HOME  FEATURES  JAGUAR XJ220 - THE INSIDE STORY
Log in/Register  

Features

Personalised plates: Tell Me I'm Wrong

Lamborghini at 50: the Grande Giro

Fast vs fun - grip or slip

McLaren P1 - inside story

Ferrari 360: PH Buying Guide

Porsche 911 Turbo timeline

Porsche 911 Turbo: market watch

VW Golf R vs Audi S3: Blood Brothers

Range Rover Sport: behind the scenes

Speed aware - one man's story

Alfa Romeo SZ: Tell Me I'm Wrong

Jaguar D-Type: not the usual ride-along

Mazda RX-8: PH buying guide

Porsche Cayman S on the Targa Florio

Jean-Pascal Dauce: PH Meets

Lambo in a spot of bother? Tell Me I'm Wrong

Jaguar revisits Jabbeke

(Not) Driven: BMW i8

PH Buying Guide: Jaguar XK8/XKR (X100)

PH Meets: Tadao Baba

Bentley Boys hit Vegas

Driven: Mini John Cooper Works GP

Driven: Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG 4Matic

Blood Brothers: Mercedes E55 AMG vs Chrysler 300C

Tell Me I'm Wrong: Mercedes SLR McLaren

Driven: Audi R8 V10 S Tronic

Driven: Toyota Picnic GT4 (yes, really)

Driven: Mini Coupe John Cooper Works

Driven: Ariel Atom 3.5 supercharged

PH Buying Guide: Range Rover (L322)

Tell Me I'm Wrong: Aston Martin V8 Zagato

Happy 100th Birthday, Aston Martin

The joy of Shed

PH meets: Mike Cross

Driven: Porsche Boxster S

Blood Brothers: Twingo 133 vs Clio 182

Best of British: One Coin, Two Sides

PH buying guide: Porsche 911 Turbo (996)

Tell Me I'm Wrong: BMW Z8

No place like home

Driving the Bond Esprit

PH buying guide: Toyota MR2

Driven: Ford Focus Zetec S Mountune MP200

Tell Me I'm Wrong: Porsche 911 Turbo

GT86: the next step

Driven: Z Cars Cappuccino

Blood Bros: TT TDI vs Scirocco TDI

Meeting 'Mr GT86'

PH buying guide: Ferrari 550 Maranello

Tell Me I'm Wrong: VW Golf R32 (Mk4)

Racing with Caterham: part two

Driven: Lotus Evora 414E

Aston Martin 'not lazy' - official

PH buying guide: Mitsubishi Evo VI

PH2 ridden: Kawasaki W800

What is Infiniti doing in F1?

Tushek Renovatio T500

PH2: Kawasaki Ninja 300

Tell Me I'm Wrong: BMW Z4 M Coupe

PH2 ridden: BMW S1000RR HP4

Driven: Jaguar XJ 3.0 S/C

PH meets Mr Gran Turismo

Bentley Mulsanne on track

Farewell Range Rover

Driven: Mazda MX-5 GT4

PH Buying Guide: Vauxhall VX220

Porsche and the death of steering feel

Jags, Playmates and Pebble Beach

PH2: The Spyder Club

PH meets Mr Autofarm

Subaru BRZ vs Toyota GT86

PH2 ridden: BMW C evolution

Blood Brothers: Corsa VXR vs MiTo

Jaguar XJ220 - the inside story

Toyota GT 86 meets Toyota Sports 800

PH buying guide: Maserati 3200 GT

PH2 ridden: 2012 Kawasaki ZZR1400

Tell Me I'm Wrong: Porsche 911 996 GT3

From Russia with ... legroom

PH does the Alps

PH buying guide: BMW M3 (E46)

Blood Brothers: Vauxhall VX220 vs Lotus Europa S

Five Lambos in one day

An idiot's guide to driving the 'ring

PH meets John McGuinness

Isle of Man TT with Mark Higgins

Lamborghini Reventon brings the noise

Driving the Queen's V8 Land Rover

PH buying guide: Clio 172/182

The £17K Ferrari? I bought it...

