AC Owners Club Forum
AC Owners Club Forum => Recent ACs => Topic started by: Chafford on March 10, 2012, 16:34:03
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Here's the latest Cobra derivative from AC - a composite bodied car to be built by Hi Tech in South Africa and yours for £67,500. It'll have a Corvette LS3 engine for Europe and a Ford V8 for the UK. I wonder whether this is a specially commissioned design for AC or merely a Superformance with an AC badge.
AC Mk11 Classic
(http://i1257.photobucket.com/albums/ii504/Chafford1/ACMk11Classic.jpg)
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And another photo of the Mk 11 composite bodied car (with the £175,000 aluminium version in the background) at this month's Geneva Motor Show.
(http://i1257.photobucket.com/albums/ii504/Chafford1/ACMkII.jpg)
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quote:
Originally posted by Chafford
...I wonder whether this is a specially commissioned design for AC or merely a Superformance with an AC badge...
Actually you should be thrilled that this is "merely a Superformance with an AC badge."
Hi-Tech Automotive builds a fantastic product. Accurate. High quality. Durable. It will compare favorably to anything the Lubinsky-era "AC Cars" has ever sold up to now.
The 289 FIA and street Cobra replicas being produced by Hi-Tech for sale under the Shelby American, Superformance and (now) AC Cars banners are top notch vehicles. Save perhaps for an AC Heritage-built aliminum-bodied MkII, I doubt you'll find a better choice than this. Mark my words.
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I don't doubt you. I suppose what I was driving at is what will distinguish the AC product from the Superformance version if the former carries a price premium.
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£175,000 notes for the ali car....as if....!!!!!!!!!
Think I'll open another bottle of Bolly ;)
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well then, there israw materials, manufacturing, markups at two or three levels , lisencing and the like........I'd open a case of Bolly %)
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Which is beginning to raise hopes of a new MK II 428 at some stage ? [8D]
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quote:
Originally posted by TLegate
£175,000 notes for the ali car....as if....!!!!!!!!!
Think I'll open another bottle of Bolly ;)
That kind of figure is probably par for the course nowadays for specialist manufacturers producing handfuls of cars each year - Eagle are a good example.
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There are large profit margins and then there are outrageous profit margins! I think we all know about the Eagle pricing policy :) so let's not go down that road... (how can anyone advertise a car as 'completely original and unrestored' when it's been retrimmed and repainted? The English language ain't wot it was))
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quote:
Originally posted by TLegate
There are large profit margins and then there are outrageous profit margins! I think we all know about the Eagle pricing policy :) so let's not go down that road... (how can anyone advertise a car as 'completely original and unrestored' when it's been retrimmed and repainted? The English language ain't wot it was))
But think of the benefits of Mr Gray's creation! A legal AC badge on the front of your car, chassis number recorded in the AC Factory ledger, a bloodline going back to the '60s cars and the ability to meet owners of original Cobras at AC events.
Surely this must be worth the extra cost over a body from Poland built by a guy called Gerry. [;)]
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Such things matter to some folks.
Amazing what comes out of Poland, badges or no badges...
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Personally, I'm not really disappointed in the pricing...[:D][;)]Proves once again my portfolio has outperformed the stock market. and I concur, Poland produces wonderful stuff... looks like there might even be a gaggle of Daytona Coupes coming out of Poland..
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150570981940775&set=a.10150276817090775.378137.66078830774&type=3&theater
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What I personnaly find amazing in all these discussions about the 2012 offerings of AC, is that nobody here is concerned with the ingredients: engine, suspension, chassis.
I do fully agree that Superformance builds high quality products which externally do very closely follow the AC/Shelby Cobra ancestors looks, but under the bonnet, chassis and suspension wise they do differ quite a lot from the ancestors (though no direct lineage pedigree wise)!
All the discussions here are centered on badge and looks.
Polish built Cobras are coming very much closer to the what they are replicating.
AC Heritage products are of a different breed, one that also underneath traces back to the parental lineage!
I believe that this makes quite a difference! Whether the market will recognize this is a different matter though!?
Constant
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quote:
Originally posted by MkIV Lux
...I do fully agree that Superformance builds high quality products which externally do very closely follow the AC/Shelby Cobra ancestors looks, but under the bonnet, chassis and suspension wise they do differ quite a lot from the ancestors...
