RE: Rover SD1: You Know You Want To

RE: Rover SD1: You Know You Want To

Thursday 27th April 2017

Rover SD1: You Know You Want To

Quarter of a million for a 37 year-old Rover? Yes, you really do want to actually



Alright, this one's personal. Whether it's to be celebrated or not, I love the Rover SD1. I love its era of touring cars, to be honest with you, but it's the Rover that I covet most. Tin-top championships of the 80s featuring the original 6 Series, the XJS, the Volvo 240 and the Rover are the kind I spend hours on YouTube watching; big engines, big skids and manual gearboxes make for compelling viewing. It's not like Group A or Super Touring was bad, but the earlier stuff is my favourite.

Green car, 80s style
Green car, 80s style
It's the incongruity of the SD1 that appeals so much, I think. Yes, it's a fairly slippery shape, but it's a big old bus. And it's a Rover. There's no way it should have been competitive, and yet it was. The Volvos appeal for a similar reason but then they don't have V8s, do they?

The SD1 you see here was a car campaigned in South Africa, built by Dave Price Racing to Group 2 spec and raced at four consecutive Kyalami endurance races (the 9-hours for 1981 and 1982, the 1,000kms for 1983 and 1984). In between those it was used in a range of national South African championships, before being sold on and repainted in different colours. By 2003 it was back with the original owners and in original colours too.

2014 is where this SD1's history gets particularly interesting though. It was purchased by the current owner, who set about a restoration covering every aspect of the car: panels were rebuilt, paint was sorted and the engine was entirely overhauled. The result is the car you see here and, if you're into old V8 touring cars, this should be just about perfect.

Heavens above
Heavens above
It remains eligible for competition too, and competitive. In its first race back the SD1 secured pole at Vallelunga in the Heritage Touring Cup but succumbed to a gearbox issue - nice to see some authentically iffy reliability included in the restoration! However, it proved a minor blip, the car then racing at the remaining rounds of the championship at Spa, Dijon, Monza and Paul Ricard.

Just think about that for a second. Racing this Rover, against many similar cars of the era, at tracks like Vallelunga, Spa and Monza. Not an automatic gearbox, traction control dial or hybrid in sight. There's even a night race this year. Sounds pretty special, doesn't it?

Moreover, this car can also race in the UK-based Super Touring Car Trophy. This year it will race at Donington, Knockhill, Brands Hatch, Silverstone and Oulton Park. The SD1's class currently features more Rovers and lots of E30 M3s, which sounds like a great place to start, but look at the grid you'll be part of too: Sierra Cosworths, a wealth of Super Touring heroes and some late S2000 cars as well. It really does look like spectacular fun.

Yes, it's a lot, but it is mighty
Yes, it's a lot, but it is mighty
The fact that this SD1 is so beautifully presented but is also still competing means it arguably represents the best of both worlds. It should be mechanically and cosmetically perfect, but the previous owner wasn't afraid to use it as intended. It doesn't have to be mollycoddled, but it doesn't need a load of money thrown at it to be race ready either. Although arguably it shouldn't need any, given the purchase price...

Yes, it's £275,000. To anybody, that is a lot of money, however difficult it can be to value race cars. Interest in classic touring cars continues to rise though, and this car has good provenance plus a fair amount of cash spent on it very recently. To me it's perhaps the best SD1 ever and therefore hugely alluring, but there's more than enough here to warrant its recommendation to seasoned racers too. Go on...


ROVER SD1
Price
: £275,000
Why you should: The ultimate in old school V8 touring car muscle
Why you shouldn't: £275K buys an awful lot of other racing cars...

See the original PH ad here and the Girardo listing here.

 


 

 

Author
Discussion

ewant81

Original Poster:

58 posts

105 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
First post honours!

I also love SD1s, it was from a great era in touring car racing. That said, over a quarter million is a big price for one.

andy97

4,703 posts

222 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
Great cars from a classic era but "how much"? I don't think so!

Also interesting as most SD1 competition cars were Group A.

Lots more info on the SD1 competition cars here:
http://tentenths.com/forum/showthread.php?p=372945...

