A Photo Video Of Various Trialling events

There are a few of our members that are keen at trialling and the Freestyle kit car is a very popular buggy for doing this as its light weight and rear wheel drive. The photos in this video are taken by a valued member Jon Way.... cheers Jon

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Freestyle Buggies Playing in Greenlanes

The Freestyle road buggy is not only great fun on the roads but they are awesome off road. Take a look at this video to see some road legal Freestyle buggies looning around climbing up steep muddy hills and getting their buggies airborne.

There are lots of videos on the Freestyle buggy and that is because they are so much fun and versatile.

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Freestyle Photo Gallery

The Freestyle Road Legal Buggy

The Freestyle kit car is by far my favourite road buggy, ok so I may be a little biassed but you have to admit that these little buggies look awesome, they handle like a go kart and because of their simplicity its easy to say that they can be built by almost anybody. The Freestyle is however a pretty difficult kit car to find and so we have to cherish teh ones we do have.

Danny Freestyle

The owner of MuddyBuggies owns this Freestyle road buggy

21 Photos

Daves Freestyle

13 Photos

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Down And Dirty Freestyle

Down & Dirty - Funbuggies Freestyle
By
Dec 5, 2003, 09:00

The Freestyle has always been an interesting little kitcar, and its stripped for action demeanour screams utility fun vehicle. It was originally created by Dave Sewell of well-known chassis firm Fibreform (Ginetta among others), before passing on to a very temporary home with Specialist Sports Cars. After a short while GRP specialists ABS took over and actually sold quite a lot of kits, but it always took very much of a backseat to their primary business of fibreglass panel making.

Freestyle Kit Car

In 2000 things moved on a little when TH Engineering run by Richard Drinkell purchased the project, and even though it was again forced to take its place behind his main business, Richard still managed to raise the profile by exhibiting at shows and introducing new colourways and options. Inevitably though Richard’s ‘day job’ took precedence and he looked for a buyer for the capable little car. Enter at this point Dave Smart, an Avionics Engineer from North Fife, Scotland, who worked at Westland Helicopters for seven years before working as a defence consultant for six years. It really was a case that he found out about the Freestyle quite by accident. Funny thing is he liked it so much he followed Victor Kiam’s lead and bought the company! Although it’s a total change from his previous occupation, Dave quickly came up with the name of Funbuggies and has devoted his energies full-time to the project. He looked carefully at things and analysed the product and its market position and set himself a series of objectives and has aggressively set about trying to achieve them. He’s already managed to raise the profile of the product and introduced several new kitoptions, the most notable of which is a new stretched 2 x 2 version called the Fourstyle but more on that later

Freestyle Kit Car

It’s obvious that the Freestyle is a fun little car, based on the humble yet hugely capable Mini, which bestows upon it a certain ruggedness and charm. When equipped with the 1000cc or 1275cc A-Series units the Freestyle is a nippy little character that will etch a permanent smile across your face, oh and (this is very important) it can be built forless than £2000. Bang for the buck just does not come any less expensive than this. Dave took another view that although not a genuine four wheel drive vehicle, it is highly capable when the going gets tough so he’s now found another potentially lucrative market within the off-road hobby.


To prove its abilities to me he suggests we have a tool around some local RUPP’S (Road Use Public Paths), and these are like bridleways but require all vehicles using them to be road legal and taxed. These paths are in the main heavily rutted, uneven and would provide a challenge to even the toughest old Land Rover.

Freestyle Kit Car

As we enter the first RUPP, Dave launches the Freestyle at it, and to my surprise the car takes it all in its stride and doesn’t get hampered anywhere and makes confident headway with the little 1275cc engine providing ample power, sending the drive to the rear wheels. Dave says that he regularly runs rings round acknowledged four-wheel drivers and says that the un-converted veteran ‘green-laners’ initially have a laugh when the little Freestyle joins them, but are soon ‘enlightened’ when it keeps up and surpasses their steeds.

To build the Freestyle you’ll need several packages from Funbuggies, with the main kit priced at £934 inc VAT and for this you get the chassis, pedals, brackets, steering column and suspension top-arms. To this you need to add the galvanised panel set at £111.63 inc VAT, with the five-piece GRP package costing £230 inc VAT, meaning that for a modest outlay of £1275.63 you’ll have the bulk of the components to build a car.

Freestyle Kit Car

Dave has already introduced several options and items to personalise your Freestyle and there are various dress-up parts including a bulbous rear panel moulding as pictured on the red car in our photos, which although not to everyone’s taste does give the Freestyle a distinctive appearance. This costs £200 inc VAT. It actually changes the look of the car quite markedly and will definitely appeal to some customers as it covers up the boxy back end and engine bay, although personally I find that aspect to be one of the cars strongest points.