This is certainly true of the Superformance MkIII. But in the case of the Shelby continuation Cobras (289 and 427) and of the SPF MkII, Hi-Tech replicates an original-style round tube chassis with 3-inch or 4-inch mains, depending on the model. The MkII has transverse leaf-spring suspension, and the MkIII uses coil-spring suspension. I would imagine the AC versions will be similar.
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quote:
Originally posted by MkIV Lux
What I personnaly find amazing in all these discussions about the 2012 offerings of AC, is that nobody here is concerned with the ingredients: engine, suspension, chassis.
I do fully agree that Superformance builds high quality products which externally do very closely follow the AC/Shelby Cobra ancestors looks, but under the bonnet, chassis and suspension wise they do differ quite a lot from the ancestors (though no direct lineage pedigree wise)!
All the discussions here are centered on badge and looks.
Polish built Cobras are coming very much closer to the what they are replicating.
AC Heritage products are of a different breed, one that also underneath traces back to the parental lineage!
I believe that this makes quite a difference! Whether the market will recognize this is a different matter though!?
Constant
Or to say it another way, whether someone is prepared to pay £175,000 for a UK built aluminium machine rather than £67,500 for a South African built car which, for all intents and purposes, looks just as good and drives just as well.
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quote:
Originally posted by SunDude
This is certainly true of the Superformance MkIII. But in the case of the Shelby continuation Cobras (289 and 427) and of the SPF MkII, Hi-Tech replicates an original-style round tube chassis with 3-inch or 4-inch mains, depending on the model. The MkII has transverse leaf-spring suspension, and the MkIII uses coil-spring suspension. I would imagine the AC versions will be similar.
Brian, thanks for this info. I had missed that so far.
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With pleasure.
As it happens the guy who developed the MkII for Hi-Tech/SPF/Shelby et al. is the guy I bought my SPF Cobra from. He painstakingly replicated the original CSX2000 cars for this project, and had access to an original throughout. I saw one of his "babies" a year ago and it was simply stunning. Only a marque expert like Ned Scudder could tell it from the real thing.
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quote:
Originally posted by SunDude
With pleasure.
As it happens the guy who developed the MkII for Hi-Tech/SPF/Shelby et al. is the guy I bought my SPF Cobra from. He painstakingly replicated the original CSX2000 cars for this project, and had access to an original throughout. I saw one of his "babies" a year ago and it was simply stunning. Only a marque expert like Ned Scudder could tell it from the real thing.
From what I have read here and elsewhere, Hi Tech will be building what is essentially the same car with Superformance, Shelby and AC badges. A sensible policy from AC's point of view since it avoids expensive development costs. The price in pounds (£67,500) seems to correlate closely with that in US dollars for the Superformance and Shelby versions in the States.
The 'badge engineering' is a little like BMC is the 1960s when you could buy Austin, Morris, Riley, Wolseley and MG variants of the same car!
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For some guys, having a Shelby or AC badge is worth the extra money over a Superformance. But for me, my budget doesn't afford me the luxury of having to choose.
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I suppose the only difference when comparing prices will be that the AC will be a fully built car whereas the Superformance as sold in the US excludes engine and gearbox.
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quote:
Originally posted by SunDude
For some guys, having a Shelby or AC badge is worth the extra money over a Superformance. But for me, my budget doesn't afford me the luxury of having to choose.
Before I bought my AC Cobra MkIV, I had been extensively looking at the upper end of the replica market. I had owned a Mohr before. Kirkham were just about to start up. There were some superior handling replicas on the market over here like Superformance Mk III, CN Cobra (German built on Dax derived chassis). I had testdriven quite a few replicas and ACs then, some of the replicas had superior handling. But soon I realized that a good replica did cost almost as much as a MkIV!! So the choice was ultimately easy to make.
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quote:
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Originally posted by Chafford
The 'badge engineering' is a little like BMC is the 1960s when you could buy Austin, Morris, Riley, Wolseley and MG variants of the same car!
.... the difference being that BMC did the engineering, development and construction/assembly themselves, whereas here and now we have "foreign" products simply being badged as ACs and the world is made to believe that they are genuine ACs.
That is not my understanding of the definition of a car maker.
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quote:
Originally posted by SunDude
For some guys, having a Shelby or AC badge is worth the extra money over a Superformance. But for me, my budget doesn't afford me the luxury of having to choose.
Personally I'd much rather own a Kirkham with no Shelby or AC badge, than a Superformance with either...
