RE: PH Annual Service | Twisted Range Rover Classic
RE: PH Annual Service | Twisted Range Rover Classic
Saturday 9th August

PH Annual Service | Twisted Range Rover Classic

Twisted's boss has built his dream Range Rover Classic - now he invites you to do the same


Given all the things Twisted has turned its hand to in recent years - speedboats very much among them - it’s a wonder that it hasn’t previously gotten around to the Range Rover Classic, a model that would appear to suit its inclinations down to the ground. Probably, it has its hands full with the classic Defender, the car it has enthusiastically (and cannily) become synonymous with. But also, it seems there is a chance that it has been holding off for the right moment.

At least that’s the way Twisted frames it, the prototype said to have been a ‘personal project’ for founder and wayfinder, Charles Fawcett. Given the firm’s preoccupation with the details, it is unsurprising that the build encompassing his vision reportedly took 2,500 hours to complete. Nor that the resulting special project will result in a vanishingly small production run: even for a specialist used to dealing with wistful memories of yesteryear, it is intended to be something special. 

It certainly looks it. The wonderful thing about restomodded Range Rover Classics (much like the Defender) is that precious little tweaking of the styling is required. The car is already an industrial design icon; too much tampering risks dilution. But there is no denying the transformative effect of wider tracks and bigger wheels. Of course, yours need not look precisely like Charlie’s— in fact, the plan is that any interested buyer will sit down with the boss himself (and the technician responsible for doing the actual work) and plan out what their vision looks like. 

Two elements, at any rate, appear to be set in stone. One, for the moment, is the three-door shell (although you’d imagine Twisted’s willpower would be tested by a sufficiently large pile of cash). And two, the engine. Which is likely to suit most buyers on the basis that Charlie has chosen one of his favourites: the always popular 6.2-litre V8 in LT1 format. Sufficient for 460hp and 509lb ft of torque via a custom-modified eight-speed auto. 

This, in a car that did not exceed the modest output of a 4.2-litre Rover V8 back in its day. As you might expect, alongside a strengthened chassis, this has meant the prototype receiving Twisted’s bespoke suspension setup, including the uprated brakes you’re certainly going to need. The firm doesn’t quote performance figures for the Classic, but you’d imagine them to be similarly mighty to the kind of response you get from one of its V8-endowed Defenders. 

The price tag, we’d imagine, will be even mightier. Twisted would not be drawn on the kind of number it’s willing to discuss - simply describing the car as POA - but it goes without saying that you’re going to be a long way into a speedboat budget. The firm, of course, would be delighted to discuss both at the same time. What better venue to do that in than a sunlit Bicester Motion? Expect Charlie’s Range Rover Classic to draw a crowd either way.


Author
Discussion

Turini

Original Poster:

441 posts

182 months

Saturday
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If this twists your cherry then go for it

WillieEckerslike

45 posts

32 months

Saturday
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Thats rather nice, not a huge fan of the headlights and I'd prefer the wheels silver. Otherwise yes please.

el romeral

1,660 posts

153 months

Saturday
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The rear overhang is getting larger every time I see one of these. It carries it off though, more or less. That must sound pretty fruity.

jon-yprpe

427 posts

104 months

Saturday
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It’s not my cup of tea. Mishmash of styles, tacky aftermarket headlights and the Rostyle tributes are over wheeled and undertyred.
Mine is a bit more subtle but with a 4.8 v8, big valve heads and on megasquirt it goes nicely enough.





smilo996

3,416 posts

186 months

Saturday
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It is a shame that those who did not have to live with bowl disintegration brown, fresh dog poo on your shoe brown and geeza on the move white shoes from the 70's have decided these colours are cool, they aren't. 😁
Otherwise, why not.

This with the optioned Labradors.

ducnick

2,065 posts

259 months

Saturday
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jon-yprpe said:
It’s not my cup of tea. Mishmash of styles, tacky aftermarket headlights and the Rostyle tributes are over wheeled and undertyred.
Mine is a bit more subtle but with a 4.8 v8, big valve heads and on megasquirt it goes nicely enough.




Now that’s much more like it. This one looks fantastic…. Unlike the comical twisted one.

biggbn

27,446 posts

236 months

Saturday
quotequote all
jon-yprpe said:
It’s not my cup of tea. Mishmash of styles, tacky aftermarket headlights and the Rostyle tributes are over wheeled and undertyred.
Mine is a bit more subtle but with a 4.8 v8, big valve heads and on megasquirt it goes nicely enough.




Perfection. Love the twisted car also. An original Range Rover is one of my dream cars

Magikarp

1,341 posts

64 months

Saturday
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It might be my eyes, but the wheels don't look centralised in the wheelarches.

fflump

2,396 posts

54 months

Saturday
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Magikarp said:
It might be my eyes, but the wheels don't look centralised in the wheelarches.
I agree the arch is centred too far back at the rear and too far forward at the front. That would really bug me, especially as the arches are one of the few bodywork modifications that have been done by the company. The interior design looks like a pretty good attempt at modernisation with retaining key dash components, although my preference would be to top it off with the original steering wheel. Otherwise , the mechanical mods likely accounted for most of the work and cost.

Of course the colour schemes are easily changed. The yellow colour is lovely (is it classic sand glow or different?)but best married with a black interior (and I am not a fan normally of black interiors). I’d go for one of the other classic paint colours like Tuscan Blue or Warwick Green.

m911rks

30 posts

86 months

Saturday
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I love this & having bought one of their Defenders last month, their attention to detail is outstanding, so the Range Rover will be brilliant

nismo48

5,394 posts

223 months

Saturday
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Good Twist on an old Classic wink

Wardy78

1,384 posts

74 months

Saturday
quotequote all
jon-yprpe said:
It’s not my cup of tea. Mishmash of styles, tacky aftermarket headlights and the Rostyle tributes are over wheeled and undertyred.
Mine is a bit more subtle but with a 4.8 v8, big valve heads and on megasquirt it goes nicely enough.




I agree on the mishmatch. The front end especially would be better without the homage to the latter big bumper models.

But aside form that, I think that's a decent resto.

GianiCakes

476 posts

89 months

Yesterday (07:32)
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I like it, particularly the colour and the interior. The headlights don’t look quite right and I’d probably prefer smaller wheels but otherwise it’s a good showcase of a design that looks ever more iconic.

Bernt Tuakrisp

174 posts

216 months

Yesterday (13:09)
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If all black is "murdered out" is this "diarrhea'd out"? You have the whole rainbow at your disposal and you select two non-matching shades of poo. Horrid apart, even worse together.

Clockwork Cupcake

78,154 posts

288 months

Yesterday (14:16)
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Those headlights really do scream "LOOK AT ME! LOOK AT ME! I'M A RESTOMOD!!!" and not in a good way.

Still, as the article says, were one to be commissioning one's own, one could specify something more sympathetic to the original.


Coalville Ed

1 posts

194 months

Bravo Charlie and team! It would seem JLR Classic have been left “pondering” on whether to start filling forms out to begin to discuss such an idea. These will sell in niche abundance I’m sure.