Home › Forums › General Discussion › What kit would work
- This topic has 9 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 9 months ago by edward ericson.
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February 26, 2011 at 4:46 am #233365
I am now the owner of a 5.0 mustang with less than 15k on the clock. This is a salvage titled donor car that has been hard rolled. This pony has a very strong screaming hot motor and a standard trans ect. This would make a wicked drive for a TD I think, any ideas or suggestions. Haven’t been on for a few days and sure enough I missed a deal. Who ever got the kit that was for sale, good buy you dog. LOL
February 26, 2011 at 9:01 am #243744you’d be looking at Cobra kits, I think.
February 26, 2011 at 11:40 am #243745I don’t know the dimensions of the five liter Ford engine, but you MIGHT be able to stuff it under the hood of a front engine TD replica.
There is a TD “street rod” running around northern NJ. So it can be done!
Paul Mossberg
Former Owner of a 1981 Classic Roadsters Ltd. Duchess (VW)
2005 Intermeccanica RoadsterIf you own a TDr and are not in the Registry, please go to https://tdreplica.com/forums/topic/mg-td-replica-registry/ and register (you need to copy and paste the link)
February 26, 2011 at 9:58 pm #243746Gee if was me I would do COBRA or maybe a Tbird some of the older un finished kits i have seen on ebay are priced lower than a new kit. Good Luck Dan
February 28, 2011 at 9:55 am #243747I you have a mustang 5.0 you need to go to factoryfive.com and get a cobra.
I would say 225 hp in a mgtd replica is way overkill.
February 28, 2011 at 10:21 am #243748How about a Miata Italia II or Manta from Simpson Design?
Way cheaper than a Factory 5 Cobra & doesn’t look like everyone else’s Cobra. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that).
I seen these Simpson kits offered used for well south of $10k–Miata included. Go get your Mustang-to-Miata kit & get to work.
February 28, 2011 at 3:10 pm #243749Monster Miata, Cobra or Sebring (Healy 3000) is the way to go. They make a great kit.
I started on a build with a CMC Ford based kit. It was to be Buick V6 (3.8L) powered with a TH200R4 automatic and an 8″ Ford 3.55 posi rear.
I had also upgraded to GM “G” body (Monte Carlo, Grand Prix, Malibu, Cutlass, Regal) metric disc brakes on all four corners and had plans for a 6 point roll cage. I also had a tubular control arm/coil over front end and a torque arm set up for the rear suspension.
I ended up selling the car with all the donor Pinto running gear as an engine/trans/rear/suspension installed “roller” to a guy in Sacramento, CA. Not sure if he ever finished it.
Most all these parts, except the Buick motor, ended up in/on my 1940 Ford Sedan.
The V8’s make these car very nose heavy and a beast to handle. Without huge brakes, they won’t stop either.
February 28, 2011 at 3:16 pm #243750I was recently thinking a cool Simpson/Miata mill would be the aluminum Buick/Rover 215, appropriately bored and stroked, of course. Very light and nominally British. Outfit it with some old strombergs maybe . . . But, as everyone knows, I have way more theories than either money or skill. Ever thus.
March 1, 2011 at 1:09 am #243751Thanks for some Ideas other than the one that I was tunnel vision focused on. More ideas will always be welcome. Some people horde books or magazines I horde things with wheels or that at least had wheels. And your probably right too much power to waste it with a TD kit besides the fact that 90% of the nose would have to go away too accommodate the motor, then again it be fun to pull up to a stop and stand a TD up on a set of drag bars as you come of the line just one time.
March 6, 2011 at 8:15 am #243752Screw it, man. This dude (ZZ4 in a TD with ‘Vette & Jaguar suspension) must be challenged! You are the man to do it.
After yer all done gawking at this engineering marvel, check out his hubcap attachment system. One of my theories is vindicated. Cause of that, I’mma post this on that hubcap/wheel thread too.
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