Edited by andy97 on Thursday 27th April 11:46

Midgster

571 posts

234 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
Oh yes......but oh no, no, no, no, no!

You must have one serious car collection to spend over quarter of a million on a Rover!

SamR380

725 posts

120 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
I love Rovers (check my garage) but I have no idea how they got to that price???

Not when you can buy a genuine ex-works GrpA rally car for £36k...

Bonhams Auctions Link


Zombie

1,587 posts

195 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
I'm wondering what spec the engine is. I think I read an interview with Tim Harvey where he was suggesting that the engines being run at the time were far bigger than 3.5l. He went on to say his car was running the standard displacement.

ruzman

45 posts

101 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
You had me until you came to the price. Typo? One too many 0's?

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
SamR380 said:
I love Rovers (check my garage) but I have no idea how they got to that price???

Not when you can buy a genuine ex-works GrpA rally car for £36k...

Bonhams Auctions Link

But how much money would need spending on that to be competition-ready? The close-up of the tank shows it's 5yrs out of date, for a start. And that's before you consider competitive...

As it sits, it's a very expensive, but not that usable, road SD1 with an interesting history.

Evilex

512 posts

104 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
"Leyland"
It's doomed!
laugh

Coatesy351

861 posts

132 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
Nice but it would have to be a late model TWR Bastos Vitesse for me.



Edited by Coatesy351 on Thursday 27th April 15:29

Dave Hedgehog

14,550 posts

204 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
always hated the SD1, slow, badly built, bad handling POS

until now

cloud9


biggrin

JohnoVR6

690 posts

212 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
BGMsport are worth a follow on Facebook for their pics alone, some of the stuff they churn out is incredible. I had this SD1 as my wallpaper for ages, which nearly led to an impromptu eBay purchase...so glad I saw sense laugh

MDMA .

8,895 posts

101 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
JohnoVR6 said:
BGMsport are worth a follow on Facebook for their pics alone, some of the stuff they churn out is incredible. I had this SD1 as my wallpaper for ages, which nearly led to an impromptu eBay purchase...so glad I saw sense laugh
it was at Race Retro last year. nice car.

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
That shape has worn well, love these things cool

If I win the lottery then I'd splash out 250k without so much as a pause, lovely car.

Speedmaster-vx7f4

2 posts

106 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
Go to http://www.speedmastercars.com
to see the real deal - Group A TWR Bastos Rover

grumpy52

5,579 posts

166 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
I love the SD1 and owned one back in the day .
I moved this one for a mate a while ago . It's a rare VDP EFI and has just finished it's restoration, it was nearly turned into a Bastos type race replica .

saaby93

32,038 posts

178 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
Those rear lights look like theyve turned them upside down off of a back of a lotus

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Thursday 27th April 2017
quotequote all
saaby93 said:
Those rear lights look like theyve turned them upside down off of a back of a lotus
There may be a reason for that...

mariscalcus

53 posts

145 months

Friday 28th April 2017
quotequote all
When I had started my first serious job in the mid 80s with equally serious money I could, for the first time, afford a new car, not some beat-up second hand mini. I narrowed my choice down to a Rover SD1 or a Saab 900 Turbo 16S Aero. I decided on the latter and ended up buying the very first one off the production line in Norkopping. Never regretted my choice. The Saab has long since gone but recently, at my local garage, I saw an SD1 in seemingly excellent condition. I spoke to the garage owner, whom I know very well, and he said that the repair/running costs to keep the car on the road were thousands annually - avoid!

It is, after all, a Rover!

Morningside

24,110 posts

229 months

Friday 28th April 2017
quotequote all
Owned at least eight SD1's and love them still. I would love one now apart from the price and the worry of the dreaded rust.

Oakman

326 posts

158 months

Friday 28th April 2017
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
saaby93 said:
Those rear lights look like theyve turned them upside down off of a back of a lotus
There may be a reason for that...
Reason being that lotus borrowed them from Rover - along with the classy Marina door handles !


I always really liked the shape of the SD1 - more than a passing nod to the GTB4 Daytona.