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TVR | {{List of TVR Models}}'''TVR''' is an independent British manufacturer of [[sports car]]s based in the English town of Blackpool, Lancashire. The company manufactures lightweight sports cars with powerful engines and is the third-largest specialised sports car manufacturer in the world, offering a diverse range of [[coupé]]s and [[convertible]]s, most using an in-house [[straight-6]] cylinder engine design, others an in-house [[TVR Speed Eight engine|V8]]. TVR sports cars are composed of tubular steel frames, cloaked in aggressive fibreglass body designs. | ||
TVR | TVR's two arms are TVR Engineering, which manufactures sports cars and grand tourers, and TVR Power, their power-train division. The company has a turbulent recent history and an uncertain future (see below). | ||
==History== | |||
===Foundation=== | |||
Blackpool born [[Trevor Wilkinson]] left school at 14 and started an engineering apprenticeship at a local garage. In 1946 he bought a wheelwright's business in Blackpool, renaming it '''Trevcar Motors''' in 1947, for the purpose of selling and repairing cars and light engineering.<ref name="DMail1"/> | |||
In 1947, Wilkinson built his first car, a special two-seater body on an [[Alvis Firebird]] chassis for himself. As a result, Wilkinson with partner [[Jack Pickard]] then started a separate company, '''TVR Engineering,''' with a name derived from Wilkinson's name - '''T'''re'''V'''o'''R.''' Their first car was an alloy-bodied two seat body on a tubular chassis, which appeared in 1949.<ref name="DMail1"/> | |||
In 1953 the concept of glass-reinforced plastic bodywork over a tubular steel backbone chassis was accepted, and continued throughout TVR's current production history. In 1954, TVR Engineering was renamed '''TVR,''' in light of the launch of the first "production" car called the Mk1, later name Grantura. The glass fibre body design and layout remained, in modified form, until replaced by the angular wedge design [[TVR Tasmin|Tasmin]] in 1980. | |||
At the | At launch in the 1950s, TVRs were powered by 4-cylinder engines from [[Coventry Climax]], [[British Motor Corporation|BMC]] or [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]], the performance models having Shorrock superchargers. As with many other British sports cars, engine sizes remained under two litres, and all produced less than 100 bhp (75 kW). As most TVRs were sold in the domestic British market, to avoid a British tax on assembled cars many of the early cars were sold in kit form - a practice which continued until the 1970s, when the tax loophole was closed and the kit-form option removed. | ||
In April 1962 Wilkinson and Pickard left the company to set up a specialist fibre-glass engineering business. On retirement, Wilkinson moved to Minorca, Spain, where he died aged 85, on 6 June 2008.<ref name="DMail1">{{citeweb|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1024909/Trevor-Wilkinson-founder-TVR-sports-car-company-dies-aged-85.html|title=Trevor Wilkinson, founder of TVR sports car company, dies aged 85|publisher=Daily Mail|date=2008-06-07|accessdate=2008-06-07}}</ref> | |||
===1960s and 1970s=== | |||
In the 1960s, American motor dealer Jack Griffith decided to put a 4.7 litre [[V8 engine]] from an [[AC Cobra]] he owned into a [[TVR Grantura]], in much the same way that V8s were first transplanted into AC Cobras (It is in honour of Jack Griffith that the [[TVR Griffith 200|TVR Griffith]] was so-named). | |||
Under the ownership of Martin Lilley from 1965, TVR returned to Ford for a 2994 cc [[V6 engine|V6]] [[Ford Zodiac|Zodiac]] engine for the new TVR Tuscan (1967) racer. This produced 128 bhp (95 kW), giving a 0-60 mph (0-97 km/h) time of 8.3 seconds, which was good performance for the time. | |||
The 1970s saw a number of engines used in TVRs (particularly the 'M Series'), mainly Triumph 2500s, Ford Essex V6 and Ford 1600 Crossflows. | |||
===Wheeler ownership=== | |||
In the 1980s, under the ownership of [[Peter Wheeler]] - a chemical industry consultant and TVR enthusiast - TVR moved away from naturally-aspirated and turbocharged V6s back to large V8s, namely the [[Rover V8]] (to which [[Rover Group|Rover]] bought the intellectual property rights from Buick). Capacity grew from 3.5 to 4.5 litres. | |||
In the 1990s, TVR Power modified a number of Rover V8s, but subsequently developed an in-house engine design. The [[TVR Speed Eight engine|AJP8]] engine, a lightweight alloy V8, was developed by engineering consultant [[Al Melling]] along with [[John Ravenscroft]] and [[Peter Wheeler]] (hence the AJP initials), a notable achievement for a small maker. The new engine was originally destined for the [[TVR Griffith|Griffith]] and [[TVR Chimaera|Chimaera]] models, but development took longer than expected and it finally became available in the [[TVR Cerbera|Cerbera]] and [[TVR Tuscan|Tuscan]] race cars. | |||
Perhaps more significantly, [[Peter Wheeler]] was instrumental in the body design of TVR cars during his ownership. He managed a design team that produced a number of acclaimed and resolved body designs including the [[TVR Chimaera|Chimaera]], [[TVR Griffith|Griffith]], [[TVR Cerbera|Cerbera]], [[TVR Tuscan|Tuscan]], [[TVR Tamora|Tamora]], [[TVR T350|T350]], [[TVR Typhon|Typhon]] and [[TVR Sagaris|Sagaris]]. These attention grabbing works of sculpture helped to keep TVR on the front covers of magazines around the world and thus in the public eye. | |||
