Tale of Two Tigers

TigerBlue

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Rick n Bonnie

Black Tiger

Our first Tiger was purchased in July 1987 from Joel Johnson of Escondido, CA. A nice looking Tiger with stock engine and mostly original except for American Libre wheels, a rollbar and the color. Under the black lacquer is the original forest green and red layers of paint. We kept it that way 10 years, just maintaining and fixing things along the way.

I was offered a 260 V8 in pieces which had been part of a Mustang restoration never finished. Lots of new parts came with the block. I had to assemble it and swap the rebuilt 260 into the engine bay. Horsepower bumped up thanks to a mild cam, HiPo heads and a Performer 289 manifold. That was May 1997. Later in that year then Tiger Tales Editor Bob Norton put Tiger Blue up for sale. In short Bonnie and I bought it and later in 1998 we found a new home for the Black Tiger.

Mario was the best caretaker we could have asked for. Over 8 years the odometer turned only another 2,000 miles and most everything rough was improved. The short list includes refurbishing the dash, steering wheel, carpets and interior. He also block sanded the black paint making it look like new. Added silver stripes and an LAT hood plus dress up under the hood. New Panasport wheels too. The phone rang in October 2006 with Mario saying he was going to sell the Tiger. Faster than I write this sentence I agreed to buy it. Bonnie was happy with getting it back too!

The Tiger ownership experience has 3 priorities with me: driving, driving and more driving! This Black Tiger delivers smooth quiet understated performance. And it is a welcome contrast to the higher energy and more difficult Tiger Blue. That is why when I had an invitation to provide a Tiger for the Speed Channel program 101 Cars You Must Drive I chose to drive Black Tiger to Willow Springs for the shoot.

Tiger Blue

Tiger Blue came with experience and scars from running open track events. Other cred for the track included a Boss Block 302, Aluminum Flywheel, modified oil pan, headers and a good roll bar (still untested). And it was and is still a GM metallic blue with a growing family of rock chips. Static cling #67 on white roundels give it the look of a race car.

The front crossmember has had major mods including the fulcum pins, MG Midget rack and the usual welding. A torque arm controls the rear axle, The engine bottom end has held up well. Engine upgrades include an oil cooler from an RX7 Mazda, World Product heads, a wild hydraulic cam and of course CAT Headers. The 302 makes about 280 hp at the rear wheels and has been reliable running over 6,000 rpm.. Towing is not an option for me so Tiger Blue is driven to the Track and driven home again after 6 to 8 sessions of lapping. Driving :)

Tiger Blue also made the round trips to SUNI III and IV. Big Sky, Montana and Park City, Utah. This was possible with some comfort because the rollbar is bolted in and can be removed for summer road driving and also replacing the racing bucket seat with the stock one.

Pictures are from 2006
 

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New (used) Tires for Blue

I recently picked up some Kumho race rubber for TigerBlue and some of next years open track events. They were tested on a racing Tiger and while the lap times were (maybe too) good, the sanctioning body would not bless them for vintage racing. The size is 235 45 13, Ecsta V700. They are "R" rubber and should grip great?

Just got them on the car today and it started raining light before I got started (raindrops on camera lens below) but was able to finish before the sky opened up for real. Did not get a chance to drive them. Maybe get out on Hwy 74 next weekend to confirm clearance.

Relative to the 205 60 13 racing tires I have used (Toyo & Khumo) these are an inch and a half smaller in diameter and an inch wider where the rubber meets the road. They look a little strange on the car but if they work? They were a bargain! I will have to deal with going all the way to the redline on Willow Springs' main straight. The car should accelerate a little better with the lower effective gearing. About 5% lower with these tires vs the 13 inch Toyo. Also positive is that the Tiger will be lower by 3/4 inch and that may reduce roll in the corners and make for less drag.

Photos below are B4 and after. The before tires/wheels are 14 inch highway everyday 195 front 205 rear Yoko's. Also my street is not level. Runs downhill in the direction the camera is looking. The garage floor is level so the driveway has a twist. Right rear sits the lowest. That lifts the left front and compresses the left rear a little.

Rick
 
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Great to read the update/sequel. Having fun driving our cars is what it is all about for me.

Please let us know how the car handles with the wide, low profile tires on 13 inch rims. I am considering something similar next year using 13x8 rims and Hankook autocross tires for such events. I have heard that back in the day that when racers went to rims bigger than 8 inches with correspondingly wider tires, they started breaking front hubs. Not studs, the hubs themselves!

Cheers, Gene
 
Ortega Highway

Last Sunday I found the time to take Blue up Hwy 74 to get some feel for the grip and find out if the 235 45 x 13 tires would touch the fenders in spirited driving. 74 connects San Juan Capistrano with Lake Elsinore across the coastal mountains.

Good news was the rears only came in contact (fender lip) under big bump full compression (bottoming) travel. Also the grip was seemingly limitless at the speeds I was cornering; leaving lots of room for error. Could not get near the limits on a public road without risking life and or Tiger. Plenty fun though and the lower relative gear ratio with these low profile tires made for quick acceleration in 2nd. And redline (over:eek:) by the time the pedal was WFO.

These Ecsta V700 Kumhos will be my track tires for Open Track Events next year.
 
Rick, many thanks for sharing the good news. Now we will await the results from the track days. But I like the trend!

Cheers, Gene:D
 
TigerBlue rebuild

Last October a problem became evident while participating in the Cobra Club Open Track at Wilow.

That story is on this Forum under Events, CA at http://catmbr.org/VB_forum/showthread.php?t=2454

We got home and it has been parked pretty much as there was nothing found to do but tear it apart and look inside.

That is done, although truly the engine was screwed! That is literal and damage is minor and with only a valve job it might be put back together.

Rings and bearings will be refreshed too and I am going from flat tappet Hyd to a new Comp Cams Hyd Roller which will be similar in rpm range 3.5k to 6k+

The car is with H&H Motorsport in Whittier. I stopped sat. on the way to the Toy Drive in Black Tiger. I got to see the bits myself and take ownership of the offending screw.

The history of the screw is unfathomable at this point. It was not from my carburetor and other possibilities are endless but? We do know that it was found in the intake manifold runner to Cyl. 1. The screw must have tried to get into that cylinder hard enough to beat up the valve and/or valve seat. The heads were not dissembled yet to get a look. P.O. had this engine built for the Tiger in mid 90's by pro race shop. We have upped power with better breathing components. Added a remote filter (he used the Wix spin on.) and an RX7 oil cooler. The original components have something like 40k miles and uncounted race track miles. It is not towed. I would estimate 2.+ open track events yearly over 15 years. SUNI 3 and 4 too.

No F.O.D. damage on piston tops or the chambers.

Pictures: AAA of Blue under our covered towing. Boss crank and rods with J&E forged pistons P.O.. '71 Boss service block +0.20 no taper P.O.. Misc parts including World Prod. Windsor Jr. heads, Harland Sharp Rockers and oil pump drive with a twist. That will be upgraded. And a picture of the screw!

Rick
 
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