Currently reading: We thought you were dead - Autocar drives the last TVR Tuscan
Two years ago, before Les Edgar’s consortium swooped for TVR, Autocar drove what looked likely to be the last-ever car bearing the iconic name

So this is it, then. The last TVR. This is the very car with which Nikolai Smolenski wanted to restart the company, and it’s back in Britain finished, V8-powered and on the road. A driveable tale of what might have been.

Russian businessman Smolenski, you’ll probably remember, bought TVR from its former owner, Peter Wheeler, in 2004, but despite his best intentions he could only watch as the whole shebang – already running out of both goodwill and customers – failed under him.

But even when the Blackpool site closed at the end of 2006, Smolenski hoped it might not be over. He took the name and development team with him, and a small team of engineers beavered away to come up with what sounds like a distinctly un-stupid idea for a limited-volume car maker: don’t use your own engine. Instead, why not buy a Chevrolet LS3 motor and save yourself the bother?

So here it is: a Tuscan Mk3, with a Chevy V8. Restarting production sounded like a plausible proposition until Smolenski’s team did the full numbers and realised that, in order to turn a profit, each car would have to sell for £100,000. No dice, then. The TVR name will live on only on wind turbines.

All except for the prototype Chevy-engined Tuscan, which was in Austria. Meanwhile, a TVR specialist – Str8six of Lewknor, Oxfordshire – was over here. Str8six has built a few ‘end of line’ TVRs, and it still owns a few Tuscan chassis it rescued from the factory. You can guess the rest.

Str8six has now rebuilt what was, in truth, a pretty shabby and hard-worked development hack. The car had been set up for high-speed autobahn work – not something for which a TVR’s famously pointy steering was a traditional match – while the engine bay was a state and the interior not much better.

Now, a few days before it goes to its new owner, it gleams. The engine bay is pristine. The LS unit – shorter than TVR’s Speed Six and a bit wider but about the same weight – sits a long way back in the chassis. It’s mated to a five-speed manual gearbox, whose large bellhousing prevents it from sitting further back still. The motor has been converted from a by-wire to cable-operated throttle and
tuned – with a bespoke exhaust – to make what Str8six is claiming to be 485bhp. That should be conservative; earlier dyno tests put it at 505bhp.

The impeccable appearance continues inside, too, because the good guys – the really good ones – always stick around in the business. Str8six’s gaffer is Jason Clegg, a former factory employee, and he chose another former colleague, who now runs a small shop called Trim Unique, to do the interior. It retains the swoopiness that was such a huge part of the appeal of late TVRs. The dash panel looks a touch incongruous, but the fit and finish is better than in any TVR I remember. They’ve called it the Tuscan Vulcan.

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By gum, it sounds pretty decent when they fire it up, too. In a standard production car, an LS3 unit is a pretty muted thing, but evidently it’s all in the exhausts. This is a monster – the sort of sound that TVRs used to have, in what I suppose you’d call the good old days. So it isn’t out of character. Take it for a drive, they say. So I do.

And you know what? It’s good. Really good. This is such a tractable engine, and it’s still a relatively light car – no more than the 1100kg it was new. So it trickles along on a light throttle opening with no worries, no complaints. There are three-stage adjustable Ohlins dampers, set up, Clegg explains, not unlike production Tuscans, so it’s respectably damped even with larger wheels than on original cars, and maintains precise body control. The leggy, lazy power delivery would make this a fine long- distance cruiser, in fact. And yes, the steering is still fast, but it’s not nervy.

There is a lot to like: incisive turn-in, lots of grip and mechanical feedback by the bucketload. Speed by the bucketload, too, when you forget about cruising and give it the beans. Blimey. It pulls. It goes. And it sounds mega. It’s fairly devastating, all told, and it remains in the top performance division, no question.

There’s so much to like, in fact, that this one found an owner without too many problems. Admittedly, he’s hooked – he’s had four TVRs before this one – but I could see the appeal. If you could, too, and if you turn up in Lewknor with a cheque big enough, this one might not be quite the last TVR after all.

First published in Autocar, 24 April 2013

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Matt Prior

Matt Prior
Title: Editor-at-large

Matt is Autocar’s lead features writer and presenter, is the main face of Autocar’s YouTube channel, presents the My Week In Cars podcast and has written his weekly column, Tester’s Notes, since 2013.

Matt is an automotive engineer who has been writing and talking about cars since 1997. He joined Autocar in 2005 as deputy road test editor, prior to which he was road test editor and world rally editor for Channel 4’s automotive website, 4Car. 

Into all things engineering and automotive from any era, Matt is as comfortable regularly contributing to sibling titles Move Electric and Classic & Sports Car as he is writing for Autocar. He has a racing licence, and some malfunctioning classic cars and motorbikes. 

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AHA1 8 June 2015

Much more viable

A bespoke cottage industry of superbly talented and experienced specialists like these guys, turning out updated and improved TVRs in small numbers, with a high level of commissioned work, sounds like a much more viable business than attempting to manufacture TVRs as new cars. This way they don't have the type approval and emissions issues and they can scope individal projects to match specific customers' wallets. Someone might want to spend 6 figures on a flawless one-off. Another might turn up with a very sorry looking example in tow but want only a track day weapon with minimal niceties etc etc.
FastRenaultFan 3 June 2015

They might not have been very well built but

they certainly did have beautiful engines and interiors. They also had great sounding engines and were lovely cars too. I wish the new owners of the company well and hope that they can
make a success of TVR