Lucas TR8 350i development car
Lucas TR8 350i development car
Author
Discussion

Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

244 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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Hi,

Does anyone know anything about Lucas using their TR8 in conjunction with TVR for the development of the 350i.

Thanks

Nick

rev-erend

21,603 posts

307 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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You could have asked Oliver Winterbottom at the wedge fest but I suspect the answer is that Peter Wheeler did an in house development to fit the BL 3.5 in place on the V6 that was not good for export at the time.

Later V8 engine developments were done first by Andy Rouse of touring car fame then later by NCK of Coventry.

KKson

3,467 posts

148 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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Adrian@ said:
Back on topic...I have seen a development hack that I'm sure is Triumph with TVR Tasmin-ish interior...
Adrian@

Edited by Adrian@ on Tuesday 14th July 18:25
I'm not aware of a Triumph variant but the MG prototype at Gaydon is sat on a 350i chassis complete with dashboard.



Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

244 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
quotequote all
Hi,

Does anyone have Oliver Winterbottom’s contact details they could email me.

I have a friend who recently purchased the Lucas development TR8 mentioned so is keen to discover any links.

It is also documented in TR8 circles that British Leyland gave a TR8 to TVR for development of the 350i does anyone know anything about this car or what happened to it.

Regards

Nick


Edited by Nick Brough on Wednesday 15th July 08:34

mrzigazaga

18,761 posts

188 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
quotequote all
Nick Brough said:
Hi,

Does anyone have Oliver Winterbottom’s contact details they could email me.
Hi Nick...I have Oliver's contact details but will obviously need to ask his permission as regards to giving out personal details...Cheers...Ziga

Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

244 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
quotequote all
mrzigazaga said:
Hi Nick...I have Oliver's contact details but will obviously need to ask his permission as regards to giving out personal details...Cheers...Ziga
No Worries,

If you could ask that would be great.

Thanks

Nick

adam quantrill

11,627 posts

265 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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No having talked to Olly on a number of occasions he referred to the V8 in somewhat disparaging terms and only truly rated the V6 (and presumably the 4-po too) as kosher wedges.

Yeah that link you posted Adrian - lol indeed!

The Hatter

988 posts

193 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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Amusing link, I love the spelling of Chimera/Chimeria/Cimera whatever it is!

Didn't the TR8 have carbs? I wouldn't have thought that would have interested TVR unduly so it seems unlikely - unless Austin Rover did the EFi development with Lucas on a TR8. But that seems unlikely too, why would they when 3500s were plentiful back then?

Oh another thought - the TR8 was destined for the USA I think, so maybe Lucas did a load of work on that before the 3500. I'm not sure what the chronology is - we need an expert on late 1970's BL...

mrzigazaga

18,761 posts

188 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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I have a feeling that this may of come from Stateside as a lot of guy's from that side of the pond call the 280i US model a "Triumph TVR"???...I have seen them advertised as a "Triumph" in the states...

There was an American chap in the park who stopped to look at the Wedges one morning and he asked if they were "Triumph"..I said.."No...TVR" and he replied..."Is that Triumph TVR"...confused...Maybe i should of pointed at my switchgear and said.."Yes Triumph"....I should imagine the only dealings that TVR had with BL was the parts bin...Still love to know where the original ashtrays in the 350i came from...Please do not say MG metro cos i had a gta styled MG Metro and the ashtray was down by my left knee..And used to fall out a lot, Especially if i was dogging a fag out...That last bit just sounds so wrong....laugh..FFS

adam quantrill

11,627 posts

265 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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Well the TR8 was sold in the 'states by the looks of it - e.g. see ebay item 251948603116.

And it was on carbs too - so carbs must have been federalised.

I don't think this is a common ancestor to the wedge though as all the 350's were injection. AFAIK.


gmw9666

2,739 posts

223 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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Bit off topic but love the engine on this TR8 http://www.britishv8.org/Triumph/OleLarsen.htm

Boosted LS1

21,200 posts

283 months

Thursday 16th July 2015
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US tr8's were federalised and had fuel injection. There were also some special build projects in the Uk. Maybe tvr got one of those to fiddle about with? I doubt tvr got a Pierburg to play about with as only a couple had that. The US engines had less power then the UK variants and we got just a handful of non restricted engines.

The TR7 was designed to take the rover from it's inception hence the wide chassis rails. The 2.0 engine was a concession to suit the times. ;-) That's cool, any big block chevy will fit, he he ;-)

Also, iirc there were only 20 or so UK spec TR8's manufactured. There were more TR7-V8's and always have been. Some independent firms used those for development.