Tell me I'm wrong: Peugeot 205 GTI

VW Golf A59: The stillborn European Evo

Blood Brothers: Mini Coupe JCW vs Peugeot RCZ

PH buying guide: Lamborghini Gallardo

Tell me I'm wrong: Aston Martin V12 Vantage

New Hethel, new Lotus

PH2 Ridden: BMW R1200GS Adventure

Driven: Artega GT at the 'ring

Driven: Radical SR3 SL

McLaren: the inside story

PH2 ridden: Ducati Panigale

PH2: Suzuki Hayabusa vs Radical SR3 RS

Blood Brothers: Mazda 3 MPS vs Ford Focus ST

The PH guide to the EU's new tyre labels

PH buying guide: Mercedes SL55 AMG

Tell me I'm wrong: Nissan Skyline GT-R R34

Geneva 2012: the PH round-up

PH buying guide: Honda NSX

PH2: Behind the smoke screen

Tell me I'm wrong: BMW M5

PH2 ridden: 2012 Kawasaki ER-6n

Driven: Porsche 911 Cabriolet (991)

Driven: Bentley Continental Supersports ISR

Land Rover Bigfoot says snow, what snow?

Blood Brothers: Golf GTI vs Leon FR

Driven: Mercedes C250 CDI Coupe

Hidden Nurburgring by Evoque

Subaru TA340C: the hot Scooby lives!

PH Buying Guide: Ford Focus RS

Chris Harris video: Sport Quattro vs. RS200

Driven: bike-engined Fiat 126 Bis

Driven: Porsche Panamera GTS

PH2 ridden: 2012 Triumph Speed Triple R

Ski joring with Bentley

PH2 feature: Inside Triumph

Tell me I'm wrong: Honda Civic Type R (EP3)

Hammersmith Flyover: more than temporary trouble?

PH2 ridden: Suzuki GSX-R750

2012 Nissan GT-R at the 'ring

Driven: Mercedes Unimog

PH drives and rides of 2011

PH buying guide: BMW Z3 M Coupe

PH2 ridden: 2012 Suzuki V-Strom 650

PH2 ridden: Yamaha TMAX

PH goes big in Japan: part two

PH goes big in Japan: part one

Feature: Tokyo Motor Show 2011

Driven: Vauxhall Corsa VXR Nurburgring

Feature: Winter tyres - worth the bother?

Driven: Range Rover Evoque SD4 2.2 Dynamic Coupe

How Do You Solve a Problem Like Sebastien?

Driven: Artega GT

Rally GB: Retro Style

Jaguar and the future of fast cars

Driven: Ferrari 250 GTO Replica

Day In The Life: The Tyre Tester

PH Meets The 911's 'Director Of Emotions'

PH Buying Guide: Aston Martin DB7

PistonHeads gives you the chance to win a supercar

Power Brokers: Tuning At Frankfurt

Frankfurt: The Greatest Motor Show On Earth?

PH Does Pebble

PH Explores The Louwman Museum

PH Buying Guide: Noble M12

The £10K Porsche 911(996). Why wouldn't you?

Notes On The Nissan R35 GT-R

RS Royalty: The Bonkers Collection

Building A Better Lamborghini

PH2: Moto GP - Going Dutch

200mph(ish) For Under 40K? It's Not Rocket Science

PH Buying Guide: Lotus Elise S1

Jaguar's Triple Sports Car Treat

PH Interviews: The Man From Singer Porsche

The Lotus Five Year Plan - One Year In

Aston Martin: A Challenging Road Ahead?

PH Builds A 505hp Corvette V8...

Scirocco R vs. Scirocco Storm

Estate Of Play: Fast Wagons

Driven: Lotus Carlton

Caterham Sale: The Full Story

Me And My Car: John Watson

Auction Report: BCA 'Super Saturday'

PH Buying Guide: TVR Griffith

An 'M' For All Reasons?

968: The Perfect F/R Porsche?

PH Fleet Update: Merc C63 AMG And Leon Cupra R

Driven: Vauxhall VXR8

PH Interview: Lotus CEO Dany Bahar

McLaren Celebrates 30 Years Of Carbon Fibre

Geneva Show - From The Hot SEAT

Pagani Huayra Ready For Lift-Off

Open Season: Ferrari California

Range Rover Sport To The 'Ring

PH Investigates: Trouble At The 'Ring

PH Fleet: BMW M6 - The Final Chapter

The Auto Show We'd Pay To See

PH Detroit Show Report

Wafting In A Winter Wonderland

PH Buying Guide: Lamborghini Diablo

Showtime For Bikers At The NEC

GT5: Worth The Wait, Or Wot?

