Discussion
I am new to the TVR forum!! I pick you my "X" 01 RR on Saturday and can not wait.....
I was never going to give my opinion on Reliability but
after reading TUS 373 throught i would......
I worked for " The Best 4x4 by Far" Car Manufacture for nearly 10 years and yes they are now owned by a German car manufacture.
When they make a new Engine or Gearbox they had faulty
units I replaced 6 new engines with less then 1000 miles on the clock.. if they can not get it right, first time with the Budget and years of Know how they
have, it was no suprise to me that a relatively small car Manufacture like TVR had some problems....
let's move on and enjoy the car.
I would be more angry if TVR were doing nothing to sort the problem out, but they are.
I was never going to give my opinion on Reliability but
after reading TUS 373 throught i would......
I worked for " The Best 4x4 by Far" Car Manufacture for nearly 10 years and yes they are now owned by a German car manufacture.
When they make a new Engine or Gearbox they had faulty
units I replaced 6 new engines with less then 1000 miles on the clock.. if they can not get it right, first time with the Budget and years of Know how they
have, it was no suprise to me that a relatively small car Manufacture like TVR had some problems....
let's move on and enjoy the car.
I would be more angry if TVR were doing nothing to sort the problem out, but they are.
Would that be 6 engines of the 47000 cars they sell a year in this country alone or 6 of the 170000 odd worldwide. Either way not a catastrophic failure rate unless it happens to you.
Think you need to get some perspective on the matter before you throw stones at one of the few lasting Motor manufacturers in this country that can still hold its head high on a global stage.
Congrats on the Trev purchase.
Think you need to get some perspective on the matter before you throw stones at one of the few lasting Motor manufacturers in this country that can still hold its head high on a global stage.
Congrats on the Trev purchase.
80% of all Landies built are still in use and considering the beating some of them get that is a great accolade.
My dad's brand new Merc has been back to the dealership for significant mechanical replacements 3 times in the first half year of ownership. Podie's Fiesta Zetec S had a complete engine replacement after 5 months.
Everyone knows someone who has had a serious problem with their car.
Granted 3 gearboxes is a bit steep but surely that comes down to component manufacture problems and not necessarily the Land Rover it is bolted into.
My dad's brand new Merc has been back to the dealership for significant mechanical replacements 3 times in the first half year of ownership. Podie's Fiesta Zetec S had a complete engine replacement after 5 months.
Everyone knows someone who has had a serious problem with their car.
Granted 3 gearboxes is a bit steep but surely that comes down to component manufacture problems and not necessarily the Land Rover it is bolted into.
This is beginning to ......wrinkle me.
I own a design company and the senior partners all have a taste for expensive kit-the 'reliability' of machines my company has owned is as follows
1) BMW 735 broke a camshaft-twice!
2)RangeRover transmission failure,had to be completely replaced-failed again two months later.Then there were electrical problems and the chap who ran it swapped it for an Amazon.
3) Mercedes 320 CE - recall on brakes and had a rear nearside indicator fault that was never traced and never succesfully repaired in the three years I ran it
4) Alfa Romeo 164 ( going back a bit ) consistent minor electrical faults and a gearbox linkage failure
5) BMW 5 series transmision failure
6) Audi S6 front suspension failure-really nasty one this one-nearly caused a big accident
All the machines mentioned above ferried luvvies around Notting Hill,Highgate and rougher dives like Ealing with the occasional blat up and down motorways
so no extreme action and certainly no track days.
Reliability comparisons need perspective.My brother-in -law worked for Fords at Dunton for some years and Ford,trying to improve their reliability record,approached the automatic transmition OEM that BMW used and specced a transmission as close to the Beamer as the OEM would allow without incurring legal problems.
After a year they were back thumping the desk,reliability had improved marginally but nothing like the assumed BMW performance.The OEM calmly informed Ford they were getting exactly the same failure rate as BMW.
Consider the Porche news item in EVO this month.The ultra high-tech ceramic disk brakes are becoming a nightmare.
Originally expected to last for 300,000km they are experiencing substantially less than that.The cost of a new set of disks and pads-wait for it £22,000.
