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During a job for the auction house I work for, just 5 miles from my house, I was lucky enough to come across this 1989 Toyota Celica ST165 GT4. I have been after one for sometime but they never come up when I have funds so I always ended up with something else. If you keep an eye on these sorts of things you will know these just don;t come up for sale these days as there are so few left, in fact, if you do a quick search you won't find one for sale in the UK at all. According to the DVLA this car has not seen the road since 1996, which is a good thing as it has saved it from rotting into oblivion. It has stood in this particular dry barn for the last 15 years and sits with 79,000 miles on the clock. Current owner says it runs but produces black smoke so that will be my first job, to attempt to rectify that and get the existing engine running properly. There is however a spare gen 1 engine included which is handy. If I can not save the current one then one of them will be fully rebuilt to standard spec with all new bolts, gaskets etc. If the current one works ok it will get a timing belt kit, fresh oil and water pumps. The body is in great or with just small rust bubbles on the sunroof, aside from that its clean and the paint will get a professional polish and the rear bumper painted. The interior looks very clean no issues with upholstery, even the steering wheel is in good order, it even has the original radio. The underside is in very good order for an 80's Japanese car, Will aim to protect and preserve that.
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1975 Volvo C304 TGB 6x6 SOLDslipngripross
@slipngripross
Club Retro Rides Member 149
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1975 Volvo C304 TGB 6x6 For Sale Reg. no. UAL 759R Chassis no. 4228 Engine no. 8210254 Transmission: Manual Mileage: 14,000KMS (8,700Miles) MOT: Exempt Price: NOW SOLD! The Volvo C30 series was an all-terrain truck specifically designed for the Swedish army. With just a few thousand produced of which a couple of thousand took the form of 6x6 instead of 4x4 versions. At the rear of the truck option included a radio body, medical body, flat bed with drop sides or mortar carrier. Being military it is designed to be worked on easily and the majority of parts are still readily available from Sweden. The size of the Volvo is quite deceptive as it looks very large, but in reality it is no longer than a LWB van, no wider than a Landcruiser and no taller than a normal 4x4 with roof tent fitted. These are regularly used as overland vehicles and this particular example was previously fitted with a large medical body suitable for camping. The current owner has removed the body with the intention of only using the truck of off-roading and green laning but has retained the rear mounting points for another frame or body to be fitted. Without a rear bed it weighs in at just 2,100kg’s which is lighter than many 4x4’s hence being able to be registered as a historic vehicle with tax and MOT exemption. This results any owner being able to drive it on a normal car licence at any age. First registered in Sweden in 1977 (built 1975), this medical AT truck was imported to the IOM with one other C303 back on November 29th 2006 by a Peter Henry. The pair of trucks were then purchased by Fred Cheshire of Lancashire in 2013. This C303 had the IOM plate LMN-230-N. It currently sits on 14,000 KMS, just 8,700 miles from new with military log to back it up. Powered by a Volvo B30 straight six petrol engine, driven by a 4 speed ZF gearbox with 2 speed transfer box, portal axles with three air locking diffs and 35” tyres, these machines are near to unstoppable. The truck runs a 24v battery system, two seats in the cab and a very good heater. The only aftermarket parts fitted to the truck are an alloy radiator and kenlow fan. The Volvo was dry stored from 2013 until 2022 in which time it had some restoration work and servicing. Under new ownership it has been lubricated and serviced as well as tested on local Salisbury Military training grounds with great success on and off road. It drives as it should, is surprisingly quiet and it has not thrown up any mechanical issues aside from fuel filters which have now been changed. The tyres have nearly new tread and the brakes were serviced within the last few hundred kms. It has braided brake lines all round but I assumed these were possibly stock items. Although Tax and MOT exempt, it has had an MOT to register it in the UK as historic and passed with no advisories on the 01/06/2022. It came from IOM registered as a van. A Current V5C is included showing 0 previous owners as well as military maintenance log, complete vehicle workshop manual, some parts receipts and UK registration paperwork. The sale of the vehicle included a number of spare parts such as 2 new hub seals, brake cylinders, brake shoes, two spare wheels and tyres, inner tubes as well as various filters and other items. Work carried out in the UK since 2013 includes: • Bottom of door shuts cut out and rebuilt • Bottom of windscreen cut out and rebuilt • Fuel tank repaired • Chassis cleaned, no rust and oil treat along with cab • Brakes refurbished with Land Rover 11” parts • Propshaft checked and greased regularly • Diffs, hubs and gearbox oil checked and topped up where required • engine serviced, new oil, filters plugs dizzy cap, electronic ignition Acuspark (12v) through a 24v to 12v reducer, carbs serviced 2018 (300kms since service) • Custom fabricated engine cover
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This may be a stupid question but how much track time do you get on a full day? Looks awesome btw! Not a silly question at all. Some people see 100 miles + of track time. We have 45 cars with 12 cars on track at any one time. Generally people will do a 10-15 minute session, rest the car for 20 minutes and then head out again so at least one session per hour.
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Feb 21, 2023 10:39:04 GMT
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I did previously ask for some info on it yea
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Feb 14, 2023 13:41:05 GMT
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Feb 14, 2023 13:35:59 GMT
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Feb 14, 2023 13:31:00 GMT
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