Guess the car

geepee said:
too easy
Scan10194.JPG
Tidy... Rover V8? Ford V6?
 
mrlozzer said:
john56 said:
Just one more for now.

p8_07-1.jpg

That's the Rover / Alvis mid-engine prototype... saw it at Gaydon a few weeks back :oops:

Yeh, easy one, a car that "should have been" every motoring journalist that tested it said what a fantastic car it was, for a company that mostly produced very sedate cars Rover were actually a very forward thinking company, just imagine this going into production in the late 60s.

p6bs_01.jpg
 
Jago chassis, Rover V8 (sounded glorious) , Viva front suspension, E-type rear.

Wife hated it - so it had to go. On to sportscars after this.
 
Rover were the only manufacturer to field a turbine car @ Le Mans
roverbrm63hill2w_xlarge.jpg


Such a shame they were gobbled up by the BL debacle
 
geepee said:
Rover were the only manufacturer to field a turbine car @ Le Mans. Such a shame they were gobbled up by the BL debacle
Totally agree... my uncle used to collect Rovers. Had several P4s, P5 3.0 saloon & P5B V8 Coupe, pre-production P6 and a V8S... all great cars, and as you say their gas turbine research was really forward-thinking. When you look at the Honda / Rover crap that came later...
 
john56 said:
Spot on,good we have a few classic car enthusiasts in the forum. :thumbsup:

That's a pretty rare one... is it a coincidence that the pub it's outside is not far from Warwick...?
 
mrlozzer said:
john56 said:
Spot on,good we have a few classic car enthusiasts in the forum. :thumbsup:

That's a pretty rare one... is it a coincidence that the pub it's outside is not far from Warwick...?
To cut a long story short.
Apparently there is a connection, the Warwick GT was built by a new company formed after the collapse of "The Peerless" using the same people and facilities but slimmed down.
The idea behind the Peerless was a chap named James Byrnes a hotel owner and motor racing enthusiast from the midlands who wanted to build his own racing car to his own specification.
Jimmy owned the Saxon Mill Restaurant which at that time was being frequented by virtually the whole of the Standard Triumph Board hence the car being based on the TR3 and later to be called the Warwick GT.
 
john56 said:
Apparently there is a connection, the Warwick GT was built by a new company formed after the collapse of "The Peerless" using the same people and facilities but slimmed down.
The idea behind the Peerless was a chap named James Byrnes a hotel owner and motor racing enthusiast from the midlands who wanted to build his own racing car to his own specification.
Jimmy owned the Saxon Mill Restaurant which at that time was being frequented by virtually the whole of the Standard Triumph Board hence the car being based on the TR3 and later to be called the Warwick GT.

Thanks for the info!!
 
Back
Top Bottom