Makes a rebuild sound like a bargain
Jaguar auto transmission recall anyone?-over 60,000 cars.
I am upgrading from a mk 1 Lotus Elite which I have loved to a Tuscan later this month-looking forward to it.
what about the Loads Of Trouble Usually Serious?
Not a bleep after 33k,not a sausage!
If the Trevor is only half as reliable-I'll still be well ahead of Range Rover,BMW,Audi Jaguar and Porche
Please-give TVR a break!
I own a design company and the senior partners all have a taste for expensive kit-the 'reliability' of machines my company has owned is as follows
1) BMW 735 broke a camshaft-twice!
2)RangeRover transmission failure,had to be completely replaced-failed again two months later.Then there were electrical problems and the chap who ran it swapped it for an Amazon.
3) Mercedes 320 CE - recall on brakes and had a rear nearside indicator fault that was never traced and never succesfully repaired in the three years I ran it
4) Alfa Romeo 164 ( going back a bit ) consistent minor electrical faults and a gearbox linkage failure
5) BMW 5 series transmision failure
6) Audi S6 front suspension failure-really nasty one this one-nearly caused a big accident
All the machines mentioned above ferried luvvies around Notting Hill,Highgate and rougher dives like Ealing with the occasional blat up and down motorways
so no extreme action and certainly no track days.
Reliability comparisons need perspective.My brother-in -law worked for Fords at Dunton for some years and Ford,trying to improve their reliability record,approached the automatic transmition OEM that BMW used and specced a transmission as close to the Beamer as the OEM would allow without incurring legal problems.
After a year they were back thumping the desk,reliability had improved marginally but nothing like the assumed BMW performance.The OEM calmly informed Ford they were getting exactly the same failure rate as BMW.
Consider the Porche news item in EVO this month.The ultra high-tech ceramic disk brakes are becoming a nightmare.
Originally expected to last for 300,000km they are experiencing substantially less than that.The cost of a new set of disks and pads-wait for it £22,000.
Makes a rebuild sound like a bargain
Jaguar auto transmission recall anyone?-over 60,000 cars.
I am upgrading from a mk 1 Lotus Elite which I have loved to a Tuscan later this month-looking forward to it.
what about the Loads Of Trouble Usually Serious?
Not a bleep after 33k,not a sausage!
If the Trevor is only half as reliable-I'll still be well ahead of Range Rover,BMW,Audi Jaguar and Porche
Please-give TVR a break!
i really don't get the point of this thread.
ALL cars have problems,yes tvr has taken a more public battering than most but the tit for tat stories are sad.
"my mate's reliable porsche broke down 1000 times where my tvr hasn't missed a beat"!
i couldn't care less about stories like that.
i bought my tvr for the looks,pace,sound and grin factor.
i'm more worried about the service i get when i have a problem and it seems this is the area where owners would like improvements.
and before anyone comes on here with a story about how they were treated well when they had a problem,i was treated superbly when i had problems with my S6 and couldn't have asked for better service,but as an owner i feel a duty to keep pushing for better service from tvr,not just for myself but for fellow owners too
ALL cars have problems,yes tvr has taken a more public battering than most but the tit for tat stories are sad.
"my mate's reliable porsche broke down 1000 times where my tvr hasn't missed a beat"!
i couldn't care less about stories like that.
i bought my tvr for the looks,pace,sound and grin factor.
i'm more worried about the service i get when i have a problem and it seems this is the area where owners would like improvements.
and before anyone comes on here with a story about how they were treated well when they had a problem,i was treated superbly when i had problems with my S6 and couldn't have asked for better service,but as an owner i feel a duty to keep pushing for better service from tvr,not just for myself but for fellow owners too

Reliability, rather that re event the wheel, on a subject that has be dicussed numerouse times.
Do a "reliability" search in the Tuscan formum, and I think a lot of your questions will be answered there.
All the best with your new purchase leaty.
>> Edited by Big Al. on Sunday 9th May 12:01
Do a "reliability" search in the Tuscan formum, and I think a lot of your questions will be answered there.
All the best with your new purchase leaty.

>> Edited by Big Al. on Sunday 9th May 12:01
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