuitous route imaginable. Ho 36 was intending to buy a GT40 and convert it for road use. Somehow he drifted into the even more daunting projoct of building his own c-ar from scratch. A number of people took en interest, and suddenly ha wo.s a co.r constructor. So he went out and bought himself a f actory. That's more or le.ss where things stand at tha moment. No Group Sixes have yet been sold. although thera are a few firm orders. including two from guys in Northern Ireland whose Volkswagens were blown up by the Army as suspeetOd booby-traps. That's the oddest reason I over hoard for buying a VW kit car. John would be the first to admit t hat the machine he brought to show U$ was In no way a Ulleable proposition in itself. lt was tho original prototype, and a.s auch e mobile test bed In all departments excapt trim and finish. The bodywork was rather rough. the engine a very mild 1200. and the clutch was definitely on the way out. However, he assuro.s us the final product ion version w ill be very different indeed, and he's promised to let us have a go in one when the time comes. which shouldn't be all that long now. Ho aiJo tells us that the latest prototypo--the third actual car to be built-is rattle·free. which the one in the picture was not. A fairly liberal uso of girders serve.s not only as crash protection, but also to stiffen up t he basic chassis considerably. along w ith a steel plt'to welded horizontally at the front. Tho glass fibre was at least very solid. and tho new moulds are virtually ono·pieco. apart from the doors, the tallgate and the screen/roof section whereas the car in the picture was modo up of three major sections. All thiJ of course adds con.siderably to the weight, so a well-tuned engine becomes oven more of a necessity. Present plans aro to market the car in two versions, one vorv basic, lacking wheels. tyres, seats and steering wheel, and the othor w ith everything Included In the prlca. Buyers will receive the bodyshe.ll. doors. locks and hinges, screen (from the Copri), side windows, rotlover bar. tank mounting f rames. side frame bar.s end t ailgate. The 'wheels w ill probably be Wolfrece, 84- x 15 at the back and 6i- x 16 at the front. The roof Jection w ill be optional. Is there a fresh air freak In the house? The Group Six has more luggage apace than the Nova, but since it's e ll behind the seats, it'd have to consist of grip bags. On the other hand, engine accessibility l.s: slightly reduced. which Is unfortunate in a cer of this typa--many owners will no doubt wish to .spend wet evenings playing with bits of carburettor and valve gear on the living room floor. There's a large console for your 5J0ugea and dials in the Group· Six. as in Richard Oaks' dream machine, although John M itchell's test vehicle had only the stock Bootlo speedo. The Nova. Incidentally, had a speedo calibrated to 220mphl So thoro you are, the VW kit car lives on. Tho Nova Is not only the more dramatJc of tho two. with Its very law sleek lines (most peopla mistak.e it for o lambo and everyone ia amazed by the unu.$Ual manner of entry and exit), but it's been around for a while, so lt's something o f a known quantity-you may remember it featured on ou.r front cover back in October 1972. We reckon lt' s sold at a fair price and that it could be dos· cribed as tha market leader. The Group Six has potential, and we shell be intero.tltod to see a production veralon when we get the chaneo. At t he moment no price is avallabla as ·tho cost of everything is so volatile {that m~U~ns 'lively, spritely, brisk or gay'; GAY?) in t hese times of un· rest and deprivation. How's that for tread· ing the tightrope? PO Addra.sses: Automotive Design r~nd (Nova) Ltd. Unit 03. Huncoat Industrial Estate, Accrington, Lanc-.s. Accrington 384124 Devalopment Group Six. MBA House. Sans Walk, Clortcenwell, EC4 01-253 4882. but tha Group Six, right ? - n TJR 956 CUSTOM CAR