The Rootes Group
At some point in time, however, the Rootes Group took over the ailing Sunbeam and Talbot marques. Brian and Geoffrey would be the impetus which carried at least one of these names into the 1960's
The Sunbeam name was used for high-quality, comfortable open-touring cars well into the 1950's (an Alpine was the car used by Cary Grant in 'To Catch a Thief"). Thanks to the nagging efforts of Brian and Geoffrey, it was decided that the new sports-car craze should be capitalized upon. The plan was to unveil a newly designed Alpine at the 1959 Motor Show and chief designer Kenneth Howe was given the task of doing so. As the story goes, Howe had fallen in love with the 1955 T-Bird while on a trip to the US and he utilized many of its design elements in the Alpine. The story has never been fully verified, but if you look at the Alpine it is very much a miniature '55 Bird.
The problem, in Norman Garrad's mind, was that the Alpine didn't have the necessary power to compete in sports racing events. Here was a car which had excellent roadholding performance, was equipped with front disc brakes and good steering. It just needed power, and Norman Garrad knew just where to look for it. His son, Ian, was the US West Coast marketing manager for Rootes and was a performance enthusiast. Ian would find an answer..
Ian Garrad had paid a lot of attention to the doings of a certain Texan who had retired from formula racing with a heart condition. Nowadays (early '60s), this Texan was stuffing Ford V8's into AC Bristol cars and making somewhat of a legend of himself in the process. Ian asked Carroll Shelby if he might be willing to try the same formula on one of his Alpines and Shelby said OK, for $10,000.
Brian Rootes was brought into Ian's confidence (Lord Rootes would have rejected the idea out of hand) and Shelby and Garrad measured the engine compartment of an Alpine with a yardstick, chalked-out the dimensions on the garage floor and then wheeled a 260 cubic-inch Ford V8 over the outline. It would work! Barely...
The Alpine was such a sturdy little car that the V8 conversion only required a few modifications. The radiator was enlarged, an MG steering rack replaced the ball-sector unit, new motor/transmission mounts were fitted (from a Fairlane) and a modified driveshaft was made up.
The engine only had 3/8-inch clearance to the wheel wells and firewall, the bay was so tight. This caused cooling problems, so the final drive was modified to 2.88:1 to keep revs down at lower speeds.
The prototype car was tested on all kinds of roads in all conditions and everyone was pleased with the effort. Now the hard part - convincing Lord Rootes to build it.
One drive in the V8 Alpine and Lord Rootes fell in love with it, naming the car "Tiger". The decision was made immediately to produce the car and sales started within months. Soon the magazine ads were touting the "world's fastest sports car priced under $3600". The motoring press was generally impressed with the Tiger and people started buying them.
One Little Problem.
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