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Before
we start there are a few things you need to know about the Suffolk
SS100 Jaguar replica. The body moulds were taken directly off an
original car and most of the brightwork, such as the fold-down screen
and radiator surround, can be used (and is used) as direct replacements
on originals. Indeed, Suffolk has been responsible for several items
being remanufactured where they were either nolonger available or
the original tooling was no longer serviceable.
Even where the car does not match original
specification (the standard headlights are smaller, the bodywork
is fibreglass and items such as exposed rear fuel tank are dummies),
original SS100 items can be fitted if the owners budget allows.
If you needed any further convincing that here is something which
is rather more authentic than your average Cobra replica, the SS100
is all Jaguar based and warmly welcomed within the Jaguar Drivers’
Club.
So
it’s fair to say that the SS100 takes the replication game
to a rather higher plain than your average kit car lookalike and,
while chassis and running gear aren’t to original designs,
Suffolk’s MD, Roger Williams, refers to his cars as a visual
photocopy - externally identical.
The various cars in the workshop when we visited
certainly make for a dramatic impact. In the spotless assembly area
(where around four cars are built each year and a further eight
or so go out as kits) they look quite stunning with their sweeping
wings, louvred bonnets and huge 18" wire wheels and period
profile rubber.
But check out the specifications sheet and
you’re in for a surprise - while the SS100 looks a large and
imposing machine, the bare statistics tell a different story. At
just 12"8 long and a measly 5"2 wide, the Jaguar is a
positive minnow against more grand counterparts from Rolls etc.
Powered by a hulking straight six engine, you’re reminded
that the original Jaguar was never intended as a stately carriage
but rather a sports car.
It’s a feature not lost on Roger Williams
or his customers - most head for a 4.2-litre Jag engine pumping
out anything from 210bhp to 265bhp. Not surprisingly, this is one
reason why the Suffolk’s underpinnings don’t replicate
the originals since in 1938 the chassis didn’t have to cope
with much more than 120bhp from its largest 3-litre engine option.
So
today a substantial ladderframe chassis plays host to Jaguar XJ6
suspension (shortened to E-type track at the back), bespoke adjustable
coil-over dampers front and back and the big cat’s vented
front and solid rear disc brakes. Even those gorgeous wire wheels
are beefed up to a 72-spoke design instead of the originals 60-spoke
set-up in order to cope with the additional power and torque. The
Suffolk SS100, as with it’s forebear, is designed for performance
rather than simply making a grand entrance.
As you might have guessed by now, much of the car’s underpinnings
are made to measure rather than pilfered from the nearest handy
donor car - pedals, fuel tank, radiator are all bespoke items while
production fitments such as the Jaguar steering rack are modified
prior to installation (in this case the power steering pump and
its associated bracketry is removed).
As we’ve already mentioned, apart from the wonderfully louvred
aluminium bonnet, the bodywork on the car is supplied in a primed
fibreglass. Roger Williams is adamant that the GRP body makes far
more sense in terms of strength and resistance to wear and tear
(as witnessed by him jumping up and down on the running boards and
putting his whole body weight on the front wings).
As well as building up customer cars, the workshop is often servicing
existing machines and fettling others that have been bought back
by the company and are being prepared for resale. Suffolk has a
highly active policy of buying up any of its customer's cars that
come onto the market.
Such is the company’s confidence in the resale value of the
SS100 that existing customers rarely suffer any depreciation at
all. Indeed, the market is so lucrative at the moment that many
will make a welcome profit at the end of any transaction.
Of
those machines currently residing at the works, two were available
for our closer inspection. The Old English white car was a 2.8-litre
machine currently residing with the factory while the owner recovers
from a shoulder injury. Meanwhile, the light blue car is a more
purposeful 4.2-litre beast with a few interesting additions such
as a £2000 stereo carefully tucked out of sight, an engine-turned
dashboard and original specification headlights. Both are immaculately
finished.
Rear hinged doors are a real novelty these days
and, so long as they are fitted with a double-latch, they are completely
road legal. With a good weight to them, they swing open wide and
close with a satisfyingly substantial ‘thunk’. Suffolk’s
own seats (exact replicas of the originals - but you’d probably
guessed that already) are adjustable both in terms of seat runners
and also the rake of the back. Initially comfortable, we found the
lack of side support slightly disconcerting when on the move. But
while the company can supply seats with additional padding it’s
apparently not an option taken up by many owners.
A 16" steering wheel dominates proceedings
in the interior, with the four spokes set in the correct ‘X’
layout rather than the more conventional gun sights one might expect.
The engine-turned dash arrangement on the blue car certainly looked
the part, while Suffolk’s specially commissioned dial faces
have the correct SS logos and layout.
Down in the footwell, the floor-mounted pedals
are adequately spaced while in operation they are all well-weighted
and full of feel.
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