Hi new help would be great
Hi new help would be great
Hi there i am new i am joining up to try and sell a Sunbeam tiger Needs a restoration. It was my Dads it came of the road a good 15 year ago and been in a lock up since. no point letting it hide it may as well let some one have the enjoyment of restoring her. First date of reg is 12/01/1966 my dad got it in 1974 Will get pictures up soon she is Blue
Chris
Chris
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- Posts: 438
- Joined: Thu Jun 21, 2007 8:35 am
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Hi Chris,
Thanks for the post and we will certainly try to help it, it would be great to get another Tiger back on the road
Assume your father had the car a little while and some history is always worth putting together when selling a Tiger as it would generate some genuine interest and in particular it "comforts" prospective buyers that they are dealing with a genuine and original Tiger and not a clone with a Tiger identity being reshelled with an Alpine body.
Pics would be very useful indeed, and close up shots of floorpan, boot floor and engine bay inner wings would be great. Interior shots would be handy as that indicates whether the car has remained standard or not. As already said, if it is a restoration project then pics of the chassis underneath and suspension/running gear would give a pretty good idea of what restoration work is required.
If you need any help hosting the pics then let me know.
As well as the forum here (classifieds section) advertise it on the main STOC website, and also eBay would generate further interest (the latter though you will attract timewasters!)
Best of luck, and be careful of the dealers...............
Thanks for the post and we will certainly try to help it, it would be great to get another Tiger back on the road
Assume your father had the car a little while and some history is always worth putting together when selling a Tiger as it would generate some genuine interest and in particular it "comforts" prospective buyers that they are dealing with a genuine and original Tiger and not a clone with a Tiger identity being reshelled with an Alpine body.
Pics would be very useful indeed, and close up shots of floorpan, boot floor and engine bay inner wings would be great. Interior shots would be handy as that indicates whether the car has remained standard or not. As already said, if it is a restoration project then pics of the chassis underneath and suspension/running gear would give a pretty good idea of what restoration work is required.
If you need any help hosting the pics then let me know.
As well as the forum here (classifieds section) advertise it on the main STOC website, and also eBay would generate further interest (the latter though you will attract timewasters!)
Best of luck, and be careful of the dealers...............
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- Posts: 438
- Joined: Thu Jun 21, 2007 8:35 am
- Location: Melbourne Australia
- Contact:
Need Help
Chris
Just to clarify the chasis number you have provided. It should be 7 numerals for a B947 Tiger. So it is probably B9472122 HRO FE.
Do you have the original logbook or the later V5. For the chassis number to be given as the 'engine number' then this would have been carried over from the original registration logbook.
This was frequently incorrectly done by registration / licensing offices in the 60's, mainly I think because they had grown use to doing this for the Alpine! The DVLA is quite willing to correct this nowadays if you ask them to and it is advisable to do so - anything to help the provenance of a Tiger.
As Michael says the original engine number can be found on the chassis plate and will look like for example 1234 S27KA and also on an applique attached to one of the chrome valve covers - if they survive on the car.
Post here or drop a line to the Club if still unsure.
Graham
STOC Editor
Just to clarify the chasis number you have provided. It should be 7 numerals for a B947 Tiger. So it is probably B9472122 HRO FE.
Do you have the original logbook or the later V5. For the chassis number to be given as the 'engine number' then this would have been carried over from the original registration logbook.
This was frequently incorrectly done by registration / licensing offices in the 60's, mainly I think because they had grown use to doing this for the Alpine! The DVLA is quite willing to correct this nowadays if you ask them to and it is advisable to do so - anything to help the provenance of a Tiger.
As Michael says the original engine number can be found on the chassis plate and will look like for example 1234 S27KA and also on an applique attached to one of the chrome valve covers - if they survive on the car.
Post here or drop a line to the Club if still unsure.
Graham
STOC Editor
Looks a nice original Tiger there, with all the correct and rare bits. Those alloys in the car are also rare and valuable. Are looking for an idea of value before you go to market?
Genuine and original Tigers ready for restoration are becoming few and far between. I would imagine if you listed it on eBay as a complete project and with documented photographs I'd expect it reach between £8-10k.
Sure you will get interest for individual items but best selling as a complete restoration - even though it has been taken apart, all the major hard to find components appear to be all there.
Expect cheeky bids from dealers.......
Genuine and original Tigers ready for restoration are becoming few and far between. I would imagine if you listed it on eBay as a complete project and with documented photographs I'd expect it reach between £8-10k.
Sure you will get interest for individual items but best selling as a complete restoration - even though it has been taken apart, all the major hard to find components appear to be all there.
Expect cheeky bids from dealers.......
I'm probably pointing out the obvious here but the amount the car sells for is all about presentation.
You need to lay out all the parts and take pics so people can see what they are getting, whether it is a complete car in part form and can see that the hard to get parts are there like the header tank.
There seems to be a few Alpine parts hanging around. They need to go.
As Tony mentioned, you will get chancers offering to take it off your hands for £5 or 6K.
Put it on ebay and you'll get a fair price.
You need to lay out all the parts and take pics so people can see what they are getting, whether it is a complete car in part form and can see that the hard to get parts are there like the header tank.
There seems to be a few Alpine parts hanging around. They need to go.
As Tony mentioned, you will get chancers offering to take it off your hands for £5 or 6K.
Put it on ebay and you'll get a fair price.
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- Posts: 650
- Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2007 10:57 am
the bottom of the wings have come apart .it will need a lot more than you think .look at my mk2 looked great in pics still needed all the usual bottom repairs .wonder if all the important bits are there .
i think some of the forum users think these cars are worth a lot more than they are.try selling one in a triple dip recession with fuel a £7 a gallon i think pricewise these cars have peaked so theres only one way for them to go now .
i think some of the forum users think these cars are worth a lot more than they are.try selling one in a triple dip recession with fuel a £7 a gallon i think pricewise these cars have peaked so theres only one way for them to go now .
Fair comment, explain this one that sold earlier this year for £5356 on eBay and was then sent to California for restoration;garyv8tiger wrote:i think some of the forum users think these cars are worth a lot more than they are
I'd know which I'd rather have
...old thread PaulRed Race Tiger wrote:Oh look out, Micheals back to give us all his wisdom.....