Owner [[Peter Wheeler]] subsequently directed the design of a straight-six derivative of the AJP8 that would be cheaper to produce and maintain than the eight. This engine, designed by [[John Ravenscroft]], became known as the [[TVR Speed Six engine|"Speed 6"]], and powers current TVRs. | |||
===Smolensky ownership=== | |||
In July 2004, 24-year-old Nikolay Smolensky bought the company from Wheeler, for about £15 million. Despite his Russian nationality, Smolensky said he intended TVR to remain a British company. | |||
In April 2006, responding to falling demand and with production rumoured to have dropped from 12 cars a week to 3 or 4, TVR laid off some of its 300 staff. At the same time, the firm announced plans to move to updated facilities in the Squires Gate district of Blackpool, citing impending expiry of the lease of the current factory in late 2006, where owner Peter Wheeler was said to be planning to build a housing estate. | |||
In October 2006 Smolensky announced<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6062084.stm BBC NEWS | Business | TVR to move car production abroad<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> that body production and final assembly for TVR would move to Turin, Italy<ref>[http://www.italiaspeed.com/2006/cars/other/bertone/10/tvr/2210.html italiaspeed.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, with only engine production remaining in the UK. In protest at this and to show support for the workers, a large number of TVR owners paraded through central London on 26 November, 2006. Dubbed "London Thunder"<ref>[http://www.londonthunder.co.uk London Thunder<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, it was also an attempt at the official world record for the biggest one-marque convoy on record. | |||
By December 2006, it emerged that Smolensky had split TVR into a number of different companies<ref>http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2769-2534377,00.html</ref>; | |||
*Brand and intellectual property rights had been transferred to a core Smolensky company | |||
*'''TVR Motors''' - held the licence to the brands and intellectual property in the UK, as well as sales and marketing of the brand | |||
*'''TVR Power''' - the parts and spares business had been sold to a management buyout | |||
*'''Blackpool Automotive''' - the factory and manufacturing assets | |||
On 13 December, Smolensky and production director Mike Penny resigned as directors of Blackpool Automotive, being replaced by Smolensky UK personal assistant Roger Billinghurst and 25 year old Austrian Angelco Stamenkov. By 24 December Blackpool Automotive was in administration. Administrators are now seeking legal clarification on the ownership of certain assets, including the brand and intellectual property, to see what assets the company has and who should pay the redundancy notices of the remaining 200 workers<ref>http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2769-2534344,00.html</ref>. | |||
===Recent events=== | |||
On 22 February 2007 it was revealed that Smolensky is once again the owner of the company after being the highest bidder. <ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/lancashire/6388109.stm BBC NEWS | England | Lancashire | Union anger as TVR is bought back<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. On 28 February 2007, less than one week after reacquiring TVR, he has reportedly announced plans to sell the company to Adam Burdette and Jean Michel Santacreu, who intend to export TVRs to the United States market. <ref>[http://www.autocar.co.uk/News/NewsArticle/AllCars/224329/ Autocar - Smolenski's out. Again<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> | |||
On 8 October 2007 it was found that Smolensky was still in control of the company and was hoping to restart production, with a target of 2,000 cars to be sold in 2008. <ref>[http://www.autocar.co.uk/News/NewsArticle/TVR-Sagaris/228517/ Autocar - TVR: new models on sale by 2008<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> | |||
===Ownership history=== | |||
The history of the company can be divided into four eras, based on ownership: | |||
* 1947–1965, founder Trevor Wilkinson, who left in 1962 | |||
* 1965–1981, Martin Lilley | |||
* 1981–2004, [[Peter Wheeler (TVR)|Peter Wheeler]] | |||
* 2004–present, Nikolay Smolensky | |||
==Model list== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
!Model | |||
!Production Years | |||
!Engine | |||
!Displacement | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=4|<center>'''Trevor Wilkinson Era'''</center> | |||
|- | |||
