Kit car
From Free net encyclopedia
Image:Complete remake of a Volkswagen bug 09-1999.jpg
A kit-car is an automobile that is available in kit form, i.e. you buy it in parts that you have to assemble yourself. Usually you take many of the parts from one or more donor vehicles. A common type of kit car is the dune buggy based on VW parts. Many kit cars are made to look like historic or current cars (the AC Cobra is a popular one) while other are completely original designs.
In the UK during the 1950s, 1960s and beyond, "kit cars" were sometimes also production vehicles that were partially assembled in order to circumvent the extraordinarly high "value added" taxes of the era. Often the cars could be taken home and completed in as little as a weekend.
Several of todays sports car producers such as Lotus and TVR started as kit car makers.
According to figures given to the magazine Total Kit Car the most popular kit in the United Kingdom is made by Robin Hood Sportscars who sell 700 kits a year.[1]
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See also
Australian Kit Car manufacturers
Canadian Kit Car manufacturers
Estonian Kit Car manufacturers
New Zealand Kit Car manufacturers
Swedish Kit Car manufacturers
UK Kit Car manufacturers
- Buckler Cars
- Caterham Cars
- Clan
- Davrian
- Dutton Cars
- Fairthorpe Cars
- Ginetta Cars
- Locost
- Lotus Cars
- Marcos
- Midas Cars
- MK Sportscars
- Robin Hood
- Rochdale
- Tornado (car company)
- Trident (car company)
- TVR
- Unipower
- Westfield Cars
Additionally, there are over 120 kit cars based around the Mini