toomush2drink wrote:slightly off topic now.
As for the cars ac cobra anyone ? TVR ,caterham as well, not well known but very very quick. The ac cobra is the reason we have our speed limit because it was so fast they decided we needed a speed limit which is still in force today. The thing is that car still has ferrari speed and yet it is so old. Think 0-60mph in 4 seconds and you get my drift.I agree our mainstream cars are crap but the smaller handbuilt cars are fantastic. Remember the film swordfish well that had a was a TVR travolta was driving, enough said.

Yeah, off topic, but you might want to check your history. The AC Cobra was a car without an engine, and without a name. AC Cars of Thames-Ditton was using a six cylinder Bristol engine for it's two seat roadster. The production name of that vehicle eludes me.
Somehow in 1960, 61 AC loses it's source for this engine. In September, 1961, Caroll Shelby writes to AC Cars and requests that they continue production of the chassis and body for a Shelby sports car to be powered by an American V-8 engine.
The following month, Charles Hurlock, the owner of AC Cars replies to Shelby indicating that he would be interested
IF a suitable engine could be found in the US.
Shelby learns of the new Ford thin-wall 221 small block, and decides on a similar engine. Shelby contacts Dave Evans, outlining his idea for the car, and his needs.
In Febuary of 1962, Hurlock air freights the first of the 260 Roadsters to Shelby, minus engine and transmission. Shelby claims the name "Cobra" came to him in a dream. Reportedly, he woke in the middle of the night, and scribbled the word Cobra on a bed side notepad. When seeing it the next morning, he says, "I just knew it was right".
It took Shelby and Dean Moon less than eight hours to install a new Ford 260 high output engine, and Borg-Warner transmission.
That first day, Shelby and Moon test drive the first new Cobra.
By 1968, the last brand new 427 Cobra Roadster is sold by Caroll Shelby. By December of 1969, Shelby Automotive Racing Company closes it's doors.
It would be 1989 before Caroll Shelby would build another Cobra. This was the 427 Cobra S/C. Cars Shelby claims were left over from the 1966 project.
In 1993, Caroll Shelby traveled to the UK, and among other things, gives his seal of approval to Cobra replicas produced by RAM Automotive in Essex. These cars are allowed to use the Shelby name and they carry chassis numbers starting with CSX4001.
I'm sure I left a lot of things out, but that's the gist of the AC Cobra.
Romstar