The TVR Fan Club

  • Thread starter TVRKing
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TVRKing
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1992 TVR GRIFFITH 4.0 V8 Sports 2dr Convertible,
44,000 miles, Burgundy Red with Cream leather. Taxed & Tested. Full Service History. Very Fast 0-60 5.0 Secs.Stainless Sports Exhaust. Pre Cat. Sounds Incredible. Car Featured in Sports Car Mag. Immaculate Condition throughout. £12,790
Oh I just love the Griffith's, there such classics. Ok guys I am at Thruxton this Saturday to watch some club meeting racing, so if I see any TVR's i be sure to get photos.
 
TVR&Ferrari_Fan
Oh I just love the Griffith's, there such classics. Ok guys I am at Thruxton this Saturday to watch some club meeting racing, so if I see any TVR's i be sure to get photos.

:)👍
 
Can you hotlink the pic or imageshack it, I'm forbidden from viewing that page, apparently.
 
live4speed
Can you hotlink the pic or imageshack it, I'm forbidden from viewing that page, apparently.
I uploaded it to deviantArt, but it is uploaded to imageshack now guys.
 
They're nice looking car's, there's a guy with a metallic silver one who lives near me.
 
Live there is more of my motorsport and car event photos in my motorsport & car event photos topic. And if you look around that topic, you see Goodwood FOS 05 photos.

Anyway I am stoked about going to FOS 06 this year.
 
I just wanted to say, that rumoured TVR supercar that's been whispered about has been official since the 8th this month with TVR saying that they are working on a supercar on thier website.
 
Coolies! Another TVR. Saw an Aston Martin DB9 2day in Aston Martin green. Looked nice though.

Wud like to see a TVR in real life here in Germany.
 
live4speed
I just wanted to say, that rumoured TVR supercar that's been whispered about has been official since the 8th this month with TVR saying that they are working on a supercar on thier website.

Sweet! 👍
 
i still havent seen any TVRs in real life, except i think i saw a v8s when i was like 4. i don't really know...what's the deal with TVR and USA?
 
I'm not sure if TVR's pass the emissions regulations for the USA.
I know there's something they don't pass, not entirely sure it's emissions, but AFAIK they're not sold there because of that.
 
ultrabeat
I'm not sure if TVR's pass the emissions regulations for the USA.
I know there's something they don't pass, not entirely sure it's emissions, but AFAIK they're not sold there because of that.

Ahhhh, that would explain it. Thanks.
 
Yeah, it's a shame, they're great cars.
It would be mean of me to tease you...






























notforyounottoday.JPG
 
Because you charge foreign companies too much to compete on your home soil :D.
 
live4speed
Because you charge foreign companies too much to compete on your home soil :D.
Yeah.. and the worst part of it.. Most are cars are just peices of crap. :ouch:
And all the nice fast beutiful cars.. We don't get, cause GM doesn't want to be further in debt :grumpy:
 
2.01 meters isn't too tall for a Sagaris, your a similar height to Jeremy Clarkson, he fits in one perfectly fine, I can tell you first hand that theres more room for your legs in a Sagaris than in the front of an M3.
 
Latest news.

16 June 2006

TVR announces it's to remain rooted in Britain


Independent British sports car manufacturer, TVR has finalised the first stage of its relocation plans, and would like to confirm that it will be remaining in Britain and predominantly within Lancashire, the region in which the company was founded in 1947.

For the foreseeable future, TVR will operate from a new international headquarters in Lancaster, where the management, sales and marketing teams, as well as research and development, will all be based. There will also be a TVR museum and an archive library at the headquarters, to which press, visitors, customers and enthusiasts will be warmly welcomed.

Following extensive discussions with the local council, final production of TVR cars will also remain within Lancashire, at a confirmed plant in the Squires Gate area of Blackpool. It is planned that some sub-assembly manufacturing will eventually be conducted away from the new plant, but that remains the subject of further discussion and is linked to new materials technology that will be a feature of future TVR models.

The new facilities, to which TVR will be moving within the coming months, will help TVR achieve Euro IV type approval and to realise an increased international presence, as well as to further its programme of continuous quality improvements. The relocation will be carefully managed to minimise disruption, and customers' orders will be unaffected.

"This is the first stage of transition for the company," said David Oxley, managing director of TVR. "The Squire’s Gate facility will enable us to increase our volumes in-line with Euro IV approval and with the opening up of new international markets for TVR. The Lancaster headquarters will also increase efficiency in our administration, research and development, aftersales and sales and marketing departments."

These strategic moves by TVR continue to strengthen its position as one of the very few remaining truly British sports car manufacturers, a claim of which it is extremely proud. The company remains committed to producing exhilarating premium performance cars, something it has done for almost 60 years and a tradition that it's looking forward to continuing well into the future.

Nikolai Smolenski, TVR's chairman added: "Our eventual plan is a brand new factory for TVR, but our choice of site for that facility is a decision to be made in the future. We have introduced a relocation strategy that allows TVR to grow into the international company that has always been my vision, and to continue to build on the improved quality using a skilled and committed local workforce."
 
The new factory is an former Lancaster bomber factory and is only 5 miles from its past factory. But anyway here is AutoCars take on this news:

TVR’s new factory is to be barely five miles from its old one — in a former Lancaster bomber factory on the perimeter of Blackpool airport on the city’s southern outskirts. The company’s owner, Nikolai Smolenski, has accepted a lease deal brokered by the Blackpool city council on a 4650 square metre (50,000 square feet) site within the Squires Gate industrial estate. He also plans to open a new company HQ and design centre 40 miles away in Lancaster, near the university.

Bosses say the new Blackpool plant as a stop-gap, sufficient to free them of an unsatisfactory lease on the old Bristol Avenue premises, and to re-start production, initially at 10 cars a week, moving to 20 cars as soon as possible. Smolenski’s longer-term plan is to build around 100 cars a week, which would require another move to new premises “within the area”. TVR had considered moving further afield, even to foreign locations, but decided it could ill-afford to lose its skilled Lancashire workforce.

The company will start moving in August, and should be building cars again by the year-end. It will concentrate on Sagaris and Tuscan; the entry-level Tamora will be allowed to die. A new Cerbera could be launched later if a suitable proprietary V8 can be found to power it. Meanwhile, TVR production — including assembly of its own-design six-cylinder engine — will continue largely by hand, but the process will be further modified to incorporate more of the measures that have lifted TVR quality since Smolenski took over.
 
It's all good, it's all good. The move is a positive one it means that all the staff keep thier jobs, though the ones that were laid off not too long ago may have to wait a while before they get offered their jobs back. The new factory is 5 miles nearer my house now, so wheres that job's paper then :lol:.
 
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