Freestyle Kit Car

As is often the case with kits of this type the better the donor the better the Freestyle you’ll end up with, but even then £350 will buy you a top notch Mini. If you’re on a budget you can purchase the kit packages separately, and as mentioned you’ll need to spend a total of £1275 with Funbuggies, which means that allowing for the Mini consumables, £1750 could feasibly see a car completed. Indeed if you know how, this figure can easily be reduced further.

Freestyle Kit Car

For those wanting to use their cars on the road there’s an SVA deluxe kit available at £2350 inc VAT that also adds such items as a lighting set and mirrors. Some of the better Freestyle’s (and nearly every single one is different and highly individual) have featured checker plate and to me this would be an essential item at just £76.38 inc VAT.

Freestyle Kit Car

Any of the ubiquitous little A-Series in either 850, 1000 or 1275cc guises can be used and although the former will give adequate performance, it’s the 1000cc or 1275cc you’ll ideally need as these give sparkling performance.

Freestyle Kit Car

When stripping your donor Mini, the engine is basically lifted out complete with its sub-frame and the whole lot bolted straight into the back of the Freestyle and provides a neat fuss free and highly practical installation.

The chassis’ are now made in Tiverton, Devon by the well-respected CKT Aero and Automotive run by Chris Piper, who are a company with a considerable reputation for fine work. It’s here where the ‘Fourstyle’ was created and I think that it will open the cars market up, as it will give four-seat practicality with the addition of 28-inches added to the wheelbase. The unit is fabricated from seamed straight tube and curved CFS before the whole lot is MIG and TIG welded, with the tubes all laser cut. Although prices for the new variant have yet to be set, Dave expects the chassis to cost around £1410 inc VAT.

Freestyle Kit Car

I like the Freestyle and think that it will prosper under the control of Dave Smart and aside from the options already introduced there are several other ideas in the pipeline. The first to come on stream will be the introduction of the Rover 100 as a donor option, which will only enhance further this great little kitcar, where your imagination is the only limiting factor. It’s always had a load of potential, but for whatever reason was never allowed to realise it.


Words by Steve HolePhotos by Carol Hardy

© CAR PR Ltd 2003 All Rights Reserved

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International Mini Meet 2005

May 26th 2005 I am outside my house strapping the last of my luggage to the freestyle waiting while I am waiting for Dave Smart to arrive from Somerset. He was driving to my house where he would get in my buggy and we both would then go to meet Jon Way and his Daughter Jenny, Jon was driving Dave's buggy down and Jenny was my passenger. [Read more...]

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TH Freestyle

The article below is about the funbuggies Freestyle before it was owned by Dave Smart, In Fact this article was what first got me interested in the Freestyle.

I have scanned a copy of the whole article and is below just click on the thumbnail to read but because my copy is not great I am writing the article out in full for you and this way you should work it out. Thank You Which KIt Magazine!!!

TH FREESTYLE

The Freestyle has always been a fairly mysterious, low-key model. That's due to the change under the direction of new owners TH Engineering, as Adam Wilkins found out.

OCCASIONALLY, THE KIT CAR industry throws up a car which needs to be looked at in detail before one can quite knows what to make of it. The Freestyle, recently re launched by TH Engineering, is just such a car. Is it a serious performance machine best suited to the road, or is it better equipped for the brown stuff?

It's time to find out....

The Freestyle was first launched in 1998, marketed by the ABS Group. ABS's main line of business was making body kits for production cars, and since the freestyle was something of a sideline, it was never marketed heavily. Word of mouth was the main form of publicity, which helped ABS sell over 150 kits amazingly, given the low profile.

In august 2001, Freestyle owner Richard Drinkell bought the project and set up TH Engineering. By the end of the year, the firm was ready to start selling kits. Exeter was TH's first show appearance, heralding the start of a much higher profile for the car, and the team was swamped with enquiries the whole weekend. The Monday after the show, TH received 22 phone calls and a further 12 the day after, TH's agent in Taunton Somerset, had about the same again. The Freestyle has made an impression on the kit buying public, its fair to say.

Underpinning the Freestyle is a round-tube chassis that remains on display and power is supplied by the vulnerable A-Series unit. That means anything from the economical 998cc plodder to a highly-tuned monster can be fitted. Probably the best compromise is the 1275cc unit from an MG Metro. There are loads about and it endows the 460kg Freestyle with about 150bhp per tonne. This is the unit TH will soon be fitting to its demonstrator and it makes the Freestyle well rounded 0-60mph in about 7 seconds, 110mph at the top and about 38mpg, Richard reckons that any more power just increases under steer and has no real performance advantage.

