Steve Winterberg
<steve_winterberg@btinternet.com>
1968 Series Three SB2339
powered by a
1963 Mk13 Cosworth Twincam
UK
| Photo August 2005,
sporting fresh new tonneau, 'doors' and leather seating! |

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Have owned the car since 1971,
bought from David Wakefield at Caterham. Here's a couple of snaps,
red livery circa 1973, blue livery 1992 and the last on the front
cover of the Uxbridge Auto Show flyer 1998. When I changed the
livery I had the roll bar recovered to match the new seats and
carpet. What a poseur eh?
I have a Cosworth Mk XIII in
my 7, of 1963 vintage, with L1 cams, cossie rods and pistons.
Tis only a 4 bolt tuftrided iron crank (to keep it within homologation
regs at the time) but has been doweled. Best ET 12.49 at Blackbushe
and 12.99 at Santa Pod not bad for a 1963 twink eh? Did a 5.18
0-60 at Brooklands a couple of years ago too. Got the fastest
terminal speed at Moreton in Marsh International in early 90's
for standing eigth mile too.
It has a standard after market
roll bar of the time made by John Aley, again bought from Caterham
but in black vinyl.
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It was motor bikes
as soon as I could, my dad used to collect them, we had a back
garden full of pre-war AJS, BSA, Matchless, Norton, DKW, even
an Ariel square 4 with a Watsonian sidecar, a BMW and my favourites,
a 500 Royal Enfield Brooklands Bullet, and post-war 650 BSA Rocket
Gold Star and full race 175 BSA Bantam. I bought the 7 on receipt
of the compensation from an motorcycle off involving tintops!
So it seems a "Seven"
was the next logical progression...
There were loads of
3 wheelers produced all over europe, BMW, Isetta, Messerschmidt
- brilliant they were too! As kids we used to push an old engineless
one up to the top of the south downs just for the freewheel ride
back down again. Took all morning to push the thing up - about
4 miles - and 5 minutes back down at high speed - till we rolled
it and my mates Dad smashed it up with a sledgehammer - the mate
who broke his arm and thigh having been trapped under the dash!
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had the wings and nose made by a young lad just outside Leicester
(who a pal of mine uses to make up bodies for the 1930's Brooklands
Riley Trial cars he builds for rich dudes) and he made them using
the old S3 glass fibre as patterns, in fresh air without a buck
of any kind which is pretty magic! |
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These
pics show the bitch of an o/s engine mount having dropped the
engine an inch or so and following 're-engineering' to miss the
dry sump pump. |
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Don't
you just love the low profile headlights?
Blimey,
how sad is that, I've got over 300 snaps of the thing starting
from ripping it apart after the recovery from Spain!
It is
a pretty little beastie eh, better than I hoped. The plan is
to stay polished ali and not paint it.I'm afraid I take no credit
for the engine - for the first time in my life I shipped it to
Vulcan Eng and asked them to fettle it top to bottom. They
gave me a price then got so enthusiastic about the condition
of it having expected it to be a dog like most 1963 Twinks are
by now, that they tooth belted the water pump drive pulleys,
swapped the cam sprockets for vernier, big valved the head and
repainted it in Ford/Lotus colours of the day at no extra charge!
Oh and remodelled and polished the inlet and exhaust tracts...
All I had asked for was a rebore, new bearings and a refresh!
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