YouTuber who rebuilt Marcus Rashford’s Rolls-Royce stripped parts from other YouTuber working on similar project

  • YouTuber rebuilt the Mansory Rolls-Royce of Marcus Rashford
  • How he managed it is incredibly complex
  • It involved several doner cars

Published on Oct 21, 2024 at 12:00 PM (UTC+4)
by Siddharth Dudeja

Last updated on Oct 18, 2024 at 3:45 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Amelia Jean Hershman-Jones

YouTuber, Mat Armstrong, rebuilt the custom Mansory Rolls-Royce once owned by Manchester United star Marcus Rashford — but how he managed it is incredibly complex.

Fixing Rashford’s Rolls involved getting parts from a donor car, but there was a catch.

You see, the donor car was another YouTuber’s project car, and his project wasn’t all too different than Armstrong’s.

Since he stripped the donor car for parts, the other YouTuber had to get yet another donor car for his project.

DISCOVER SBX CARS: The global premium car auction platform powered by Supercar Blondie

Stripping a Rolls-Royce for parts to fix another

Confusing – but let’s break down what happened and how many Rolls-Royce cars are in this story.

First things first, Marcus Rashford owned a Rolls-Royce that was curated by Mansory, but he wrecked it.

Mat Armstrong took it upon himself to rebuild it, which he did — albeit after endless struggle.

To do that, he needed replacement parts, which he got from YouTuber, Tavarish’s, project car — a Rolls-Royce Wraith — named ‘Sue.’

Although Mat got what he needed and eventually rebuilt Marcus Rashford’s Rolls-Royce, Sue was left without essential parts.

He gets a donor car, you get a donor car, everybody gets a donor car

Tavarish wanted to complete his build, so he was forced to source yet another donor car.

Moreover, this new donor vehicle had been flooded, so it was only good for parts — which is what Sue needed.

Finally, the build was complete — well, sort of.

Tavarish even took it to a car show and was mocked about parts missing from his build that Armstrong took.

That’s certainly a lot of Rolls-Royces, but it all worked out in the end for both YouTubers.

Building or restoring a car is no piece of cake, especially if it’s something as complicated as a Rolls.

user

Siddharth is a tech nerd with a secret love of all things cars. He has been writing for a few years now, and on his free time you would find him gaming when he's not procrastinating.