Edited by Boosted LS1 on Thursday 16th July 08:29

Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

244 months

Friday 17th July 2015
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From my TR8 owning friend

The TR8’s had EFI from about 1979, mostly test cars, until production for USA, late 1980 through until 1981, they had a flat inlet manifold, mine is a UK spec EFI with about 180bhp, done by Lucas who did all the BL emissions development, and we know in the club that Leyland offered the 3.5 engines with efi to TVR, that’s well know, we know this from speaking to engineers who worked in development at Canley.

It is also thought that some very early 350i’s had the flat plenum before the later curved plenums


Regards

Nick

mrzigazaga

18,761 posts

188 months

Friday 17th July 2015
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Hi Nick...I asked Oliver but he said he doesn't know of any involvement with Triumph...Might of been later with PW?

adam quantrill

11,627 posts

265 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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That's very interesting - I always thought it was TVR pushing up the capacities, this certainly puts a different spin on the story of what was going on at the time. More of a skunkworks thing going on with TVR taking advantage of the development. With LR following on taking the 3.9?


Boosted LS1

21,200 posts

283 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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I'm not sure how relevant this is but BL were probably unofficially backing race/rally teams here and in the US who were racing Tr7 V's.

There were track and rally cars in the hands of privateers to. Tullis and Group 44 spring to mind for the race cars and Buffum (I may have spelt that wrong) for the rally cars. The US guys would have been very familiar with BOP engine parts. In fact, imo a lot of RV8 development is copied over from the Buick v6. We didn't really develop this engine, the americans did it before us. We did, eventually redesign the block and internals to suit the 4.0/4.6.

mrzigazaga

18,761 posts

188 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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From "Wiki"


3.9/4.0

The 3.9 L Rover V8, a bored-out version of the original 3.5 L engine, was used in several Land Rover vehicles, TVRs, and the MG RV8.
Land Rover used a 3,946 cc (240.8 cu in) version of the Rover V8 through the 1990s. Bore was increased to 94.0 mm (3.70 in) and stroke remained the same at 71.0 mm (2.80 in). The engine was revised in 1995 (and thereafter referred to as a 4.0 to differentiate it from the earlier version, although displacement remained the same at 3,946 cc) with a new intake and exhaust system, extra block ribbing, revised pistons, and larger cross-bolted main-bearings. The 1995 4.0 produced 190 hp (142 kW) and 236 lb·ft (320 N·m) .

Production of the 4.0 ended in 2003. The final version of the engine, used in the 2003 Land Rover Discovery, produced 188 hp (140 kW) at 4,750 rpm and 250 lb·ft (340 N·m) at 2,600 rpm.

Applications:

1990–2004 Morgan Plus 8
1991–1995 Ginetta G33
1992–1996 MG RV8
1986–1993 TVR S Series
1989–1995 Land Rover Range Rover (known as a 3.9 in this application)
1991–2000 TVR Griffith
1992–2001 TVR Chimaera
1995–1999 Land Rover Range Rover in SE trim
1994–1998 Land Rover Defender (only used as standard on USA-spec vehicles- available only to special order in other markets.)
1986–1991 Sisu NA-140 BT all-terrain transport vehicle
1998 Land Rover Defender 50th Anniversary Limited Edition
1996-2002 Land Rover Discovery Series I,II

In the early 1980s TVR approached Andy Rouse with a view to using his race-developed 3.9L variant of the V8 in their Rover-powered 350i 'wedge'; Rouse had successfully campaigned a Rover SD1 with a modified V8 on the track. For a number of reasons (primarily cost) Rouse's version was not used, but the concept was passed to alternative engineering firms which resulted in a rare variant of the 3.9. This unit has 93.5mm cylinder bores (instead of Rover's own 94mm that was introduced some years later) and thus has a capacity of 3,905cc. Flat-topped pistons and high-lift camshaft gave a compression ratio of 10.5:1. TVR claimed 275 bhp as the output and whilst this is generally disregarded by aficionados, a healthy 3,905 cc engine will produce in excess of 240 bhp. Once a reproducible specification had been determined, the bulk of engine production was undertaken by North Coventry Kawasaki (NCK), which company was subsequently purchased by TVR to become their in-house engine division known as TVR Power. About 100 cars (TVR 390SE) were built with the 3,905 cc engine; TVR's later '400' offering being based on the then-current Range Rover 4L of 3,946 cc.

Boosted LS1

21,200 posts

283 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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I had one of those early 93.5 engines. Iirc the pistons were made by Cosworth. There were also a limited number of 'X' blocks which were produced by BL for racing purposes. I can't remember if they were on the 93.5 mm bore size though.

A good place to ask about this history might be the TR register as their early records for Tr7 and V8 's are quite comprehensive. I know because I was the keeper of those records for a number of years. There will also be history for 'unusual' projects which may mention any developments with TVR.