News:

SMF - installed December 2017.
Returning members - please use the 'Forgot Password' function when logging in to the new Forum for the first time. If you have changed your email address please let me know so I can update it.

Main Menu

Correct Color AC green metallic

Started by AEX166, November 13, 2014, 15:07:40

Previous topic - Next topic

AEX166

Where can help.
   what was the correct color code for mist green metallic AC Aceca?
   is the almond green of Aston Martin one other similar color?
   Thanks for your helps

B.P.Bird

Stefano, 'A.C. Racing Green' - the colour was from Valentines -'Jewelessence Mist Green' in nitro cellulose 'Spraygloss.' Valentines and their successor companies are all gone so the original formulation numbers are not much help. However an A.C.O.C. member put a lot of work into getting a modern water based formulation made which is a perfect replica of the original. I think Bill Shepherd was the most recent user. The colour is rather different from the green which Aston Martin used. If you care to email me I will forward your request.

B.P.Bird

And here is a lovely pic of AEX560, the Aceca in question, hopefully going back to the original mist green shortly. Seeing this weather makes one wish for the Northern Hemisphere spring asap......
   
   

4852

quote:
Originally posted by B.P.Bird
   
Stefano, 'A.C. Racing Green' - the colour was from Valentines -'Jewelessence Mist Green' in nitro cellulose 'Spraygloss.' Valentines and their successor companies are all gone so the original formulation numbers are not much help. However an A.C.O.C. member put a lot of work into getting a modern water based formulation made which is a perfect replica of the original. I think Bill Shepherd was the most recent user. The colour is rather different from the green which Aston Martin used. If you care to email me I will forward your request.
   

4852

quote:
Originally posted by B.P.Bird
   
And here is a lovely pic of AEX560, the Aceca in question, hopefully going back to the original mist green shortly. Seeing this weather makes one wish for the Northern Hemisphere spring asap......
   
   
   

nikbj68

Hi George, welcome to the forum and thanks for reposting these, but did you have something else  to ask or say?
   
   There is a green Aceca for sale at Hexagon Classics that according to their blurb was one of only 6 to leave the factory in Jewelessence Mist Green, and was the last Aceca produced!
   Never heard that "..The front-end styling of the Ace and Aceca reportedly traces back to a design suggested by PininFarina for AC in the late 1940s.." I thought Alan Turner took John Tojeiro`s design but had to raise the lights to comply with regulations!
   
   
   
   Gorgeous!

shep

Absolutely stunning and my favourite colour! I'm not sure its name translates so well into German though!

ACOCArch

QuoteOriginally posted by nikbj68
   There is a green Aceca for sale at Hexagon Classics /quote]
   
   Lovely looking car!
   
   From the Factory Ledger, AE822 is indeed the last chassis number in the AC/Bristol engined Aceca series. However:
   
   a - At least three cars in this series left the factory after AE822;
   b - A83, the prototype wide-track Aceca, is recorded after AE822 in the Ledger, although A83 was almost certainly completed well before AE822;
   c - The Ford 2.6 engined Acecas are recorded in a separate series. Of these, four left the factory after AE822.
   d - A quick count shows twelve Acecas originally painted Mist Green.
   e - There is no way the rear suspension of a standard production AC Aceca remotely follows De Dion principles (see Hexagon advert). Is there something radically different about AE822 in this respect?
   
   The styling reference is a new one to me. Although I have not seen a definitive statement, people who were in the factory at that time attributed the final Ace styling to Alan Turner, with the Aceca a natural development.
   
   The Ace, in both chassis and styling,  was in turn developed from the Trojeiro-Lea Francis, bought by AC Cars from Vin Davison in 1953. The raised headlights in the production Ace and Aceca may well have been necessary to meet the legal minimum height (from memory 2 feet 2 inches at the centre of the light?)
   
   There has been comment that the styling of the Tojeiro resembles the period Ferrari Barchetta, and both the Tojeiro and the Ace show similarities to the Ferrari in this respect. Again, I have not seen a definitive statement to confirm that the Ferrari influenced the Tojeiro or the Ace, and would be surprised to do so. If nothing else, the laws of design ownership and Design Registration would probably preclude such a formal admission.

BE774

Was there not a photo in an ACtion, probably early/middle 1980s, showing a Ferrari Barchetta, a Tojeiro and an Ace in a line for comparison? If my ACtions were not packed up I would look it out - perhaps someone else can?
Barbara

AC Ace Bristol

.
   .
   Great picture of The Styling similarities with the Ferrari 166 Barchetta, the Prototype AC Ace and the Production AC Ace on page 15 (chapter 3 )of
    Toj... John Tojeiro and His Cars .  book Published 2005 ISBN No 0-9549167-1-9.
   
   Thank you to John Baker for organising the line up and photo session of these three cars.
   
   The evolution is self evident.... One day hopefully someone brings these three  cars together again to produce a photographic and written appraisal....
   
   John / (James?) Baker & Trevor Legate joint venture   ..[?]..[?]..[;)]
   
   just a idea.. [:p]..[^]..
   
   Keith  

AC Ace Bristol

.
   
   BE774.  Someone's got a good  memory [;)]. A quick check of mid 1980's ACtion magazines....
   
   A picture of the Ferrari Barchetta 166 (195?), LOY500 and a 1957 Ace Bristol appeared on the front cover of ACtion Vol 9 No5,
   with a further three pictures published in ACtion Vol9 No6 Page 6.
   

   The three cars were in 1985 currently owned by:-
   John Baker, Frank Sytner and  Rye Heuff respectively.
   
   Not being too familiar with early Ferrari, what is the difference between a Ferrari 166 and a Ferrari 195 [?]
   ( No Trevor, No clever/ witty answers like... 29 [;)])
   
   Keith..

bex316

From the start the numbering of Ferrari's for many years has been the cubic capacity  per cylinder, not only for 12 cylinders but also for 4 cylinders (like the 2 litre 500 Mondial and 3 litre 750 Monza). The most famous being the 3 lire 250 series in many guises.
   The first Ferrari was the 125 equating approx. 1.5 litre V12, the 166 being the 2 litre that came next and then the 195 equating just over 2.3 litre and the 212 equating between 2.5 and 2.6 litre.
   Of course there are several more differences and guises with open or closed bodywork by different coachbuilders.
   
   Jerry

AC Ace Bristol

.
   Jerry.
   
   Many thanks for explaining ,  even I can follow the Enzo logic.[:)]
   
   Keith..

TLegate

I would never say a word....
   
   For those lucky owners of my Cobra (sorry) book paying homage to the first 40 Years and all that, you'll find a snap of LOY500 alongside a Ferrari barchetta in the holding paddock in downtown Goodwood on page 23. It was just chance - Nick Wigley in the Toj waved to me and told me to grab the opportunity quick as he was about to depart :) I'll try to upload something but that was shot on proper film and not digitally recorded with nasty little pixels....anyhoo, it's shows the styling 'coincidence'.