Compact dimensions and the weight savings of its thin-wall block design were hallmarks of Ford’s new Windsor small-block V8 series upon its debut in 1962. It soon became obvious the little Windsor ...
More than other cars, the Sunbeam could never decide what it wanted to be. The Sunbeam Tiger was made by a British brand that built it with a Ford engine. Then the company was bought by Chrysler, ...
This 1965 Sundance Tiger on Exotic Car Trader rides the fine line between preserving the old and embracing the new, all with a cheeky homage paint scheme. American racer and designer Carroll Shelby is ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Tiger has a fascinating history, although its life was short through no fault of its own. In 1962, Carroll Shelby officiated ...
The Sunbeam Tiger is a factory V-8-swapped version of the Rootes Group's Sunbeam Alpine roadster, built from 1964-1967 by Jensen Motorcars and powered by the Ford Windsor V-8. The Sunbeam Alpine, ...
The Sunbeam Alpine was a sports car developed by the British manufacturer Rootes Group from 1953 to 1955 and then again from 1959 to 1968. Related Articles Me & My Car: East Bay owner keeps ’91 ...
The Sunbeam Tiger was a high-performance V8 sports version of the Sunbeam Alpine roadster, and it was designed – at least in part – by American car designer and race driver Carroll Shelby. Produced ...
SCITUATE — Warner Dauphinee’s red 1964 Sunbeam Tiger convertible is a prime example of what used to be called a hybrid back in the 1960s — a mix of European styling with American power. He said he ...
His automotive adventure started reporting on various motorsport events as a sports writer before moving onto a full-time auto career with various sites, including This Week In Motors and ...
The Tiger story is long and, in typical British automaker fashion, somewhat convoluted. When you think about it, though, it's sort of an Anglo-American Subaru BRZ/Scion FR-S -- a combination of parts ...
Back in the 1960s, Carroll Shelby was the go-to man for companies in need of high-performance cars in the U.S. Even giant Ford was forced to turn to the man to handle the company’s motorsport ...
Employing celebs to pitch cars is nothing new. But you'd have to wonder how much Rootes Motors had to pay the timelessly dashing Cary Grant to pose with this Sunbeam Tiger. Yes, it may look just like ...