At the rear, the Freestyle uses the front subframe of a Mini, while the front the front suspension is also made from modified Mini parts, with its light weight respectable power and proven suspension, the Freestyle handles much as it looks, like an oversized go-kart. The Mini has a huge reputation for its sharp responses and the minimalist Freestyle simply hones those talents.

Despite the small aeroscreen, the cockpit is highly exposed and very blustery. A crash helmet is a must for journeys of significant distance, its a pretty small cabin too, although never cramped, it merely feels diminutive. The MWS high backed seats of the demonstrator are a real boon, though making the fairly harsh environment much more bearable.

Returning to this features opening gambit, it seems the Freestyle's abilities are many and varied depending on individual setup. Road and track day use is by no means beyond the funstars talents and it's the way many owners use their cars. It is after all, a lightweight mid engined car with terrific handling, so in the right hands it will humiliate much more expensive machinery.

Off-roading is another area where the Freestyle can be made a very effective tool and we're talking the less demanding green laning, this is the real deal. The relatively low ground clearance is its obvious disadvantage, but that's countered by the little car's light weight and modest footprint. Again, it'll outperform more respected machinery. indeed there's a Land Rover club which gives a trophy to whoever makes it furthest up a particularly steep hill on a difficult off-road course. Nobody's ever made it to the top, until a Freestyle driver gave it a go...

Of the Freestyle's that are complete, a few are even put through their paces in formal competition. One example races in a hill climbing series while another, much-modified Freestyle, has proven its worth in autotest competitions.

Richard Drinkell is soon to look into whether the Freestyle can cut it at trialing too. If it can, that'll add another entry into an already varied CV. There are also builders prepared to do crazy things with road legal cars, such as the Freestyle currently being built with a 2-litre Vauxhall engine on Webers. Interesting....

As often the case when new owners take over any company, Richard has some ideas as to developing the product. Firstly, he's going to make the kit much more SVA friendly. Leaving less to the builders ingenuity. The most significant step in this direction will be developing bumpers that exclude the suspension from the inspector's projection measuring tool.

To make the ownership proposition better, TH may also develop a roof panel which will incorporate a storage box.

Currently there is no luggage space at all. Richard is also keen to offer a new engine cover. A rigid panel has always been available bas an option to the netting (the minimum requirement for the SVA) but it incorporates the lighting which makes it a bit of a picnic to remove.

The Freestyle is on of those kits which is intended to be highly individual. The kit structure allows builders to fit their own choice of items like interior fitments and other details. That's an asset Richard doesn't want to change, so the kit package contents will remain the same (pricing hasn't changed since 1998, either!!) The starter kit priced at £695 plus VAT, includes the chassis and alluminium body panels and allows builders to buy the rest of the parts on an as-and-when basis.

The second option is to buy the SVA kit, which adds a nose panel, wheel arches, lights, handbrake mechanism and mirrors. Although a larger initial outlay at £1150 plus VAT, this has traditionally been the cheaper way to build. However, recognising that the Freestyle is at the budget end of the market, TH is restructuring the prices so there's no longer a disadvantage to going the more manageable starter kit route. All of which means you can build a Freestyle without being stingy for about £3000, although another £1000 would be easy to spend on a good example. That said, one car has managed to swallow £7500 but that's unusual - looking over a Freestyle its difficult to see where you could spend that sort of money.

In fact, that strikes on one of Richards key aspects to running a company, he's passionate about customer service. His perspective is that once TH sold the kit, the company has made its money and the rest is a service which he owes his customer, whether that means being on-hand for practical advice or offering parts very cheaply, he only makes £3 on a petrol tank, for instance, he's happy to do it.

So there you have it the freestyle is an affordable car that the individual can tailor to whatever needs suit him.

Indeed, Freestyle makes a very apt name, if I had established any expectations before I visited TH, they probably would have been exceeded by a credible product from a respectable if young company.

Which Kit Magazine Freestyle Article

Which Kit Magazine Freestyle Article

Which Kit Magazine Freestyle Article

Thanks 'Which Kit' for a cracking article. If I hadn't seen this article I may never have been hooked on the Freestyle

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The IMM 2006 To Poland In Freestyle Road Legal Buggies

A few weeks before the trip to Poland I had already started to get the buggy ready it needed a fair amount of work including a new steering rack, clutch master and slave cylinders the steering column needed repairing as it was damaged on the way to the Spanish IMM, I also need to get a need indicator stalk. [Read more...]

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