|TVR Jomar<sup>1</sup>||1957-1959||[[Coventry Climax]]<br>[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>||1098 cc<br>1172 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] I||1958-1960||[[Coventry Climax]]<br>[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1098 cc<br>1172 cc<br>1588 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] II||1960-1961||[[Coventry Climax]]<br>[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1098 cc<br>1172 cc<br>1588 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] IIa||1961-1962||[[Coventry Climax]]<br>[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1098 cc<br>1172 cc<br>1588 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] III||1962-1964||[[Coventry Climax]]<br>[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1098 cc<br>1172 cc<br>1588 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] 1800S||1964-1966||[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1798 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Griffith 200]]<sup>1</sup>||1963-1964||[[Ford Windsor engine#289|Ford Windsor V8]]||4727 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Griffith 400]]<sup>1</sup>||1964-1967||[[Ford Windsor engine#289|Ford Windsor V8]]||4727 cc | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=4|<center>'''Martin Lilley Era</center>''' | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Grantura]] IV 1800S||1966-1967||[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1798 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Tuscan (1967)|TVR Tuscan V8]]||1967-1970||[[Ford Windsor engine#289|Ford Windsor V8]]||4727 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Tuscan (1967)|TVR Tuscan V6]]||1969-1971||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] S1||1967-1968||[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]<br>[[BMC B-Series engine|BMC B-Series]]||1599 cc<br>1798 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] S2||1968-1969||[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]||1599 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] S3||1970-1972||[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]||1599 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] 1300||1971-1972||[[Triumph Spitfire|Triumph]] I4||1296 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] 2500||1971-1972||[[Triumph TR6|Triumph]] I6||2498 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Vixen]] S4||1972||[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent]]||1599 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR 1600M]]||1972-1973<br>1975-1977||[[Ford Kent engine|Ford Kent I4]]||1599 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR 2500M]]||1972-1977||[[Triumph TR6|Triumph]] I6||2498 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR 3000M]]||1971-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR 3000M Turbo]]||1975-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR Taimar]]||1976-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR M Series|TVR Taimar Turbo]]||1976-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR 3000S]]||1978-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR 3000S]] Turbo||1978-1979||[[Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)|Ford Essex V6]]||2994 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR Tasmin 200]]||1979-1984||[[Ford Pinto engine|Ford Pinto I4]]||1993 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR Tasmin 280]]||1980-1984||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2792 cc | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=4|<center>'''Peter Wheeler Era</center>''' | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 280i]]||1984-1987||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2792 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 350i]]||1983-1985||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3528 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 350SX]]||1985-1989||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8 <br>+ Sprintex Supercharger]]||3528 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 400SX]]||1989||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8 <br>+ Sprintex Supercharger]]||3948 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR 350SE]]||1990-1991||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3947 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 390SE]]||1984-1988||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3905 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 400SE]]||1988-1991||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3948 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 420SE]]||1986-1987||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||4228 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 450SE]]||1989-1990||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||4441 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 420SEAC]]||1986-1988||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||4228 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Wedges|TVR 450SEAC]]||1988-1989||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||4441 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR S Series|TVR S]]||1986-1988||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2792 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR S Series|TVR S2]]||1989-1990||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2933 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR S Series|TVR S3(C)]]||1991-1992||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2933 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR S Series|TVR S4C]]||1993-1993||[[Ford Cologne V6 engine|Ford Cologne V6]]||2933 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR S Series|TVR V8S]]||1991-1993||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3948 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Griffith]]||1992-2002||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3948 cc<br>4280 cc<br>4988 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Chimaera]]||1992-2001||[[Rover V8 engine|TVR/Rover V8]]||3948 cc<br>4280 cc<br>4495 cc<br>4988 cc | |||
