QUOTE (Derwent Motorsport @ Jul 14 2009, 11:35)

The Freddie Owen E type Special raced in the Coys 2 hour races at MG Live! According to the commentator it has been hidden away for 30 years. I was involved in running another car in that race so did not get a photo of it. Not very pretty really and much slower than John Clark's Lighweight E type that won race. It was being driven by Neil Cunningham.
Does anyone have any knowledge of the car and why it was modified?
I have only just joined this facility having just Googled 'Freddie Owen' and discovered these comments. Simply to fill in some details - I am Freddie's stepson (now aged 59) and have just taken an interest in this having just been contacted by the new owner within the past few days. This followed a letter with pictures that appeared in the Isle of Wight County Press last Friday seeking information - all quite bizarre! The original 'Owen Special' was designed as a convertible and built with a tubular chassis and a Triumph 1800 engine in circa 1958/9 - never as a Jaguar, in fact the body design actually pre dated the E type - making it very much ahead of its time. Some years later 'Freddie' didn't feel that it was particularly competitive and promptly removed the front end, inserted a Jaguar sub frame and 3.4 engine. I suspect, largely because he was involved with Dick Tindall (Tindall / Owen Racing Equipe) in racing the Costin bodied Lister Jaguar (YCD 422) and the 'O' Type TAC 743 (ex David Hobbs XK140 re bodied by Freddie hence the 'O' designation) the 'Jaguar special' referred to above was rarely, if ever, raced in this configuration.
It was taken to the Isle of Wight when he and my mother retired having sold the coachbuilding business in Esher (Wellands) in 1974 and the car was sold to a Belgian? (late 70's - early 80's?). As far as the family was concerned it next resurfaced during the late 80's when the car was at Lynx and an article appeared in Motorsport seeking information about the 'unknown' vehicle. I am not sure whether Pete Waterman owned it at that stage or not, though I think he probably did. It transpired that the request for information was primarily in order to try to persuade the DVLA to reinstate the original registration number 15 YPG - as it had Belgian plates at that stage. My mother provided the necessary provenance that secured 15 YPG's reinstatement. Freddie and mother were invited by Lynx to see the car and as Freddie was no longer driving at that stage, I drove them to Hastings for Freddie to be reunited with it - circa 1988 /9? Freddie died in 1994 - mother passed away in 2004.
So the answer is that it was 'modified' by the designer and builder because it wasn't competitive. Some may say it was a better looking car when new with the original engine - but as I politely and reverently pointed in my eulogy at his funeral, with UFO as I knew him, nothing ever went 'unmodified' for long whilst he was around!