Essen Show - The PH Highlights

LA Show Preview: Range Rover Evoque 5-Door

PH Fleet Update: M6 On The Isle Of Man

The Best Garage On PistonHeads

Jaguar XJ LWB At The Nurburgring

Red Victor - A History Of A Very Fast Vauxhall

PH Comparo: BMW M6 vs Nissan GT-R

In Detail: Audi Quattro Concept

PH Buying Guide: Porsche 993

PH Paris Motor Show Round-Up

Driven: Mini Countryman

Driven: Porsche GT3

PH Fleet Update: Nissan 370Z

PH Buying Guide: Ferrari F355

Factory Tour: Behind The Scenes At McLaren

Beechdean Mansell: Le Mans Gallery

Driven: Polaris RZR S

PH Meets Lamborghini Boss

Jaguar XFR Vs. Aston Martin Rapide

PH Fleet: BMW M6 (Competition pack)

SLS AMG And The Carrera Panamerica

To Geneva By Rolls-Royce

PH Fleet update: BMW M3

Taking The Trackday Trophy Challenge

Aston Martin Rapide Revisited

Renaultsport Megane 250 Reader Test

Geneva: 2uettottanta By Pininfarina

Geneva Special: Ferrari's Hybrid Future

Q&A: Stephane Ratel, 2010 FIA GT1 Boss

PH Fleet Update: Jaguar XFR

Defender Of The Faith

Out On Track In A Caterham Seven Academy Car

Interview: Lee Noble / Fenix Automotive

Awakening The Ghosts Of Reims

Video: PH Meets Godzilla At The 'Ring

Racing A Caterham R300

Crazy Concept Corner: Part 1

Part II: GT-R/ Kazutoshi Mizuno Interview

Nissan GT-R: Kazutoshi Mizuno Interview

Driven: MINI E

Three Men In A Car: To Frankfurt By Panamera

Jaguar XFR At The Nurburgring

PH Interview: Westfield Sportscars Boss

PH Fleet: Porsche 944 S2

Lotus Exige Nurburgring Experience

Advertorial - Insignia VXR Gets A BTCC Workout

PH Fleet: Mazda MX-5 Arrives (With Grandad)

Clio Renaultsport 200 (Cup Chassis)

PH Fleet: Evo And Out...

PH Zeroes: Volkswagen Beetle

Le Mans Odyssey Part 3: Audi R8

Driven: Lexus LF-A 5.0 V10 Coupe

PH Fleet: Evo X Takes On A Tank Track

Rolls-Royce Phantom Menace

Le Mans Odyssey Part 2: Morgan 4/4 Sport

Le Mans Odyssey Part 1: Aston Martin DB9

PH interview: Jaguar's Handling Guru

Interview: Caterham Cars MD

PH Le Mans Heroes

Exclusive: Le Mans - The Racer's View

Gone in 60 Seconds

Morgan SuperSports - Inside Story

Volkswagen Golf GTI

Nissan GT-R Ready For Le Mans

Porsche Panamera at the track

MINI John Cooper Works Reader Test

What Credit Crunch?

PH Zeroes: Mitsubishi 3000GT

PH Zeroes: Ford Mustang II

Al Melling Interview

PH Goes for a Spin in a Porsche

PH Zeroes: Rambo Lambo

PetrolTed Interview

Joy Ride

PH Zeroes: Alfa Arna

Ferrari 430 Scuderia

Porsche 911 Turbo

Twingo Renaultsport 133

Caterham R400 Superlight

Wiesmann GT MF4

Touring Car Battle: E30 Vs E90

Noble Interview

Supercar In The City

Rendezvous II

Corvette Z06 Road Trip

Storm Chaser

Robb Gravett Driving Course

Million Pound Morning

Project Retirement Rocket PART 2.

GTechniq Magic Goo

PH drives the Caparo T1

Project Retirement Rocket PART 1

First Drive: Gumpert Apollo

Hot hatch debate

BP 102 Fuel

Transformers, motorhomes in disguise

I wouldn't be seen dead in that...