|- | |||
|rowspan=2|[[TVR Cerbera]]||1996-2003||[[TVR Speed Eight engine|Speed Eight]]||4185 cc<br>4475 cc | |||
|- | |||
||1996-2003||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3996 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Tamora]]||2002-2006||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3605 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR T350]] (Targa & Coupe)||2003-2006||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3605 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Tuscan]]||1999-2006||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3996 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Sagaris]]||2004-2006||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3996 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Typhon]]||2004||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3996 cc | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=4|<center>'''Nikolai Smolenski Era</center>''' | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Sagaris]]||2004-2006||[[TVR Speed Six engine|Speed Six]]||3996 cc | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=5|<br><center>'''Speciality/Racing Cars</center>''' | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Cerbera Speed 12]]<sup>2/3</sup>||1997||[[TVR Speed Twelve engine|Speed Twelve]]||7730 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR Tuscan Challenge]]<sup>3</sup>||1989-(43 made)||[[Rover V8 engine|Rover V8]]/[[TVR Speed Eight engine|Speed Eight]]||4500 cc | |||
|- | |||
|[[TVR T400R]]/Typhon GT<sup>3</sup>||?||||440 bhp | |||
|} | |||
<sup>1</sup> - Not technically a TVR model, but used TVR chassis/body.<br> | |||
<sup>2</sup> - Never went into production.<br> | |||
<sup>3</sup> - Built exclusively for racing.<br> | |||
==See Also== | |||
{{TVR}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* [http://www.tvr.co.uk/ Official TVR website] | |||
* [http://www.tvrcc.com/ The TVR Car Club] | |||
* [http://www.tvrccna.org/ TVR Car Club North America] | |||
* [http://www.thegriffithpages.com/ TVR Griffith Owners Register, History, Mods and Maintenance, Gallery, Alt Parts,Resources, Links] | |||
* [http://users.firenet.uk.com/martinjones/tvr.htm TVR pictures, costs, service schedules and specifications.] | |||
* [http://homepage.mac.com/tvr43/history.html TVR history] | |||
* [http://www.chimaerapages.com TVR Chimaera maintenance, modification, ownership and buyer's guide.] | |||
* [http://www.autoblog.com/2008/06/08/trevor-wilkinson-tvr-founder-dead-at-85/ Trevor Wilkinson, TVR founder, dead at 85] | |||
* [http://www.autoblog.com/2009/06/12/ex-tvr-owner-peter-wheeler-dies/ Ex-TVR owner Peter Wheeler: 1944-2009] | |||
* [http://www.kerridges.co.uk/tvr-index.html TVR Dealer UK Kerriges TVR] | |||
[[Category:TVR]] | |||
[[Category:Motor vehicle manufacturers of the United Kingdom]] | |||
[[Category:Sports car manufacturers]] | |||
[[Category:Car manufacturers]] | |||
[[Category:Makes]] |
Latest revision as of 18:43, 12 April 2010
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TVR is an independent British manufacturer of sports cars based in the English town of Blackpool, Lancashire. The company manufactures lightweight sports cars with powerful engines and is the third-largest specialised sports car manufacturer in the world, offering a diverse range of coupés and convertibles, most using an in-house straight-6 cylinder engine design, others an in-house V8. TVR sports cars are composed of tubular steel frames, cloaked in aggressive fibreglass body designs.
TVR's two arms are TVR Engineering, which manufactures sports cars and grand tourers, and TVR Power, their power-train division. The company has a turbulent recent history and an uncertain future (see below).
History
Foundation
Blackpool born Trevor Wilkinson left school at 14 and started an engineering apprenticeship at a local garage. In 1946 he bought a wheelwright's business in Blackpool, renaming it Trevcar Motors in 1947, for the purpose of selling and repairing cars and light engineering.<ref name="DMail1"/>
In 1947, Wilkinson built his first car, a special two-seater body on an Alvis Firebird chassis for himself. As a result, Wilkinson with partner Jack Pickard then started a separate company, TVR Engineering, with a name derived from Wilkinson's name - TreVoR. Their first car was an alloy-bodied two seat body on a tubular chassis, which appeared in 1949.<ref name="DMail1"/>
In 1953 the concept of glass-reinforced plastic bodywork over a tubular steel backbone chassis was accepted, and continued throughout TVR's current production history. In 1954, TVR Engineering was renamed TVR, in light of the launch of the first "production" car called the Mk1, later name Grantura. The glass fibre body design and layout remained, in modified form, until replaced by the angular wedge design Tasmin in 1980.
