hmmmmm........
You know, Damon, in my experience, CMC/Fiberfab Speedster bodies were very well made. Some of the trim bits were on the cheap side, but the bodies themselves were really decent (and I have seen more than one Beck or IM near me with pitted/corroded headlight rims and other trim from the weather, so they're not immune, either). Many CMCs suffer from "Butt-Sag" and that can be easily corrected in an afternoon. Some were built without the front frame brace but your photo of the Frunk shows the brace boltheads in the right spot so that one is fine - They even used carriage bolts for a professional look, too!
The problem after that was whomever put the car together, and that might have been more than one person over time as each, in turn, got to 2X or 3X the advertised 40 hours build time, saw that there was a looong way to go and gave up, as none of them had any experience doing so. To that end, the build quality is always suspect. The very same could be said of each and every "home restoration" of an older classic car (I've done a few of those, too).
However, if someone with good build skills or mechanical experience were to build one (and I have seen more than a few of those, too), took their time and made it look like somebody cared with the result, they could easily stand up to a VS car from that era and some were quite a bit better. I gave Henry Reisner a ride to the hotel from dinner at Carlisle one year and he was quite surprised to find that he was riding in a CMC. "It doesn't squeak or rattle!" he said. hmmmmm... Maybe I made a new convert there.
So I looked at Indian Bob's list and if he changed his (sorry, her) car to white it would be almost a twin to mine. I have a 2-liter, but not a 912 engine, but all the other stuff is in there, PLUS a super-reliable gas heater and TWO Blaze-Cut fire suppression systems (one each, heater and engine) plus a pair of super-comfy cabriolet seats so I know that it's worth $30K somewhere, should I decide to sell it, maybe even more!
So, Damon: You have a few choices to make. Check out Theron's car. Ask for more info or more photos if you wish - I'm sure he would oblige.
Check out the CMC again, too. Check the rear vertical edge of the doors on both sides to see how the gaps look. The gap should not get wider towards the top, but if it does it is easily corrected (the info to do so is all on here).
Remember, in the end if you like the car it doesn't matter much what the rest of us think of it. You're the one who has to walk away happy because you like the car.
After all that and some negotiating, you'll have to decide on one car. Remember that if you go for a US car then there is the transport cost home and any tax/import implications to consider, and a little more fiddling with your government to get it registered, so balance that against the cost of the BC CMC.
Personally, I think you'll probably do well with either one.
Gordon
The Speedstah Guy from Bahsten(-ish)
Oh, and here's my lowly CMC: