Martin and Robin had just attended the first ever kit car show in the UK. It was being run by the Marcos Owners Club at Donington who offered an open invitation to all glass fibre bodied cars. Robin went along with his older brother Martin who at the time was inexplicably an owner of a Fairthorpe Atom/Electron 'thingy'. Hundreds of cars of all denominations turned up and several specialist magazines were spawned as a result. The popularity of this show surprised the brothers, the organisers as well as the public and highlighted the demand for unusual, fun sports cars.
This was in the early eighties and Martin and Robin began thinking out loud. The Triumph Spitfire/MG Midget/MGB Roadster had all been out of production for quite a while so there were no open topped British sports cars available brand new. Except, of course for the Aston Martin V8 Volante which was a little bit out of the reach of your average man in the street. The only other affordable sports car that came to their minds was the Fiat X1/9, which was really a targa at the end of the day. It was to be a few years to come before VW/Peugeot/Ford began lopping the roofs off luke-warm family hatchbacks.
So, after a few pints and the vision of a packed Kit Car show thronging with a sports car hungry public with bulging wallets the boys came to the decision. Both of them were at loose ends, Robin having been made redundant and Martin just having sold his motorcycle courier company. Apparently a girlfriend's father owned Stonor Farm near Henley on Thames with several empty barns. It all seemed ordained to happen, as if by a higher force.
The only barn with an electricity supply was rented, cleaned out and turned into a rudimentary industrial unit with painted walls, power points and strip lighting. It also had a very good canteen in the form of the Stonor Arms public house a half mile away.