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Thread: A little piece of me died

  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by marty View Post
    anyone who knows anything about muscle cars know that the AC was a gutless piece of british engineering that needed some serious horsepower to become a classic.
    ...and you obviously don't know much. The AC Ace was never built as a muscle car in the first place. Shelby stopped making them in the mid 60's as they were financial failure. The 289 was built by AC in the UK from then on.

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by McJim View Post
    It's a testamaent to the superb handling of american vehicles
    Quote Originally Posted by limbimtimwim View Post
    The AC Ace is British.

    Mr Shelby shoved a massive engine in it in typical American dunderhead style and called it a Cobra.
    Correct. Although I have a soft spot for those mid-60s sports-cars, I've always had problems falling for the Shelby. It always seemed a great shame to me that you had these beautiful Ferrari 250GTOs and Jaguar E-Types and Maserati Tipo 61s roaring around the GT circuits in the 60s, gorgeous, wonderful handling vehicles with elegant 3-litre V12s and the like.

    Then Carroll Shelby (an oversized Texan who liked to shoot his mouth off) ruins a lovely balanced-handling two-litre straight six British sports-car by stuffing an overweight V8 lump in it, and begins to win the GT series by virtue of sheer horsepower. It's like what Sketchy Racer was talking about with the supposed introduction of 4-stroke thumpers into the 125 GP class -- an elegant class and style of racing ruined by brute force.

    To be sure the Shelby Cobra is an exciting car -- to look at, and certainly to drive. But you don't have to look too far to see why its arrival was lamented by the European racing fraternity -- one of his famous quotes was something along the lines of when racing, `all we really do is drag between the corners'. There's a nice philosophy for you. One contemporary GT driver of the Cobra referred to it as `a turd' in terms of handling.

    I don't know if the modern replicas (like what is featured in this video) have improved on the handling somewhat, but I doubt it. You can only push a shit design so far. A big heavy V8 sitting on top of the front wheels is never going to handle very well.

  3. #33
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    ah yes, but i don't think the 429ci was sourced from the US. As was the 289, which as introduced in the early 60's.

    The SHELBY cobra is the classic, and everyone knows, mr shelby is from merka.

    check this out from wikipedia:

    Shelby's original model, CSX 3015, was kept by Carroll Shelby himself over the years as a personal car, sometimes entering it into local races like the Turismos Visitadores Cannonball-Run like race in Nevada, where he was "waking [up] whole towns, blowing out windows, throwing belts and catching fire a couple of times, but finishing." Shelby later sold CSX 3015 to Jimmy Webb for $10,500. During the collector car bubble of 1989–90, Webb was said to have turned down $1.2 million for the car, but the car was seized by the IRS, after owing millions in back taxes and was auctioned off in 1995 for $375,000.[3] CSX 3015 was auctioned off on January 22, 2007 at the Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Event in Scottsdale, Arizona for $ 5,5 Million USD + commission (a record for Cobras, and a record for a Barrett-Jackson sold price)

  4. #34
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    Wasn't it fastest production car for a few years in the 60's? Faster than the 50's Kompressor?
    Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.

  5. #35
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    Legendary racer, car designer Carroll Shelby dies

    A little piece of me died today too

    Quote Originally Posted by Stuff
    Carroll Shelby, designer of the Shelby Cobra and other sports cars that placed him in the pantheon of auto industry legends, has died at age 89, his company said today.
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/mo...ll-Shelby-dies

  6. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by NordieBoy View Post
    He sure lasted a long time for somebody in that career - and was quite good at throwing money into heart research/surgery etc (As he had some kind of massive heart surgery quite a few years ago)
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
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  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by avgas View Post
    Wasn't it fastest production car for a few years in the 60's? Faster than the 50's Kompressor?

    0 to 160kph and back to 0 in under 13 seconds.
    Or something like that...from memory
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
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  8. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by NordieBoy View Post
    A little piece of me died today too



    http://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/mo...ll-Shelby-dies
    lol nice thread necro! Ok maybe a bad choice of words


    RIP Carroll Shelby, what a legend!

    A link to his time line at the bottom, makes for great reading! http://www.carrollshelby.com/#/1923-1951
    To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and to endure the betrayal of false friends. To appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition; to know that even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded

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