Gus
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Another photo of the Mk11 Classic from Geneva:
(http://i1257.photobucket.com/albums/ii504/Chafford1/425752_255126187907977_110063782414219_570188_1076803975_n.jpg)
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quote:
Originally posted by MkIV Lux
quote:
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Originally posted by Chafford
The 'badge engineering' is a little like BMC is the 1960s when you could buy Austin, Morris, Riley, Wolseley and MG variants of the same car!
.... the difference being that BMC did the engineering, development and construction/assembly themselves, whereas here and now we have "foreign" products simply being badged as ACs and the world is made to believe that they are genuine ACs.
That is not my understanding of the definition of a car maker.
No, but if you want to take this approach, then the Autokraft MkIVs produced between 1982 and 1986 before Brian Angliss took a stake in the AC company were also 'foreign' products with an AC badge - the AC company playing no part in the MkIV's initial development.
Personally I prefer the inclusive approach: Autokrafts and the current cars being regarded as genuine ACs.
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Courtesy of 'MarkIV' on the Club Cobra website, here are some more photos of the Mk11 Classic. AC used the car developed by Riverside Racers in Canada with Hi Tech in South Africa as its Geneva show car with an AC badge attached - the car is now at Mark IV's Superformance dealership in the States and will be marketed as the Superformance Mk 11 'Slabside'. The Shelby CSX8000 series, also built by Hi Tech, is the same basic car.
http://www.riversideracers.com/
No doubt, this will be very close to the final AC model once it has passed Individual Vehicle Approval (IVA) rules.
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/IMG_2627.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/IMG_26281.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/IMG_2629.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/IMG_2630.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/IMG_2631.jpg)
According to 'Mark IV', the chassis is a development of the one 'Superformance developed for the FIA and USRRC models using the original AC Cars blueprints and specifications. Upgrades including stronger frame tubes, updated Wilwood brakes and other modifications provide an improved driving experience while keeping the original feel.'
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia27.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia17.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia18.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia10.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia9.jpg)
(http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/data/500/fia16.jpg)
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I see no side indicator repeaters...and the interior...good luck with IVA!
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quote:
Originally posted by TLegate
I see no side indicator repeaters...and the interior...good luck with IVA!
According to Terry Webb, the plan is for Jurgen Mohr in Germany to homologate and complete all models before they are sent to the dealers.
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All of the above pictures are of my pre production car. It was rushed off to Geneva for that show but it was built for me, and not to meet IVA specs. which we don`t have to meet here.
The car that was sent to Goodwood was the first rh version and the first of the 50 Celebration cars.
That car has most of the IVA requirements.
The next car,which left the factory today for the Mcau motor show in China, is closer to the real deal. This car has already been sold so will remain in Asia.
Ross
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quote:
Originally posted by riverside
All of the above pictures are of my pre production car. It was rushed off to Geneva for that show but it was built for me, and not to meet IVA specs. which we don`t have to meet here.
The car that was sent to Goodwood was the first rh version and the first of the 50 Celebration cars.
That car has most of the IVA requirements.
The next car,which left the factory today for the Mcau motor show in China, is closer to the real deal. This car has already been sold so will remain in Asia.
Ross
Congratulations Ross!
This was the press release for the £75,000 AC MkII Classic 50th Anniversary Special Edition with 350hp 306ci Ford V8:
http://www.automotivepr.com/news_detail.php?AC-celebrates-50-years-of-Cobra-at-Goodwood-Revival-with-its-own-classic-model-1208
(http://www.automotivepr.com/cmsAdmin/uploads/ss_cobra_050912_04_001.jpg)
(http://www.automotivepr.com/cmsAdmin/uploads/IMAG0002.jpg)
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I like it very much, definately interested in one. are there plans to get a EU-type approval for MKIIs???
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I bet it looks great. Just drop an eye on the Riverside Racers website (http://www.riversideracers.com) and you'll see their new FIA. These guys do wonder. The car just looks as it was, back in the 60's.
Kirkham has a notable contender ;-)
For Switzerland, AC Switzerland (http://www.ac-cars.ch) should be the importer, but heard nothing yet about the Mk II. Same for the 378 Zagato.
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quote:
Originally posted by SwissAKL
I like it very much, definately interested in one. are there plans to get a EU-type approval for MKIIs???
I think the plan was to sell the Mk11 with the Corvette engine in Europe.
Possibly worth contacting the company:
Tel: 0049 / (0)7082 20226
Fax: 0049 / (0)7082 5865
Email: info@accars.de