At launch in the 1950s, TVRs were powered by 4-cylinder engines from Coventry Climax, BMC or Ford, the performance models having Shorrock superchargers. As with many other British sports cars, engine sizes remained under two litres, and all produced less than 100 bhp (75 kW). As most TVRs were sold in the domestic British market, to avoid a British tax on assembled cars many of the early cars were sold in kit form - a practice which continued until the 1970s, when the tax loophole was closed and the kit-form option removed.
In April 1962 Wilkinson and Pickard left the company to set up a specialist fibre-glass engineering business. On retirement, Wilkinson moved to Minorca, Spain, where he died aged 85, on 6 June 2008.<ref name="DMail1">Template:Citeweb</ref>
1960s and 1970s
In the 1960s, American motor dealer Jack Griffith decided to put a 4.7 litre V8 engine from an AC Cobra he owned into a TVR Grantura, in much the same way that V8s were first transplanted into AC Cobras (It is in honour of Jack Griffith that the TVR Griffith was so-named).
Under the ownership of Martin Lilley from 1965, TVR returned to Ford for a 2994 cc V6 Zodiac engine for the new TVR Tuscan (1967) racer. This produced 128 bhp (95 kW), giving a 0-60 mph (0-97 km/h) time of 8.3 seconds, which was good performance for the time.
The 1970s saw a number of engines used in TVRs (particularly the 'M Series'), mainly Triumph 2500s, Ford Essex V6 and Ford 1600 Crossflows.
Wheeler ownership
In the 1980s, under the ownership of Peter Wheeler - a chemical industry consultant and TVR enthusiast - TVR moved away from naturally-aspirated and turbocharged V6s back to large V8s, namely the Rover V8 (to which Rover bought the intellectual property rights from Buick). Capacity grew from 3.5 to 4.5 litres.
In the 1990s, TVR Power modified a number of Rover V8s, but subsequently developed an in-house engine design. The AJP8 engine, a lightweight alloy V8, was developed by engineering consultant Al Melling along with John Ravenscroft and Peter Wheeler (hence the AJP initials), a notable achievement for a small maker. The new engine was originally destined for the Griffith and Chimaera models, but development took longer than expected and it finally became available in the Cerbera and Tuscan race cars.
Perhaps more significantly, Peter Wheeler was instrumental in the body design of TVR cars during his ownership. He managed a design team that produced a number of acclaimed and resolved body designs including the Chimaera, Griffith, Cerbera, Tuscan, Tamora, T350, Typhon and Sagaris. These attention grabbing works of sculpture helped to keep TVR on the front covers of magazines around the world and thus in the public eye.
Owner Peter Wheeler subsequently directed the design of a straight-six derivative of the AJP8 that would be cheaper to produce and maintain than the eight. This engine, designed by John Ravenscroft, became known as the "Speed 6", and powers current TVRs.
Smolensky ownership
In July 2004, 24-year-old Nikolay Smolensky bought the company from Wheeler, for about £15 million. Despite his Russian nationality, Smolensky said he intended TVR to remain a British company.
In April 2006, responding to falling demand and with production rumoured to have dropped from 12 cars a week to 3 or 4, TVR laid off some of its 300 staff. At the same time, the firm announced plans to move to updated facilities in the Squires Gate district of Blackpool, citing impending expiry of the lease of the current factory in late 2006, where owner Peter Wheeler was said to be planning to build a housing estate.
In October 2006 Smolensky announced<ref>BBC NEWS | Business | TVR to move car production abroad</ref> that body production and final assembly for TVR would move to Turin, Italy<ref>italiaspeed.com</ref>, with only engine production remaining in the UK. In protest at this and to show support for the workers, a large number of TVR owners paraded through central London on 26 November, 2006. Dubbed "London Thunder"<ref>London Thunder</ref>, it was also an attempt at the official world record for the biggest one-marque convoy on record.
