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Monday, 15 December 2014

Sunbeam Tiger

The Autumn Historic Car Races organised by the Aston Martin Owners Club took place at Oulton Park in September 1993 and included a race which is shown in the programme of the event as the 'MG Car Club/AMOC Thoroughbred & Classic Sports Car Championship Race'. One of the cars that took part in that race was this Sunbeam Tiger.
Wikipedia says this about the Sunbeam Tiger:

'The Sunbeam Tiger is a high-performance V8 version of the British Rootes Group's Sunbeam Alpine roadster, designed in part by American car designer and racing driver Carroll Shelby and produced from 1964 until 1967. Shelby had carried out a similar V8 conversion on the AC Cobra, and hoped to be offered the contract to produce the Tiger at his facility in America. Rootes decided instead to contract the assembly work to Jensen at West Bromwich in England, and pay Shelby a royalty on every car produced.
Two major versions of the Tiger were built: the Series I (1964–67) was fitted with the 260 cu in (4.3 L) Ford V8; the Series II, of which only 633 were built in the final year of Tiger production, was fitted with the larger Ford 289 cu in (4.7 L) engine. Two prototype and extensively modified versions of the Series I competed in the 1964 24 Hours of Le Mans, but neither completed the race. Rootes also entered the Tiger in European rallies with some success, and for two years it was the American Hot Rod Association's national record holder over a quarter-mile drag strip.
Production ended in 1967 soon after the Rootes Group was taken over by Chrysler, which did not have a suitable engine to replace the Ford V8. Owing to the ease and affordability of modifying the Tiger, there are few surviving cars in standard form.'
The race programme says that it's a 1964 car which means that it's a Series I car, but it shows the engine capacity as 4727cc which seems to indicate that it's got the 289 cu in engine which was fitted to the Series II car and confirms the last sentence of the Wikipedia article that 'there are few surviving cars in standard form'.

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