RE: PH Heroes: Rover 3500 Vitesse

RE: PH Heroes: Rover 3500 Vitesse

Wednesday 19th December 2012

PH Heroes: Rover 3500 Vitesse

An iconic British bruiser with motorsport success in its veins - a true PH hero in other words!



For people of a certain age, the Rover SD1 evokes bittersweet memories. The handsome BL wedge comes with baggage - sepia-tinted images of striking car workers huddling around burning braziers, damp evenings on the hard shoulder and 'Jam Sandwich' police cars on television. But for those into touring cars during the 1980s, the unforgettable sight and sound of the SD1 mixing it with the front running BMWs and Jaguars will be an eternal snapshot from a golden era in the sport.

Burly touring cars were a feature of 80s racing
Burly touring cars were a feature of 80s racing
Race bred, race cred
The SD1 hit the circuit in 1980, after BL Motorsport John Davenport realised how much potential Rover's executive hatchback had as a track weapon. A pair of touring cars were built for Jeff Allam and Motor magazine's Rex Greenslade, and after some tweaking, they pushed out 250hp. They performed well, and convinced BL's embattled management they should formulate a proper race programme. Tom Walkinshaw Racing was drafted in and it proved a winning relationship that lasted until 1986.

Keen to capitalise on the SD1's motorsport success, and in order to ensure racing components were homologated, Rover set about developing a VHPD (Very High Performance Derivative) road car. It was originally designed with a multi-carburettor set-up (and was to be called the Rapide until Aston Martin said no), and was unveiled at the Dorchester at the end of 1982. It was a suitably plush location to reintroduce the Vitesse name.

Fuel-injected V8 delivers easy performance
Fuel-injected V8 delivers easy performance
Upgrades over the standard Rover 3500 included Lucas fuel injection, a 35hp boost, lowered suspension, 15-inch cross-spoke alloys, and a huge rubber tailgate spoiler (which really did add downforce). These changes completely transformed the look of the SD1, beefing it up, and turning it into a budget-priced muscle car. In short, the Vitesse was the perfect halo car.

Right on time
It was perfectly timed, too. The 290hp SD1 completely dominated touring cars in 1983. Well, it would have done except that BMW lodged a formal complaint, claiming the Vitesse had oversized rear wheelarches and non-standard engines. The result went against Rover, and it was stripped of its title after a lengthy court battle. TWR Rover fought on, taking the 1984 BSCC title, before being trounced by the turbocharged Volvos the following year and then losing out again in 1986 in a messy season marred by protests and counter-protests.

Racing links celebrated in contemporary press pics
Racing links celebrated in contemporary press pics
But glory came for an even more-powerful Vitesse in 1987. Kurt Thiim won the DTM championship and Tim Harvey took overall BSCC honours. For a road car that had been in production for over a decade, this was an amazing performance.

Rover introduced a twin plenum inlet manifold on the road-going Vitesse in 1985 to keep the racecars at the head of the field. Lotus helped develop the Vitesse Twin Plenum - but in order to avoid re-homologation, the official power figure of 190hp remained unchanged. In reality, it jumped to 210-220hp.

Great on track, brilliant on the road
When Motor magazine tested the Vitesse against a BMW 528i in April 1983, it pronounced the British car an easy winner, describing it as the 'poor man's Aston'. And almost 30 years on, you can see why. Brutish good looks aside, there is something very special about the Vitesse - even when climbing on over that wide sill and dropping into the supportive driver's seat, there's a sense of occasion. The widescreen view over the curvaceous bonnet is unbeatable, while the ultra-wide, box-like instrument panel, stacked with dials and buttons the size of biscuits, is wonderful.

Distinctive cabin brims with 80s character
Distinctive cabin brims with 80s character
The V8 takes stoking to fire, but once it does, it settles to a rumbling tickover. The idle is so laboured you'd swear you can feel each pulse and rotation of that ex-Buick V8. But tickle the throttle, and it revs keenly, ready for action.

It feels agricultural when you pull away, which doesn't bode well. The controls are heavy, the gearchange deliberate, and the lever's a fair old stretch. And the quartic steering wheel is huge, although most have now been binned by now. But once you start pushing the Vitesse, and acclimatise to the over-long throttle, you're rewarded with elastic acceleration, overlaid by a bass-heavy Can-Am soundtrack. The gearing is so long, it never really feels like you're moving - but you are, and you'll inevitably be doing 20mph more than you thought.

With a simple suspension set-up, it should be all over the place in corners. It has MacPherson struts up front and a live rear axle, but thanks to excellent location of the back end by a sturdy pair of Watt's Linkages, it doesn't hop, skip or jump when the road deteriorates. The steering (geared at 2.5 turns from lock-to-lock) is pin sharp, allowing the Vitesse to turn in quickly and with just a hint of understeer. Boot it mid-bend, though, and it will drift like a proper hooligan. But it's so easy and relaxed you'll never be intimidated - just how a track-proven racer should be.

Wing and cross-spokes an iconic combo
Wing and cross-spokes an iconic combo
A hero in your garage
Once you get past the corrosion-prone bodywork and flaky build quality, the Vitesse is a proper PH Hero to have on your fleet. The parts supply is brilliant, with just about everything available off the shelf for reasonable money. And should you want to tune it - and most do - there's a cottage industry built around its V8 that's waiting for your credit card details. Buying one's still child's play, as there are plenty around, with ones you'd actually want to own starting from as little as £1,500.