By December 2006, it emerged that Smolensky had split TVR into a number of different companies<ref>http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2769-2534377,00.html</ref>;
- Brand and intellectual property rights had been transferred to a core Smolensky company
- TVR Motors - held the licence to the brands and intellectual property in the UK, as well as sales and marketing of the brand
- TVR Power - the parts and spares business had been sold to a management buyout
- Blackpool Automotive - the factory and manufacturing assets
On 13 December, Smolensky and production director Mike Penny resigned as directors of Blackpool Automotive, being replaced by Smolensky UK personal assistant Roger Billinghurst and 25 year old Austrian Angelco Stamenkov. By 24 December Blackpool Automotive was in administration. Administrators are now seeking legal clarification on the ownership of certain assets, including the brand and intellectual property, to see what assets the company has and who should pay the redundancy notices of the remaining 200 workers<ref>http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2769-2534344,00.html</ref>.
Recent events
On 22 February 2007 it was revealed that Smolensky is once again the owner of the company after being the highest bidder. <ref>BBC NEWS | England | Lancashire | Union anger as TVR is bought back</ref>. On 28 February 2007, less than one week after reacquiring TVR, he has reportedly announced plans to sell the company to Adam Burdette and Jean Michel Santacreu, who intend to export TVRs to the United States market. <ref>Autocar - Smolenski's out. Again</ref> On 8 October 2007 it was found that Smolensky was still in control of the company and was hoping to restart production, with a target of 2,000 cars to be sold in 2008. <ref>Autocar - TVR: new models on sale by 2008</ref>
Ownership history
The history of the company can be divided into four eras, based on ownership:
- 1947–1965, founder Trevor Wilkinson, who left in 1962
- 1965–1981, Martin Lilley
- 1981–2004, Peter Wheeler
- 2004–present, Nikolay Smolensky
Model list
Model | Production Years | Engine | Displacement | |
---|---|---|---|---|
TVR Jomar1 | 1957-1959 | Coventry Climax Ford Kent |
1098 cc 1172 cc | |
TVR Grantura I | 1958-1960 | Coventry Climax Ford Kent BMC B-Series |
1098 cc 1172 cc 1588 cc | |
TVR Grantura II | 1960-1961 | Coventry Climax Ford Kent BMC B-Series |
1098 cc 1172 cc 1588 cc | |
TVR Grantura IIa | 1961-1962 | Coventry Climax Ford Kent BMC B-Series |
1098 cc 1172 cc 1588 cc | |
TVR Grantura III | 1962-1964 | Coventry Climax Ford Kent BMC B-Series |
1098 cc 1172 cc 1588 cc | |
TVR Grantura 1800S | 1964-1966 | BMC B-Series | 1798 cc | |
TVR Griffith 2001 | 1963-1964 | Ford Windsor V8 | 4727 cc | |
TVR Griffith 4001 | 1964-1967 | Ford Windsor V8 | 4727 cc | |
TVR Grantura IV 1800S | 1966-1967 | BMC B-Series | 1798 cc | |
TVR Tuscan V8 | 1967-1970 | Ford Windsor V8 | 4727 cc | |
TVR Tuscan V6 | 1969-1971 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR Vixen S1 | 1967-1968 | Ford Kent BMC B-Series |
1599 cc 1798 cc | |
TVR Vixen S2 | 1968-1969 | Ford Kent | 1599 cc | |
TVR Vixen S3 | 1970-1972 | Ford Kent | 1599 cc | |
TVR Vixen 1300 | 1971-1972 | Triumph I4 | 1296 cc | |
TVR Vixen 2500 | 1971-1972 | Triumph I6 | 2498 cc | |
TVR Vixen S4 | 1972 | Ford Kent | 1599 cc | |
TVR 1600M | 1972-1973 1975-1977 |
Ford Kent I4 | 1599 cc | |
TVR 2500M | 1972-1977 | Triumph I6 | 2498 cc | |
