<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by John Clancy</i>
One of the strongest, most over-engineered bodyshells ever produced. Built to meet US legislation that never appeared in the draconian fashion that was feared. The TR7 was Years ahead of its time and as a result I feel safer in mine than I do in any modern car I drive.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
Over the years I've bought most of the TR7 related books and each one stresses how the Wedge was developed to meet the strictest crash test legislation they expected to appear and then some.
It's probably the safest late 70's / early 80's car to have a crash in. But that was 30 years ago and there's not an airbag or seatbelt pretensioner in sight. It could be worse, you could be in a classic Mini like the Cooper I'm restoring. Now that's vulnerable.........
Adam
TR7 V8 DHC Jaguar Solent Blue. 9.35cr Range Rover V8, Holley 390cfm, JWR Dual Port, 214 Cam, Lumention, Tubular Manifolds, S/S Single Pipe Exh, 3.08 Rear, 200lb Spax & PolyBushes all round, Anti- Dive, Strut-Top Roller Bearings, Capri Vented Discs & Calipers, Braided Hoses, 4 Speed Rear Cylinders, Uprated Master Cylinder & Servo, AT 14" 5 Spokes or Maestro Turbo 15" Alloys, Cruise Lights, S/S Heater Pipes, Replacement Fuel Tank. No Door Stickers. Mine since July 1986, V8 from 1991 courtesy of S&S V8 conversion and big brake kits.