SCM Analysis
Detailing
Years Produced: | 1954-63 |
Number Produced: | 220 |
Original List Price: | $4,799 |
SCM Valuation: | $45,000-$65,000 |
Tune Up Cost: | $400 |
Distributor Caps: | $25 |
Chassis Number Location: | Data plate on cowl |
Club Info: | AC Owner’s Club, Ltd., 11955 SW Fairview St, Portland, OR 97225, 503/643-3225, fax 503/646-4009 |
Alternatives: | Jaguar E-type SI roadster, Austin-Healey 3000, Sunbeam Alpine “Tiger” |
This car sold for $8,100, including buyer’s premium, at the Bonhams & Brooks Beaulieu sale held September 9, 2001.
As experienced gardeners know, attempting to create a hybrid is always a chancy bit of business. This poor old AC just about defined the term “abandoned project,” sitting in the Bonhams & Brooks tent at Beaulieu bereft of its intended Ford V8, showing awful paint and looking like it had just been dragged from a long stay in a field or from under a barn.
Bonhams & Brooks estimated the car to earn a bid of between $11,200 and $16,800. Frankly, they were fortunate to raise what they did for this scabrous example. There are other ACs that have suffered the same fate as this car—indeed, there was also a 1963 Aceca coupe from the same Oregon “collection” that was offered at this auction complete with an uninstalled Ford V8.
Sadly, this roadster is now a vandalized mish-mash, neither AC Ace (thanks to the heavy-handed “427” body bodge-ups, big grille opening, imitation Halibrand mag-style wheels plus a poorly installed roll bar) nor AC Cobra (because, of course, even the most skillful conversion on the planet would still render it an AC with a Ford V8 dropped in decades later instead of a true “factory” Cobra).
At least these erstwhile plastic surgeons quit the ’63 Aceca coupe project before its body could be messed with. Consequently it made that car all the more restorable to someone who wanted to bring it back to its original AC powertrain combo. Not only that, it turned out to be a better buy than the roadster, selling for only $6,890 with premium.
We don’t know who bought either the roadster or the coupe, but we can’t imagine the roadster shown here actually being useful for anything except a donor car/spare parts source for another AC Ace’s maintenance or restoration. To even entertain thoughts about bringing this car back from the automotive Twilight Zone it presently occupies is an invitation to throw money away by the bagful and get way past its fully restored value before it ever approaches that condition.
It’s just a shame it wasn’t left alone before the previous owner or owners tried to turn it into a shade-tree Cobra.