TVR 3000M | 1971-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR 3000M Turbo | 1975-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR Taimar | 1976-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR Taimar Turbo | 1976-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR 3000S | 1978-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR 3000S Turbo | 1978-1979 | Ford Essex V6 | 2994 cc | |
TVR Tasmin 200 | 1979-1984 | Ford Pinto I4 | 1993 cc | |
TVR Tasmin 280 | 1980-1984 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2792 cc | |
TVR 280i | 1984-1987 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2792 cc | |
TVR 350i | 1983-1985 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3528 cc | |
TVR 350SX | 1985-1989 | TVR/Rover V8 + Sprintex Supercharger |
3528 cc | |
TVR 400SX | 1989 | TVR/Rover V8 + Sprintex Supercharger |
3948 cc | |
TVR 350SE | 1990-1991 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3947 cc | |
TVR 390SE | 1984-1988 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3905 cc | |
TVR 400SE | 1988-1991 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3948 cc | |
TVR 420SE | 1986-1987 | TVR/Rover V8 | 4228 cc | |
TVR 450SE | 1989-1990 | TVR/Rover V8 | 4441 cc | |
TVR 420SEAC | 1986-1988 | TVR/Rover V8 | 4228 cc | |
TVR 450SEAC | 1988-1989 | TVR/Rover V8 | 4441 cc | |
TVR S | 1986-1988 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2792 cc | |
TVR S2 | 1989-1990 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2933 cc | |
TVR S3(C) | 1991-1992 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2933 cc | |
TVR S4C | 1993-1993 | Ford Cologne V6 | 2933 cc | |
TVR V8S | 1991-1993 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3948 cc | |
TVR Griffith | 1992-2002 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3948 cc 4280 cc 4988 cc | |
TVR Chimaera | 1992-2001 | TVR/Rover V8 | 3948 cc 4280 cc 4495 cc 4988 cc | |
TVR Cerbera | 1996-2003 | Speed Eight | 4185 cc 4475 cc | |
1996-2003 | Speed Six | 3996 cc | ||
TVR Tamora | 2002-2006 | Speed Six | 3605 cc | |
TVR T350 (Targa & Coupe) | 2003-2006 | Speed Six | 3605 cc | |
TVR Tuscan | 1999-2006 | Speed Six | 3996 cc | |
TVR Sagaris | 2004-2006 | Speed Six | 3996 cc | |
TVR Typhon | 2004 | Speed Six | 3996 cc | |
TVR Sagaris | 2004-2006 | Speed Six | 3996 cc | |
TVR Cerbera Speed 122/3 | 1997 | Speed Twelve | 7730 cc | |
TVR Tuscan Challenge3 | 1989-(43 made) | Rover V8/Speed Eight | 4500 cc | |
TVR T400R/Typhon GT3 | ? | 440 bhp |
1 - Not technically a TVR model, but used TVR chassis/body.
2 - Never went into production.
3 - Built exclusively for racing.
See Also
image (between 170-190 pixels) | ||
TVR | ||
TVR Motors | TVR Power | Blackpool Automotive Current: Typhon Historic: Sagaris · Tuscan S · Tuscan S Convertible · T350 · Tamora · Cerbera · Chimaera · Griffith · V8S · S4C · S3(C) · S2 · S1 · 450SEAC · 450SE · 4520SEAC · 420SE · 400SX · 400SE · 390SE · 350SX · 350i · 250i · Tasmin 280 · Tasmin 200 · 350SE · 3000S · 3000S Turbo · Taimar · Taimar Turbo · 3000M Turbo · 3000M · 2500M · 1600M · Vixen 2500 · Vixen 1300 · Vixen S4 · Vixen S3 · Vixen S2 · Vixen S1 · Vixen S1 · Tuscan (1967) · Grantura Racing: Cerbera Speed 12 · Speed 12 · Tuscan Racer · T400R / Typhon GT Concept: Project 7/12 Concept · Peter Wheeler · Jack Pickard · John Ravenscroft · Al Melling · Tuscan Challenge | ||
Trevor Wilkinson | Corporate website | independent |
External links
- Official TVR website
- The TVR Car Club
- TVR Car Club North America
- TVR Griffith Owners Register, History, Mods and Maintenance, Gallery, Alt Parts,Resources, Links
- TVR pictures, costs, service schedules and specifications.
- TVR history
- TVR Chimaera maintenance, modification, ownership and buyer's guide.
- Trevor Wilkinson, TVR founder, dead at 85
- Ex-TVR owner Peter Wheeler: 1944-2009
- TVR Dealer UK Kerriges TVR