When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: bugeye sprite

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Austin-Healey Sprite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin-Healey_Sprite

    The Austin-Healey Sprite is a small open sports car produced in the United Kingdom from 1958 until 1971. The Sprite was announced to the press in Monte Carlo by the British Motor Corporation on 20 May 1958, two days after that year's Monaco Grand Prix. It was intended to be a low-cost model that "a chap could keep in his bike shed", yet be the ...

  3. Donna Mae Mims - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Mae_Mims

    Donna Mae Mims. Donna Mae Mims (July 1, 1927 – October 6, 2009) was an American race car driver. She was the first woman to win a Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) national championship. Mims won the SCCA Class H championship in 1963. She was known as the "Pink Lady" of racing because she wore a pink racing helmet and coveralls and had the ...

  4. Bugeye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugeye

    Bugeye. Edna Lockwood, a surviving bugeye. The bugeye is a type of sailboat developed in the Chesapeake Bay for oyster dredging. The predecessor of the skipjack, it was superseded by the latter as oyster harvests dropped.

  5. Austin-Healey Sebring Sprite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin-Healey_Sebring_Sprite

    Austin-Healey Sebring Sprite. The Austin-Healey Sebring Sprite is a small sports car that was produced by the Donald Healey Motor Company at its Cape Works in Warwick and at the Healey's Speed Equipment Division in Grosvenor Street, London W1. Subsequently Sebring Sprites were also produced by John Sprinzel Ltd from his well-known premises in ...

  6. Donald Healey Motor Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Healey_Motor_Company

    The business was founded in 1945 by Donald Healey, a successful car designer and rally driver. Healey discussed sports car design with Achille Sampietro, a chassis specialist for high performance cars and Ben Bowden, a body engineer, when all three worked at Humber during World War II.

  7. Austin-Healey 100 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin-Healey_100

    Austin-Healey 100. The Austin-Healey 100 is a sports car that was built by Austin-Healey from 1953 until 1956. Based on Austin A90 Atlantic mechanicals, it was developed by Donald Healey from his Nash-Healey 2 door sports car, which had Nash mechanicals instead, [3] to be produced in-house by his small Healey car company in Warwick. [1]

  8. Sprite Car Club of Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprite_Car_Club_of_Australia

    The Sprite Car Club of Australia is a club founded in 1960 for owners and enthusiasts of Austin-Healey Sprites and MG Midget cars. It was established by seven enthusiasts at a BMC car dealership in Sydney, for owners of Austin-Healey Sprite Bugeyes also known as Frogeye which started assembly in 1958 at Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England.

  9. Austin-Healey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin-Healey

    Austin-Healey was a British sports car maker established in 1952 through a joint venture between the Austin division of the British Motor Corporation (BMC) and the Donald Healey Motor Company (Healey), a renowned automotive engineering and design firm. Leonard Lord represented BMC and Donald Healey his firm. BMC merged with Jaguar Cars in 1966 ...