http://www.completekitcar.co.uk September 2019 71
At this point I need to apologise to all my
neighbours – the exhaust silencers hadn’t
yet arrived. Wummpff... wummpff... BAM!
BBBAAMMM! It fired at the second turn
of the key and the oil pressure came straight
up to 60psi and the car settled down to a
reasonable idle. Phew!
The next two hurdles were running-in
and IVA. As the IVA test dates were months
away and we were at the tail end of summer,
there was no chance of getting it road
registered before the roads got slippery and
salty, so Andy suggested running it in at the
Complete Kit Car track day at Blyton Park in
September 2018.
I was desperate to drive the car and,
although it sounds a bit mad to run a brand
new engine in on a track day, it would be a
good safe environment to snag the car and
bed in the brakes for IVA. And anyway, most
race engines are run in on a dyno in a matter
of hours...
Andy kindly set up the alignment for me
and helped with a few last minute jobs to get
the car ready – fabricating a silencer support
frame and checking the ECU map would be
safe for a track day.
After sorting a few minor issues at the
track day (air lock in cooling system, battery
isolator fault) and getting used to the car and
the circuit, I had an amazing day. The car was
unbelievable. The acceleration is a given, but
it’s the brakes and cornering that is equally
otherworldly. As it’s mid-engined and has
dinner-plate sized discs at each corner, the
car seems to pivot around the engine when
you hit the middle pedal and you can brake
incredibly late on a track day.
Although it doesn’t have any aero (though
the diffuser has been wind-tunnel tested at
MIRA and is functional), the mechanical
grip from the 335-section rear tyres is
staggering and fast corners are a proper test
of your neck muscles.
In total the car did 65 gentle (ish!) miles
at Blyton and was brilliant fun. One of
the best days of my life and easily the best
track car I’ve ever driven. Having tracked a
Cerbera V8 and a Westfield on slicks, plus a
Radical SR1, this is high praise.
As the afterglow of the track day faded,
the car passed its IVA test (with only a few
minor items to tweak) first time and is now
fully road registered.
I’ve since covered over 1000 miles in it
and try and use it whenever it’s dry. I’m not
precious about driving it in the rain, but it’s
pretty hairy in the wet as the lightest brush
of throttle will light up the rear tyres, no
matter what gear you’re in.
In total it took about three years to
build, putting in hundreds of man hours (I
didn’t log them, but it’s a lot) and there’s a
brilliant feeling of satisfaction when you’re
behind the wheel of a car you’ve built
yourself. Built not bought.
Gardner
Douglas
T70
ENGINE: 6.2-litre
LS3 V8, Lingenfelter
GT11 camshaft with
titanium retainers and
springs, Canems ECU,
Pace dry sump system,
Speedflow oil pipes,
Goodridge fuel pipes
GEARBOX: Porsche
G50/20 6-speed
with LSD
SUSPENSION: Inboard
rocker suspension,
double wishbones
front and rear, Protech
dampers and springs,
rose-jointed anti-roll
bars front and rear
BRAKES: AP Racing
4-pot calipers, grooved
and vented discs front
and rear, Pagid RSH 42
pads. Separate Brembo
handbrake caliper
WHEELS AND TYRES:
Image Wheels Billet 81
three-piece, powder
coated gold on rims
and centres. Pirelli P
Zero Assimetrico tyres
in 335/30x18 rear and
245/40x17 front
INTERIOR: GD leather
trimmed seats, hard-
anodised aluminium
panels, Schroth silver
Profi III ASM harnesses,
Momo Team steering
wheel, custom Porsche
917-style wooden
gearknob, SPA kit dash,
Tyco-style electronic
battery cut-out,
FEV plumbed in gas
extinguisher system
EXTERIOR: Gelcoat
body in RAL 6018
Yellow Green
T70 looks purposeful at rear with
the rear diffuser and flat floor
having been wind-tunnel tested.
Tripod mirror stands are unique to GD.
While no T70 is a budget build, if
you compare it to a modern supercar of
equivalent performance it’s a bargain. Its
915kg weight (weighed full of fluids at IVA)
and 500bhp V8 means it can hit 60mph
in under 3.0sec with 100mph coming up
in around 6.0sec. To put that in context, a
McLaren F1 was timed by Autocar hitting
0-100mph in 6.3sec, while the current
generation Lamborghini Huracán takes
3.4sec to get to 62mph. You’ll need £160k to
buy the Lambo and you’ll be just as unique
as every reality TV star in Chelsea.
However, it’s not the performance figures
of the T70 that impress you the most on
the road, it’s the ride quality and torque
of the 6.2-litre V8 that leave the lasting
impression. With up to 500lb ft of torque
on tap, the pull is immense in any gear
and you don’t need to change gear that
often on the road – fourth is fine for most
A-roads. Not having to worry what gear
you’re in makes it pretty easy to drive,
though the clutch and gearlever both need
a good shove.
Since it’s been on the road, I’ve taken out
as many passengers as I can in it – it’s great
to be able to share the experience. The wide
sills mean you sit shoulder to shoulder in a
T70, making it a social place to be and you
can chat without shouting. People can be a
bit sniffy about kit cars if they’re used to fast
BMWs and Porsches etc, but when they’ve
experienced a bit of full throttle in the T70
they get a new found respect for them!
But of course there will always be
doubters that will stick to their tin-tops no
matter what. So spare a thought for those
people that buy the Lambo. They’ll lose
£50k in depreciation in the first year and
have the slower car...
066 GD T70.indd 71 01/08/2019 12:46 pm