I must admit I am rarely disappointed when purchasing Europas, but I had a unique opportunity that did not quite pan out in the way I had hoped. I saw an interesting S1 engine advertised on Ebay which would perfectly suit my motorless 460468. I was intrigued and so I inquired further about the state of the rest of the car. The current owner and purchased it from an estate and he now had plans to Tesla swap the car. I asked if he would rather trade me for a similar condition S2, but he was not interested. He sent me pictures of the car and its title...then the story got interesting. The title shows the car as 460393....the sister car to my 460392. I asked if he would sell the car to me. He said he might, but wanted time to think on it....the classic slow play. After some back and forth we agreed on a fair price and I committed to purchasing the car. I drove to Chicago and immediately noticed something odd... The rear tail section was of an S1B. I had been convinced by the title and realized the tail cluster had never actually been pictured....It was an honest mistake on his part as he just did not know the difference. The car wears S2 doors strangely enough. It is body number 460643 which would make it the penultimate S1 body. I am aware the body and chassis numbers did not match, nor were the numbered engines installed in any particular order. It does not have its chassis plate, so I need to find the number on the frame to confirm the vin.
On the plus side- The frame is in excellent shape. Somebody loved this car. For it to be in this condition 50+ years later... what an effort. The motor has been substantially reworked. It has a spare set of TC wheels, tons of spare gauges, a supposedly rebuilt engine with a ported head, headers, a warneford side draft intake with DCOE 45. Unfortunately the PO disassembled all of it in pursuit of his electric swap, so I have some sorting to do....
I am thrilled with the car overall and it is a project I am looking forward to...eventually....
At this rate I only need a true S1, a 54, and the coveted 47 to complete a collection worthy of starting a non profit museum of broken Europas