A few years ago, I bought a Twin Plenum off the guys at Autocar for not very much money. They'd bought it for a laugh, and had their fun. Understandably, they looked sad when I handed over the dosh and rumbled off into the rush hour, grinning from ear to ear. Several years later, I ran into road tester Chris Chilton, who had formed a proper attachment to the car while it was in his hands, and was still curious about my purchase.

"How's the Vitesse?" he asked.

"Full of filler, and a bit knackered," I replied.

"Wish I'd known that ... I took that up to 140 on the Millbrook banking and loved it."


ROVER 3500 VITESSE
Engine:
3,528cc V8
Transmission: 5-speed, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 190@5,280rpm
Torque (lb ft): 220@4,000rpm
0-60mph: 7.1 sec
Top speed: 135mph
Weight: 1,440kg
On sale: 1983-1987
Price new (1983): £14,950
Price now: c. £1,500-£6,000

Photography by Keith Adams/Rover Press

Author
Discussion

RacingBlue

Original Poster:

1,395 posts

164 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
I seem to remember this car being AROnline car of the year a few years back (long time reader and lurker!).

I just love the 'set top box' on these stretching halfway across the dashboard smile

RichTBiscuit

430 posts

151 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Vitesse in Pictures needs Re-Gingercating.

That is all.

FWDRacer

3,564 posts

224 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
ETCC. Donington Park 500kms. 1985. Great memories.

ant leigh

714 posts

143 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
First car I ever drove was my old mans V8 SD1
Great memories and for its time a great car IMO
Its true rust was an issue and that was the main reason it had to go but I loved it for the 4 years we owned it. Other than the rust and one electronics issue it was pretty reliable as well.

It was also the first car I got the back end sliding in after I passed my test biggrin

Garlick

40,601 posts

240 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
RichTBiscuit said:
Vitesse in Pictures needs Re-Gingercating.

That is all.
Agree 100%, not a great look with clears

AmitG

3,290 posts

160 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Want want want.

I LOVE that dashboard.

Mark-C

5,054 posts

205 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
AmitG said:
Want want want.

I LOVE that dashboard.
This - best dashboard ever thumbup

K 5ive

123 posts

217 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Garlick said:
RichTBiscuit said:
Vitesse in Pictures needs Re-Gingercating.

That is all.
Agree 100%, not a great look with clears
Well back in 2005 when I changed it to some brand new clear lenses that I had tracked from the series 1 car, I thought it looked good, and so did the mags! tongue out All that was done was removing the orange filter from inside. I miss this car so much.

Baryonyx

17,995 posts

159 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
AmitG said:
Want want want.

I LOVE that dashboard.
The interior does look amazing.

Funny how I find this so much more interesting and exciting than any supercar...!

The old Police show (I think it was Police Camera Action) where the police did the 30 minute run across London to deliver a liver in SD1's is awesome viewing. Proper driving heroics. And the rumble of the V8's as the cops come through the tunnel onto the Embankment; glorious.

Garlick

40,601 posts

240 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
K 5ive said:
Well back in 2005 when I changed it to some brand new clear lenses that I had tracked from the series 1 car, I thought it looked good, and so did the mags! tongue out All that was done was removing the orange filter from inside. I miss this car so much.
Just personal taste, not knocking yours at all. smile

swanny71

2,853 posts

209 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Absolutley loved these as a kid - still do.

Wolands Advocate

2,493 posts

216 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
swanny71 said:
Absolutley loved these as a kid - still do.
Me too! Absolutely one of my favourites - still like them today. But, for all that, nowadays I can't really see myself driving one. Too huge and a bit wideboy unless you de-spoiler it. But I'd have room for one in my lottery win garage.

Meths

1,897 posts

136 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
I borrowed one, once upon a time. The noise is fantastic, great to drive something that doesn't come from the noise/emissions/safety/catalytic converter age.


There seems to be a soft spot on here for rovers. rolleyes

Edited by Meths on Wednesday 19th December 11:56

OllieC

3,816 posts

214 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
What's not to like !



Dennis Leech's car from 1988, the last time these ran in the BTCC

I would love a mint twin plenum vitesse

Xtriple129

1,150 posts

157 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Had a new SD1 back in about 82. Loved that car but the build quality was dire. Opened the door one day and the doorcard stayed where it was!

OllieC

3,816 posts

214 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Wolands Advocate said:
swanny71 said:
Absolutley loved these as a kid - still do.
Me too! Absolutely one of my favourites - still like them today. But, for all that, nowadays I can't really see myself driving one. Too huge and a bit wideboy unless you de-spoiler it. But I'd have room for one in my lottery win garage.
it would look small next to a mondeo

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
This, the Range Rover classic and 911 were my favourite cars as a kid smile

Red than Dead

17 posts

193 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
Here's some of my favourite SD1 footage...1984 Manx Rally..Pond's car looks like it's just come out of the showroom and taken a wrong turn into a rally stage http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pCbU6IljXA He makes winding roads look so easy in such a big car...legend!!

SuperHangOn

3,486 posts

153 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
OllieC said:
it would look small next to a mondeo
.. nigh on exactly the same size as a MK3 mondeo hatch.


Wolands Advocate

2,493 posts

216 months

Wednesday 19th December 2012
quotequote all
OllieC said:
it would look small next to a mondeo
Not sure it would. I was next to one in traffic not long ago, when I still had the M5 and even compared to the M5 (itself no puny weakling) it looked absolutely huge - long, low and wide.