This is off the topic of the red car.
I'd like to correct a few comments that appeared earlier in this thread about the involvement of Jensen and Pressed Steel in building the Alpines and Tigers. The following is my current understanding of the process.
In the 1964-67 time frame both Alpine and Tiger bodies were built on the same line at Pressed Steel in Oxford. Various assemblies were built and then welded together to form the tub and what the industry calls the "buck".
From some of these initial assemblies, Tigers differed from Alpines! And vice versa. There are many Tiger specific differences in Pressed Steel's construction of Tigers versus Alpines.
In the case of the Alpines, at Pressed Steel the entire car was built and even finish painted. The interior and trim were installed and the car was then trucked about 60 miles north to Rootes' Ryton facility for installation of the drive train. With Alpines Rootes had subcontracted the vast majority of the construction to Pressed Steel.
Since Tiger transmission tunnels were to be installed by Jensen, Pressed steel did not install a tunnel, so the carpeting and seats were shipped "loose". It appears that except for the floor the rest of the interior was installed by Pressed Steel. The otherwise completed, painted and trimmed Tigers were trucked about 70 miles north to Jensen.
At Jensen the Tiger tunnels were installed and various minor mods were done to each chassis before Jensen installed the drive line.
Jensen did not "build" the Tigers. Jensen did a little work on each. For their efforts Jensen was paid GBP 30. That's not a typo. All they got was 30 pounds per car. The majority of the building was done by Pressed Steel.
The point I want to make is that while Tigers were built on the same line at Pressed Steel as Alpines, the two differed from the beginning of construction.
BT
at the beach