Lamborghini's Stephan Winkelmann speaks out

Auto Union: Audi's ancestor

Sub-£10k super-saloons

Michiel van den Brink

Ariel's boss Simon Saunders

Porsche 959 v 997 Turbo

Staples-to-Naples rally 2006

Lotus' new boss: Mike Kimberley

Honda ADAS

Watkins Glen International

Bio-fuelled Lotus Exige 265E

Talking to Bentley

Ton-up for Lancia

Birth of the Noble M15

Lifting the lid

Buying a DB7

Classic Adelaide Rally 2005

Modifying a Lotus Esprit S4

Jaguar XJ-S

Staples2Naples 2005

totalkitcar LIVE!

Prescott Speed Hillclimb

Aston’s new age

Crash Course

Nick Mason

Sport-Auto German Tuner Grand Prix

Fastrak - a track day plus

Marcos TSO GT2 Coupé

Ian Callum

Bentley Continental Flying Spur

Lamborghini Miura at 40

Track Club opens for business

Audi quattro

TVR Drive Day at Loch Lomond

End of the E-Type

Power Torque Engineering

Which is faster, Porsche or Ferrari?

Diesel engines torque it up

BBR Astons

Cannonball Run Europe 2004

Vantage Points

S Sport VX

Alfa Giulietta -- what’s in a name?

Classic Car Club

Lotus execs speak out

Ultima Sports

Simbin GTR

Coventry Transport Museum

Circuit des Remparts

Ride Drive

Henrik Fisker

Segway

2003 Supercar Rally

SmartNav Reviewed

QV8 Coupe

Ferrari Festival

007's New Motors

Le Mans 2002

Tour Auto 2002

BJT Open Day









More...

Older features



The Jaguar XJ220 will forever be the car that wasn't. Whereas really, it should be celebrated for being the car that was, against all odds.

Professor Jim Randle, former Jaguar director of engineering, takes up the story, which starts in the early 1980s. “Sir John Egan had been tasked with demonstrating Jaguar was still in business and could independently survive.” A work level “bordering on the unbelievable” ensued for every director, selling the Jaguar brand and “inventing a believable product plan – which we didn’t have… but so good was our deception, BL believed it!” After six frenetic months Jaguar was privatised in August 1984. “We were then told to make it work.”

Sexy, swoopy and sensuous - the XJ220 concept
Sexy, swoopy and sensuous - the XJ220 concept
In Randle’s words, this meant “selling the sizzle became more important than selling the sausage”. Jaguar needed to get its pride back. More was needed than just new models like the XJ40. In stepped Tom Walkinshaw, who convinced the board he could win in ETCC. With the XJ-S, in 1983, he did. The workforce loved it. Later, he would do the same with Le Mans. But Randle had another idea: produce a road-going supercar designed to race in the fledgling Group B championship being mooted by the FIA. “I spent Christmas 1987 thinking about what we could do, and ended up with a CAD model, which I still have.” CAD for Randle is, it should be noted, cardboard-aided design…

“Intentionally complex”
This was given to the styling department. “Put a frock on it, make it echo the XJ13.” Randle also deployed an unwritten understanding with suppliers such as FFD, QCR, Triplex. If they did work, and it worked, they’d get the work. He wrote an internal memo, requesting volunteers to work, in their own time, on a supercar project. 12 people signed up, forming ‘the Saturday club’ and giving Randle “the opportunity to do the job without any money.”

Concept's drama carried over into final car
Concept's drama carried over into final car
And so, the gestation of a 220mph car started. “XJ220 was fitting. It was 40 years after the XK120 did 120mph. That was a Bill Heynes car, (development legend) Norman Dewis told us ‘honour Bill’.” 

“It was intentionally complex: four-wheel drive, rear-wheel steer, variable aerodynamics so it could ‘drive-to-race’, though being a downforce car it would have to lower by a few inches from road guise. The aero was to produce 1,360kg (yes, you read right) of downforce at 220mph – although, what tyres could manage such forces? They remained a problem throughout the entire programme.

