“I went to see John to talk about it and he told me all sorts of stories,” says Harper. “He tried to degrease the chassis and passed out one night in his single garage, only to wake up again at 2am. He said it was amazing how much of the car seemed to be held together with Araldite.
“Berry campaigned it primarily in sprints and hillclimbs before removing the Cosworth engine and fitting it to a single-seater Brabham, later selling the lump to Martin Wyatt.”
Previous owners, including John Berry, hillclimbed this car
It was during a chance encounter at the 2004 Le Mans Classic that Harper bumped into Wyatt who, against the odds, had held on to the engine for a number of years.
“He had intended to come in his +8 but there was something wrong with it so he brought his 4/4 instead.
“I looked under the bonnet and there it was – he’d been using it the whole time. Despite what must have been my obvious enthusiasm, Martin insisted he had no intention of selling the engine.”
Harper’s 4/4 soldiered on for a further eight years before he decided that the time was right for a proper restoration.
A fan of angry four-pots, Harper’s garage includes a Vegantune Evante and Honda S2000
“It had been in the family for 40 years and got to the point where if it wasn’t restored it would probably go to the dogs, so I bit the bullet and took it to a Morgan specialist up north in January 2012.
“When I got it back you wouldn’t believe how bad it was – it would define unbelievable. I brought it to Dave Baskerville in Barnstaple, who discovered that the gearbox needed taking out and redoing, even though it had been done twice already. Even the propshaft was the wrong length so it was vibrating badly.”
The project was then graced with two strokes of luck: the first, that the Cortina 1500 hadn’t been rebuilt by the first specialist; the second, that then club competition secretary Wyatt had agreed to reunite the original 1498cc Cosworth, which had since been run in everything from a Ginetta G4 to a Marcos, with chassis 996.
This car spent decades being used as the Harper family runabout
There was just enough time to rebuild the engine to coincide with the completion of the restoration, and after going on the rollers a healthy 118bhp and 106lb ft torque was registered – comparable with the motor’s performance in period.
It’s easy to believe the power figures as the engine barks into life, the noise reverberating around the barn after you slip into the leather-trimmed bucket seat and twist the key.
The twin 40DCOE Webers need a tickle to keep the revs up and the dry-sump lump takes about 10 mins to warm; when it’s ready, you’d best be sure you are, too.
The 4/4’s streamlined hardtop
The slick four-speed ’box is a revelation and there’s no vagueness or recalcitrance to detract from the experience.
With a 4.56:1 rear axle ratio you work through the gears quickly, which could be a disappointment with the old Cortina engine – until, that is, you realise that the ceiling of the Cosworth is so much higher.
Bury the throttle in third instead of changing up at 4000rpm and the engine comes to life, screaming around the dial to a scintillating 7000 and filling the tight cabin with a mechanical roar.
“It feels like we’re back in 1964,” shouts Harper from the passenger seat, as the hedgerows blur in your periphery and your vision narrows on the road ahead.
‘Bury the throttle instead of changing up at 4000rpm and the engine comes to life, screaming around to a scintillating 7000’
Such is the faithful accuracy of the restoration that you don’t need sepia-tinged specs to imagine threading the little Morgan through Druids and Cascades rather than the sweeping lanes of Devon, chasing the tail of the great Jim Clark and its own place in history.
Today, as in ’64, the unique Cosworth-engined 4/4 punches well above its weight, despite being forced to play a supporting role in period for the sake of 20bhp.
But while many of its competitors have fallen by the wayside, this special and much-loved Morgan has gone from strength to strength – a welcome reminder that sometimes the race is a marathon, not a sprint.
Images: Will Williams
Thanks to Buckland House
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Greg MacLeman
Greg MacLeman is a contributor to and former Features Editor of Classic & Sports Car, and drives a restored and uprated 1974 Triumph 2500TC