Mike,
I know what I would do. Have you ever seen or better yet driven a
2010-2012 Honda Fit? That 1500 Honda Fit engine is the ultimate "new"
Coventry Climax 1500. Standard with no tweaking - it puts out 120 hp on
regular 87 pump fuel. They even make all of the stand alone engine control
electronics as it is used to replace Formula Ford 1600 engines. They have to
actually detune the engine to run it in Formula F. The entire engine is
aluminum and it is SOHC with i-vtec. The engine has good torque low end but
wakes up above 5000 revs. redline area begins around 7000. Once the vtec
changes the valve timings it is a serious screamer. The engines from low
mileage wrecked Fits sell very cheaply on ebay -around $500. All you would
need to do is make an adapter plate etc. for a Spridget trans. Even the
clutch looks like a Spridget/BMC part.
Cool eh.
Mike
________________________________
From: Mike Rambour <lists@dinospider.com>
To:
Spridgets <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2013 2:20 PM
Subject: [Spridgets] kind of spridget related
11 years ago I was a
younger man (pretty interesting eh ?) and I had
a unique opportunity to buy a
very rare 1934 Singer and when you already
own a 1934 Singer and say this one
is rare you know its unique.
I have not touched this Singer because I did
not want to have 2 cars
apart at the same time and so I told people it was
going to be my
retirement project, well retirement is too far away and I want
it on the
road. The reason I mentioned something about being younger is that
as
I have gotten older, I no longer enjoy the moments broken down on the
side of the road and I enjoy the trouble free driving more so I am
thinking
of doing a engine swap.
The original motor is a 1493cc 6 cylinder motor of
early 1930's
technology (59 mm. by 91 mm bore-stroke) and I have no idea the
HP
rating of it but it can't be very high. The gearbox is a crashbox with
four speeds with ratios 5.22, 6.65, 10.68 and 19.43 to 1 and 26.4:1
reverse
with silent second and third gears, no idea the rear axle
ratio. Fueled by
twin Solex sidedraft carbs. The motor has had cracks
brazed in the side of
the block on both sides, the freeze plugs corroded
out decades ago and were
covered by bondo (yes Bondo) to prevent leaks I
assume. I removed the oil
pan and found wood screws jammed into the
block because the oil pan studs
were broken so they drilled small holes
and used wood screws. The oil pump
strainer was cut off (presumably to
increase oil pressure after too much
sludge plugged up the strainer) and
there appears to be a crack between the
number 2 and 3 cylinders which
allows coolant into the oil sump. The motor
can be fixed but its
ridiculously expensive and I want reliability.
I have
a Spridget 1275 complete with carbs and gearbox, I have no idea
the year but
it has a 10CG (or is it 10GG?) head which implies its a
later 1275 motor, no
idea of its real condition but its free turning and
just turning by hand
appears to have compression in all 4 cylinders, of
course a full rebuild is
in order.
I am thinking a newer 1275 will have more HP than a 1930's 1500
motor,
it will also be lighter and extremely very easily fit into the chassis
with no permanent mods to the Singer and that the 1275 motor would work
well
in this car. When I have done motor swaps it was usually to make a
hot rod
with much larger more powerful motors, I have never gone down in
size before
am I stupid to try this ? should I find a 1500 motor from
some other make ?
There is one of these cars in New Zealand with a VW
2Litre from a modern car
in it but they also swapped the rear axle and I
want to avoid that.
My
goal would be to make it reliable and be able to get to freeway
speeds so I
can take it places, if it takes a while to get to that speed
that is ok with
me.
Wow, long message...
mike
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