“The V12 engine was originally designed by Walter Hassan in the 1960s. It was developed with Cosworth and raced in 1986, and a road car study discovered it was powerful, but uneconomical. It wasn’t carried on, but we were able to steal one of the five development engines for our concept.” Cue one 700hp 6.2-litre V12 engine, complete with driveshaft running through the open vee.

Infamous switch to V6 power was controversial
Infamous switch to V6 power was controversial
About that V12…
Just one of many clever innovations. “We designed the rear-steer system not for cornering but to put yaw damping in the system. Suspension was relatively conventional but, as it was height-adjustable, we accounted for caster change constraints.” The bodywork was 4000-series aluminium, with an FIA roll cage buried within the structure. “It had astounding crash performance.”

Keith Helfet did the styling, “knowing I was going to lose, how can to better the old cars?” But he went ahead, using the XJ13 as inspiration. Within the constraints of a design “that couldn’t be fully oval as we had the constraints of the Group B aero stuff”, he aimed to replicate Malcolm Sayer’s design language of form being all, getting acceleration into the design, “making it look fast standing still.”

Making it work was a real test of mettle
Making it work was a real test of mettle
It was an aero-led shape. “I didn’t want flame surfacing and feature lines, but shapes that made sense.” Jaguar couldn’t afford a full-scale model, so everything was done in quarter-scale. It was tested and honed in MIRA’s new wind tunnel, and this optimised model became the final car. “It was scary – the thing looked the size of a house. You can’t scale the sense of scale! I actually felt guilty, too: we’d made the aluminium body panel beaters’ job so hard. Luckily, they disagreed and said it was the highlight of their careers – they’d never been stretched so much.”

More late nights
And so, 10 months after the project started, the 12-strong team wheeled the car direct from its press material photoshoot into the 1988 NEC Motor Show at 3am on opening day. “One of the team found six bottles of Champagne. At 6am, we all went home worse for wear.” The crowds flocked in, your 10-year-old writer was squashed by them, Ferrari became increasingly desperate to draw attention to the F40 parked next door (“They moved the car, then got an attractive lady, who then started taking her clothes off – still nobody turned around.”), an extra 90,000 people visited the Birmingham show just to see it – the XJ220 sizzled alright.

Under appreciated, is the XJ220 due a revival?
Under appreciated, is the XJ220 due a revival?
So that was the concept. It was a bold Jaguar board that agreed to green-light it, targeting a 1992 launch just three years hence. And, with no racing intent in mind, it was a focused project engineering team that led to the road car makeup which disappointed so many.

Engine? The Metro 6R4 V6, a shortened Rover V8 whose design had since been sold to TWR. It had racing pedigree (in the Group C cars), it was powerful, it didn’t weigh loads. But for the V12 promise, it was ideal. The Porsche 959 could get away with a six-pot turbo, so why not Jaguar? As for four-wheel drive, it was heavy, compromise-laden, unnecessary: it went. Rear-wheel steer, height adjustable suspension and active aero followed suit. All were sound engineering decisions that created a lighter, faster, more able car than would otherwise have been the case.

Cut and shut
Helfet knew the car had to shrink. The V6 allowed it to. “This was before the days of Photoshop: we ‘cut and shut’ photographic prints to get the proportions of a smaller car. I’d have liked it shorter, but Tom [Walkinshaw] wouldn’t have it.” Bigger openings for the turbo intercoolers were created, but the XJ13-inspired glass engine cover was retained, as was pretty much everything else from the show car. Which in itself is remarkable. Few realise they are so very different. Few realise the show car was never designed to make production. Underappreciated is the fact it did at all.

The Jaguar supercar could be due a revival
The Jaguar supercar could be due a revival
Production ceased in 1994, 281 cars into the planned 350 total, with a fizzle. Yes, history is unkind to the XJ220. It was, at 213mph, the fastest car in the world, despite being developed on a shoestring at breakneck speed. The recession, the no-V12 fallout, the court cases from aggrieved owners, all shadow what is a pretty stunning accomplishment: an automotive minnow turning a race-inspired piece of conceptual engineering brilliance into a roadgoing reality that beat every other supercar on the planet. 20 years on, it’s time we celebrated it.

Terms of Use
Privacy Statement

Copyright © 1998-2013 PistonHeads.com ® Speed Matters ®

Hosted by Carrenza