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Cat’s Cradle
Nestled Cozy in This Sprite is a Big Jaguar’s Heart
By Scott R. Lear
Photography by Tim Suddard If you’ve taken a peek under
the hood of any car built in the past decade, odds are you in its middle. These covers
serve a variety of purposes—hiding the potentially dirty bits functions is packaging. If
nothing else, a big plastic cover gives the chugging away. If you can’t
see the pavement when the hood is up, then certainly it’s because A few quick turns of a wrench,
however, can remove these plastic covers and peel away and air is found
underneath, our natural response is to want to do something about it. Ideally, we’d prefer to pop
the hood and see a massive lump that threatens to dent the engine Aaron Couper isn’t the first
person to put a bigger engine in his car, but his story is a twist point is a diminutive 1961
Austin-Healey Sprite. For Aaron, there was no better choice
Alley Cat
Aaron, who’s originally from New Zealand and now makes his home
in West Pawlet, Vermont,
“I found the Sprite in an
Couper’s Classic Cars,
As a result, his Sprite sat idle for the
The eureka moment came one day, as such moments do,
unexpectedly.
continued. “I was finishing a customer’s Jaguar XK120, and as I
went past the Jag engine
Just like that, the turbocharged 1275cc engine was pushed to the
side. Aaron started measuring up
available space in the Sprite’s
Austin- Healey Sprite,” he laughs, echoing
Once he started work on the car, Aaron learned that there was a
semi famous
the 1960s by Alan Brooks. Dubbed
the
The Fright, the creation currently lives
by all accounts the car was a missile. Aaron continued with his
plan.
Fitting the Feline
After taking measurements, Couper was a bit surprised to
discover that the big Jaguar
however, would not be so accommodating. “The Jag transmission is
kind of wide—once I got it in there wasn’t much
Aaron recalls. “Everything else was pretty straightforward. The
engine
“I had to cut the heater out,” he explains, but it didn’t seem
to concern him too much. “No need for a
To make it all fit, Aaron also had to fabricate a removable
transmission
firewall area. It’s cozy but not uncomfortable for the average
driver.
front pipes and the stainless steel dual-pipe exhaust from an
XK120. The torquey 3.8-liter Jag block was far too lusty for
to find a suitable upgrade for the stock pumpkin. A trip to the
junkyard bore fruit in the form of a Toyota pickup truck rear end. “The
price was right, something like $75 for the
rear end,” he recalls. “I ended up making a four-link rear end
with a Panhard rod and coil-over shocks.”
to be too soft. Aaron cut some XKE springs and was happy with
the end result. Up front, Aaron mated the Sprite’s stock lower A-arms to
custom
upper A-arms and once again turned to the Internet for the
finishing touches.
a Sprite off the shelf is a 500-pound spring. This guy paid big
money to have them made in some race
Jaguar-powered 1961 Austin-Healey Sprite
one-Since
the Jag block was quite a bit longer and taller than the original
Austin-Healey unit,
and English
the end result.
“I was also thinking about the heat issues,” he explains, “It’s
one thing getting air into
all ugly around the edges. I cut about 13 inches or so out of
the middle of it, wheeled it and
of fit on the frame.” The E-type hood provides functionality
thanks to the large stock vents
Kitty’s Got Claws
Thanks to years of experience and more natural talent than Aaron
would ever admit
precisely as if it had begun life with the big Jag block in the
nose.
worked well together, I was very surprised. Iran it with no
doors. It would spin the wheels
Traction is tricky when you’re dealing with big power in a small
chassis, so an upgrade to
165mm wide tires up front and 175s in the rear.
MGB calipers up front, a common big-brake setup among
Spridget owners. A vacuum
quick,” he reports. Most people expect that the addition of such
the case. Aaron says that the despite its length, the engine is
still mounted behind the front
He assures
factor in his
has an almost physical
Good thing
“After
All, big is relative when your
starting point is A diminutive 1961
Austin-Healey sprite.”
one-on-one
Aaron Couper recently gave Classic Motorsports Publisher Tim Suddard the
opportunity to drive the Jaguar-powered Sprite. Tim was not expecting
such a well turned-out driver’s car. “Suspecting the worst, I was
pleasantly surprised with the way this Jaguar-powered monstrosity
drove,” he reports. “I was expecting very heavy steering, excessive
cockpit heat and poor handling. What I found was a car that felt more
like an 1800-pound XKE than a Spridget with too heavy an engine in it.
“The Sprite started and ran like a brand new car. Other than the wide
transmission tunnel, the conversion was totally unobtrusive—until I
planted my right foot against the accelerator pedal, that is. “The power
came on evenly and didn’t seem to overwhelm the well-sorted chassis.
While some 250 horsepower is a lot for a Spridget, the combination
seemed to work really well, and this was one of the most satisfying
conversions I’ve ever experienced. The steering was light and pleasant,
the brakes seemed to work well and the handling was not bothered by the
extra weight of the XKE engine at all. There was no axle tramp, either.
Overall, it’s a very well-engineered and sorted project that Aaron
should be very proud of.”
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Contact us Email . Couper's Classic Cars. 314 Rt 153, West Pawlet, Vermont 05775 | |||||||||||||