Reshelled classic cars

Author
Discussion

clarkey

Original Poster:

1,365 posts

285 months

Tuesday 6th May 2014
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Something described as a Mini Cooper S -http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/271472880522?clk_rvr_id=629563297965

So it doesn't have the original body, or the original engine, but it's still a Cooper S.

Surely this is just the chassis number of the Cooper S and otherwise a 998 standard Mini of a similar vintage? Or have I missed something?

Mike_Mac

664 posts

201 months

Tuesday 6th May 2014
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Escy

3,948 posts

150 months

Tuesday 6th May 2014
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You're not missing anything but what's the issue?

clarkey

Original Poster:

1,365 posts

285 months

Tuesday 6th May 2014
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I just wondered if it should be valued as a 998 Mini, or a Mini Cooper S? What is a Mini Cooper S worth if it has new body, interior, wrong engine, etc? I guess I can't really see the point - it seems a bit of a waste.

Escy

3,948 posts

150 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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It's strange with classics. A re-shelled car = a ringer, makes some people want to stay away yet those same people would consider a restoration that has had every panel replaced during a ground up restoration. Where is the line?

Personally I don't care either way. That Mini obviously isn't a genuine Cooper S but it's a blank canvas, you can make it what you want it to be. I'd say most of the value of that car is in the ID rather than the car itself.

Lost soul

8,712 posts

183 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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I guess that's why matching numbers add so much value to the car

Truckosaurus

11,346 posts

285 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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Similarly, in the past people have paid fortunes for ex-works rally cars that in period the teams switched number plates/VIN numbers around at random, so who knows what history a 'winner' actually had.

Lost soul

8,712 posts

183 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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DELETED: Comment made by a member who's account has been deleted.
I would just love a Mk 1

V8forweekends

2,485 posts

125 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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clarkey said:
Something described as a Mini Cooper S -http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/271472880522?clk_rvr_id=629563297965

So it doesn't have the original body, or the original engine, but it's still a Cooper S.

Surely this is just the chassis number of the Cooper S and otherwise a 998 standard Mini of a similar vintage? Or have I missed something?

If I understand the rules correctly, if all that stuff was done today and declared to DVLA, it would be wearing a "Q" plate. The seller is being totally upfront and the DVLA were certainly more lenient in the past, but it's a "trigger's broom" or BITSA at best.

That said, I wouldn't pay the premium for something that seemed all numbers matching and original anyway since it's almost impossible to be sure.

clarkey

Original Poster:

1,365 posts

285 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
quotequote all
I guess it's unusual that the guy is being up front!
To put it in a modern context - if I buy an Impreza 22B and wreck it, then buy a standard Uk turbo car and put the chassis number on that, is it still a 22B??? Or a UK Impreza with the identity of a 22B.
But as I say, at least he is being honest.

V8forweekends

2,485 posts

125 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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clarkey said:
I guess it's unusual that the guy is being up front!
To put it in a modern context - if I buy an Impreza 22B and wreck it, then buy a standard Uk turbo car and put the chassis number on that, is it still a 22B??? Or a UK Impreza with the identity of a 22B.
But as I say, at least he is being honest.
I think you can reshell (as long as you use new shell of the same spec) and keep the original identity. Not quite sure how the chassis number would work in that case. Where the wheels come off (see what I did there) is where you start changing other major components too. - on reflection, maybe that Mini wouldn't get a Q plate...

chad valley

45 posts

135 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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A new monocoque and a new engine clearly makes this car a ringer. It's pretty straightforward.

DonkeyApple

55,479 posts

170 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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V8forweekends said:
I think you can reshell (as long as you use new shell of the same spec) and keep the original identity. Not quite sure how the chassis number would work in that case. Where the wheels come off (see what I did there) is where you start changing other major components too. - on reflection, maybe that Mini wouldn't get a Q plate...
Generally you need the chassis and then at least 8 points from the DVLA scoring system to swerve a Q plate.

Classic cars that never existed until last week are only a problem when the bubble bursts. And when it does, this time around they will find a very, very large number of cars that never really existed.

That's if anyone actually wants to go looking. wink

P5Nij

675 posts

173 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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At least this particular example is a Mk3 reshelled into an appropriate shell. It does grate a bit when earlier Mk1s and 2s are reshelled using Mk3,4,5 etc shells.


V8forweekends

2,485 posts

125 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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P5Nij said:
At least this particular example is a Mk3 reshelled into an appropriate shell. It does grate a bit when earlier Mk1s and 2s are reshelled using Mk3,4,5 etc shells.
Even that is "fixable" at a cost - you can get a kit to retro fit the external door hinges and smaller rear light apertures etc

Mavic82

89 posts

161 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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I don't see the issue here, sure it may not be the car that came out of the factory but....

It is perfectly legal to reshell a car, at some other point in time it is legal to change the engine. The only issue would be if both of these and significant other changes happened at the same time.

The seller is open to the history. A ringer would be the application of one cars identity to another, that is wrong and illegal. Simply shelling and at a different point swapping the engine is not.

LordBretSinclair

4,288 posts

178 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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Trigger's broom !!!!!

Truckosaurus

11,346 posts

285 months

Wednesday 7th May 2014
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LordBretSinclair said:
Trigger's broom !!!!!
I was talking to my brother about the 1990 Rover Mini Cooper we've owned between us since 1995, and how much of a Trigger's Broom it was - new 1380cc engine, new front wings, grille, doors and loads of other welding and paint (because rust, of course), complete after-market suspension (hi-lo etc.), Metro brakes.

We'll probably swap out the original sunroof roof panel for a solid one soon, plus some new gearbox internals. Soon it will just be the rear number plate that is left original.

lowdrag

12,905 posts

214 months

Thursday 8th May 2014
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Anyone see the Chasing Classic Cars episode where the auction ran into trouble because the local motor licencing department (East coast USA) wanted to pull the auction because the cars had been restored and the rivets attaching the VIN plates were new and they could have been ringers? In the end the auction went ahead but 15 cars had advisories put on them. It obviously pays to age the rivets before attaching the plate to to the car. I mean, who leaves the plate on when respraying? How far do you go before a car actually doesn't really exist? I've oft said that even the fact of doing an oil change means the car is no longer original. And what about historic rally cars? Bad accidents meant new shells in the day, engines were swapped as a matter of routine; in fact probably the only part that was left original was the number plate. Strawberry jam and tea anyone? wink

lowdrag

12,905 posts

214 months

Thursday 8th May 2014
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Just a thought? Is this car, which still races and may well be at the Classic, still original after this accident in 2004? It's still the same C-type after all. Discuss.














For me, the only test of a classic car's authenticity is continuous history, not how many parts have been or not been changed.