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Yes but still no roll up or power windows.
Just an aside. Carey from SE contacted Intermeccanica in regards to purchasing now unused IM parts/technology and was told that anything regarding prior IM parts/technology such as the Conv D top is not for sale. I figure that all of this was part of Henry’s buyout and is now the property of Electramechanica or whatever they are calling it. That’s a real shame.

@550 Phil posted:

I figure that all of this was part of Henry’s buyout and is now the property of Electramechanica or whatever they are calling it. That’s a real shame.

Sad. If my experience finding a replacement pickup for my 60’s Mosrite Dobro is any indication, all that stuff will get piled into a warehouse and forgotten for 50 years.

(Thank goodness in my case that someone cared enough to find one of Moseley’s grand kids  and dig 150 NOS pickups out of a storage unit in Bakersfield, CA)

@550 Phil posted:

Carey from SE contacted Intermeccanica in regards to purchasing now unused IM parts/technology and was told that anything regarding prior IM parts/technology such as the Conv D top is not for sale. I figure that all of this was part of Henry’s buyout and is now the property of Electramechanica or whatever they are calling it. That’s a real shame.

OK, that is a real shame, but not unexpected.

But...

I keep hearing how nobody can figure out the Convertible D top, and it confuses me.

Used IM roadsters come up for sale from time to time for less than $50K. If a car could be located and purchased, the top and door cards can be removed easily enough to be shamelessly copied. If it really is as magical as everybody acts like it is, then there would be some money to be made in backward engineering (in the east Asian tradition).

Once everything is loaded into a CNC program, it's just a matter of laser-cutting, deburring, and assembly. You could put the car back together and sell it (probably at a profit).

It'd be a nice retirement gig for somebody with some machines or contacts in industrial fabrication, along with copying the overriders Gray Eagle used to make, which seem to be unobtanium now.

There seems to be at least 2 designs of Speedster replicas with roll up side windows,

Early IM Roadsters used a Porsche 356a Convertible D windshield with the taller glass and matching roll up side windows ,

I have seen others that used the stock Speedster windshield and some  shorter roll up side windows that do not seem to fit as well.

are there more designs ?

Last edited by imperial
@Chappy posted:

@WNGD not quite what you’re after but I have a super wide body on order with VMC with a removable hardtop. No traditional roll up windows unfortunately, but it does have hard top windows that are removable.

I see that on their website as a $4500 option, thx.

I think fitted roll-up or power windows might come along eventually. Super Wide Body, power windows, Suby and AC/Heat. I'm a princess what can I say?

I have only seen 3 Super Wide bodies with a hard top. One was a bit of a mechanical nightmare unrelated to the hard top and 1 Troy had (maybe twice iirc)hardtop for 356 vintage speedster | 356 Speedster, 550 Spyder, Replica, Automotive Community

In Canada, we also have the issue of importing newer replicas and just lost Intermeccanica as an option. If I can't eventually find the unicorn, I may go Coupe.

Last edited by WNGD

@imperial,  I think Specialty Auto had a design for roll-up windows in a Speedster.  I saw a video of him describing it.  You may be able to find it with a search.

On my one and only visit to SAS many years ago, I seem to remember Steve Lawing telling me that he used the power window regulators from the donor Subaru Impreza.  He had made some custom mounts inside the doors and also used the window channels from the Impreza.   It also appears that he had a more substantial windshield frame with tall, straight corner posts more like those on a “Convertible D” to allow the door glass to seal better.

Google “specialty auto sports” and then click on images to see a bunch of his cars for comparison.

He also assembled an articulated top mechanism similar to an original 356 Cabriolet and even powered one of them.

If you could have a canvas top that like a speedster goes away hidden and under the hard top it would be the best of both worlds.  I passed on the hard top here as my season for it would be snow bound and you cannot drive the car year round but in Virginia you do have a chance to ride it all year.  I wonder if Carey would do that ?

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