RE: Jaw-dropping TVR Tuscan for sale

RE: Jaw-dropping TVR Tuscan for sale

Sunday 1st December

Jaw-dropping TVR Tuscan for sale

25 years ago the Tuscan gatecrashed our imagination - this one, in Porsche Dark Olive Green, brings it all back


The '90s really was TVR’s heyday. Back when disposable income still existed and cars could be made with a bit less tech, the combination of style, speed and value was hugely alluring - as we all know. TVRs became famous around the globe for offering up supercar-slaying speed for middle-order sports car money - no 911 Turbo or Ferrari driver was safe from big power Cerberas and Griffiths. And that was cool. 

By the end of the century, however, it was time for a change. The traditional styling cues that had characterised the range would get a radical refresh for the '00s, and neither the Rover nor AJP V8s would carry on forever. The 21st-century TVRs would be Speed Six-powered and look like nothing else on the planet - the revolution would be kicked off by a reborn Tuscan. 

It’s easy to imagine now that a dramatic departure from the norm would have alienated fans, but the opposite was true; TVR received something like 1,300 deposits following the debut of a concept at the 1998 British motor show, more than enough to crack on with development and show a production version a year later. Just imagine how this looked next to a Griffith or Chimaera in 1999, with its wild exterior and partially digital dash. 

Furthermore, while the old school would soldier on into the 21st century, it was the Speed Six spaceships that would define the brand for those fleeting final years - and they’re the ones now very much in demand. Perhaps partly due to more being around, there are Chimaeras from £10k, plus Griffiths and Cerberas from £20,000, but there’s not a Tuscan, T350 or Tamora for less than £25k. Most are more than £30,000. And that’s before even thinking about the Sagaris…

As such a significant car for the brand (a Chimaera just wouldn’t have been right in Swordfish) on a big birthday, it only seemed right to celebrate 25 years of Tuscan before 2024 is out. There’s a decent selection on PH, as there often tends to be, and while the typical logic is to go for as late a car as possible (the Tuscan 2 brought some useful revisions) it’s hard not to be drawn to this 2002 Speed Six.

Why? Because all is not quite as it seems. ‘Restomod’ would be too strong a term for it, but this Tuscan has certainly been sympathetically optimised to make for the best TVR experience possible. And that promises to be epic. Cosmetically it benefits from a stunning respray in Porsche Dark Olive Green, the interior has been retrimmed in Bentley leather and the much-loved Spider alloys, if not refurbed, are in glorious condition. All these years later, a Tuscan still has the power to stop you in your tracks. 

Additionally, this Tuscan benefits from Michelin PS5 tyres, Bilstein dampers and Eibach springs, so the ride and handling ought to be bob on. The seller (well-known specialist Str8Six) also says the in-car entertainment is a ‘Tour de Force’, which is probably the first time that’s been said in the context of a TVR. There’s a proper amp, sub-woofer and set of speakers, basically, which hopefully means this Tuscan could make quite agreeable long-distance company, as well as a Sunday morning sports car. 

It means this is the priciest Tuscan on PH, at £52k, but then evidently a lot of money has been spent on it. The mileage is low for a 20-odd-year-old car, and there’s never going to be a time that a Tuscan isn’t a very cool sports car - particularly as they’re becoming eligible for US export. Known to this specialist for many years, it’s probably about the best a Tuscan can get. Looks pretty damn great to us.


See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

neeklaus

Original Poster:

11 posts

27 months

wicked

BlindedByTheLights

1,480 posts

105 months

That is beautiful

TheRainMaker

6,633 posts

250 months

Twenty-two years old and still looks stunning.


GianiCakes

328 posts

81 months

I haven’t owned a TVR but I have owned that colour. Looks black most of the time with the green only really showing in sunlight. On a car with the flowing form of this one it’s a great choice.

jwwbowe

635 posts

180 months

cloud9 yes please

Slowlygettingit

721 posts

49 months

Lovely wheels

x5tuu

12,150 posts

195 months

I remember looking at buying a new Tuscan that HHC had in stock - delivery miles etc.

Got up to the garage, did all the chat and insurance stuff and was given the keys.

It was lovely to sit it, went to shut the door and the door panel fell off. Much embarrassment of the salesman but we laughed it off and then it wouldn’t start - the battery wasn’t dead (apparently).

I never did get to drive it, I sadly decided that was enough demonstration of the quality for me.

Edited by x5tuu on Sunday 1st December 10:19

Skeptisk

8,268 posts

117 months

When they were new I had a test drive of one. I owned a 996.1 GT3 at the time. It didn’t feel that good in comparison.

Nomme de Plum

6,211 posts

24 months

x5tuu said:
I remember looking at buying a new Tuscan that HHC had in stock - delivery miles etc.

Got up to the garage, did all the chat and insurance stuff and was given the keys.

It was lovely to sit it, went to st the door and the door panel fell off. Much embarrassment of the salesman but we laughed it off and then it wouldn’t start - the battery wasn’t dead (apparently).

I never did get to drive it, I sadly decided that was enough demonstration of the quality for me.
The last TVR I owned was the most badly engineered and constructed car I ever owned. So bad I received a full refund. It just happened to be wrapped in an attractive body.

slopes

40,165 posts

195 months

TheRainMaker said:
Twenty-two years old and still looks stunning.
Only on pistonheads and discussing a TVR, could a bunch of guys get away with that statement hehe

PhilkSVR

1,512 posts

56 months

Beautiful, I have had a couple of TVR’s and they always stay on my wish list. The initial owners suffered in the early days and subsequent owners sorted most of the problems out because they loved them so much.

Taz73

227 posts

20 months

Absolutely gorgeous, only wish I could afford something like this, I have always had a soft spot for TVR's, and many other cars as well, to be fair, unfortunately funds have never permitted. But it's a genuine occasion when I see one out on the road.

Corkys

269 posts

209 months

Loved mine. Would have another. The noise was amazing, De-cat and sleeved exhaust cans.

As stunning as that is I would want it to have a Powers 4.3 rebuild and an S model. Mk1 is the nicer design, outside and in.

EV8

137 posts

11 months

This could come out today and would be stunnig. Such a great design. Love it.

Nomme de Plum

6,211 posts

24 months

PhilkSVR said:
Beautiful, I have had a couple of TVR’s and they always stay on my wish list. The initial owners suffered in the early days and subsequent owners sorted most of the problems out because they loved them so much.
My dealer said that it would take them a period of 18 months, on and off, to turn the car into something relatively reliable. I was not willing to wait that long. Shame really as it went like a rocket but the handling was not for the feint hearted.

Kipsrs

513 posts

57 months

To my old eyes, from every single angle it looks fantastic, in and out. . . Marvellous cloud9

GreatScott2016

1,503 posts

96 months

Slowlygettingit said:
Lovely wheels
Agreed, I’ve always thought these were a lovely design smile

PhilkSVR

1,512 posts

56 months

Nomme de Plum said:
My dealer said that it would take them a period of 18 months, on and off, to turn the car into something relatively reliable. I was not willing to wait that long. Shame really as it went like a rocket but the handling was not for the feint hearted.
That’s fair enough. They got away with murder, but lots of punters loved them and went through that pain to sort them out, which future owners will always be grateful for. They were/ are an emotional attachment and rational thought doesn’t always come into it smile

Glenn63

3,138 posts

92 months

Gorgeous thing, TVR’s just seem to become more and more appealing.

Puddenchucker

4,467 posts

226 months

I've never like the styling of the rear end of these and those tail lights up in the rear window are just plian odd.