RE: Rover 620 SLi | Shed of the Week
RE: Rover 620 SLi | Shed of the Week
Yesterday

Rover 620 SLi | Shed of the Week

Some people would like to forget when the Rover Group was majority owned by BAe and mad as a brush - but not Shed


Yes, Shed knows he brought you a different Rover only two weeks back, but sometimes something comes along that’s just too good to ignore. Even if we set aside this car’s superb condition and history it warrants inclusion on the basis of it being a Shed of the Week debut for the 620, or indeed any Rover 600 series car. Seems almost incredible but there we are.  

The 600 was basically a Rover-reskinned Honda Accord. It breezed into view in 1993 on a promise of Japanese reliability plus British poshness. It all sounded too good to be true but, despite some of what you’ll undoubtedly be reading in the forum after this story, it actually was. Shed knows this from personal experience having managed to attach himself to the UK press launch back in ’93 by wearing a curly wig and pretending to be Paddy Hopkirk. It was a lot easier to lig your way into press dos back then. 

Shed had a wonderful summer once by renting a tuxedo and standing outside the Dorchester hotel in London whenever there was a press or industry dinner going on there, which was most evenings of the week. When the flow of similarly-attired types arriving for their free wine seemed to be at its peak, he would simply drift in with them and take up station in one of the empty seats. Nobody ever asked for his credentials. He only stopped doing it because after a couple of months the tux didn’t really fit him any more. Plus there were so many stains down the jacket by that stage he was starting to get some funny looks from the other people on whichever table he ended up on. 

Anyway, the result of his Rover subterfuge was a very enjoyable afternoon spent hacking around the Oxfordshire countryside in a 620. They gave him a variety of models to try including the 620ti which with its Garrett turbocharged T-series engine was putting out a very respectable for the time 197hp. Before you start scoffing you should be aware that one well-respected British car mag testing the 620ti found it to be as quick in the midrange as a Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth.  

The 620 SLi you’re looking at here came from humbler stock. Its long-stroke 2.0 litre single-cam Honda F20Z1 engine was essentially designed for easy plodding, but as Shed found on that launch it didn’t mind lifting up its skirts and having a go. 129hp went a fair way back then. In this case, where it went was 0-60mph in nine and a bit seconds and on to a top speed of 125mph. Some reviews sniffily suggested that the 620’s ride was a bit rubbish but don’t you believe it. Because of its Honda mechanicals it was by definition one of the most reliable Rovers ever built. If it wasn’t it would have been close to it. 

AI says the VED is £360 a year so if that’s wrong blame the robots and not Shed. Shed always gets his specs wrong too but he’s bravely going to say that the SLi was the next most luxurious 600 after the GSi range-topper. That meant its standard equipment included ABS, burr walnut interior trim pieces, electric rear windows, an electric slide and tilt sunroof, twin zorsts for a racy look and even heated mirrors which even now are not on all cars. The spec was gradually twiddled and tweaked over the years. By 1997 the SLi had these nice 7-spoke alloys as standard (Michelin tyres all round on this one too). The sunroof had become an option by then and it looks like this one doesn’t have it but for Shed that’s a point in favour of any old car. 

Our shed is from 1999, which was the wind-up year for the 600. All of its 25 years and 78,000 miles have been spent in the company of one clearly enormously proud and fastidious owner. Serviced every year and apparently with everything done as it was needed, it’s just as clean under the bonnet as it is above and behind it. Probably underneath it too if someone could have been bothered to crawl under there with a camera. The next owner will receive a service record with 25 stamps, all the paperwork including confirmation that it’s on its fourth cambelt, a new and squeaky clean MOT certificate and what we’re told is the very rare red ignition key still in its box. We all know how much Shed loves a fresh box.

All in all it looks like an absolute treat. At £1,991 Shed can’t see it hanging around in the Classifieds for long. Whoever has the nuts to buy it can have Shed’s personal guarantee that it will be a belter. To be strictly accurate, they can look at his personal guarantee, but for legal reasons they won’t be able to take it away or photograph it. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

tomsugden

Original Poster:

2,405 posts

248 months

Yesterday (06:07)
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Love it, that’s a lot of car for not a lot of money.

Lefty

19,031 posts

222 months

Yesterday (06:20)
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Top shed, I like 90’s Rovers getmecoat

yme402

582 posts

122 months

Yesterday (06:24)
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These stil look very classy.

Palmela

174 posts

4 months

Yesterday (06:26)
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Great shed. Under-rated cars that we love to be sniffy about.

oilit

2,768 posts

198 months

Yesterday (06:27)
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Great shed, you could buy this and probably have 5 years of solid motoring - if it were an estate I would have bought it - oh wait they never made the estate !!

Waynedear1

6 posts

1 month

Yesterday (06:28)
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Glorious and green, winning combination.

FrankandLynn

48 posts

13 months

Yesterday (06:29)
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For sure the kind of example that would be ideal for FOTU or a museum. Unfortunately, and having previously owned one, it is a dynamically unexceptional car apart from its fastidious maintenance and condition. Not nearly exciting enough to make me open my wallet.

PSB1967

398 posts

176 months

Yesterday (06:29)
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What a cracker!

My ol' man had one in this colour from new. His was a diesel. Didn't fair very well when an EU HGV cut across its bow by Oxford services. The car ended up in two pieces. (Mum and Dad were fine)

Instant fond memories of my Dad giving it its weekly Monday morning handwash and polish while exclaiming BRG to be the best colour going.

I'm probably going to spend the rest of my day thinking about Dad and Mum now, Particularly given the time of year.

Happy Christmas Shed and everyone at PH towers. Happy Christmas to all the forum contributors too!

(Will 2026 bring the first EV shed? Imagine the thread size laugh)

carinaman

23,933 posts

192 months

Yesterday (06:45)
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Twin pipes means it's the high compression SOHC engine.

wistec1

700 posts

61 months

Yesterday (06:46)
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Probably the best shed in terms of financial risk we've seen this year. Honda showing Rover how to build a car with the good fortune of a very careful owner makes this is a great shed. In fact it's probably way better than that lowly status and qualifies only on the basis of its price point.

humphra

570 posts

112 months

Yesterday (06:47)
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Love it!
And my admiration to the previous owner for keeping it so well. There's a PH'er!!

And to Shed, Merry Christmas and thanks for sneaking this one in.... "We all know how much Shed loves a fresh box." Loved it!! laugh

JRaj

104 posts

93 months

Yesterday (06:50)
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Underrated and classy

595Heaven

3,039 posts

98 months

Yesterday (07:06)
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I had an M-reg Rover 620 as one of my first management cars at Rover a long time ago. It was in Nightfire Red with the light coloured fabric interior and was a lovely car.

my boss (RIP Malc, and thanks for everything) had the 620ti (Turbo) which had leather and about 200hp (the same as a 3-door Sierra Cosworth), but had the same brakes as my car. It was properly quick for those days, and I can still smell the brakes pads overheating on that car as I tried to stop after a spirited drive on one of my favourite roads, which ended at a T-junction onto the A43 at Syresham just outside Silverstone. At that time the A43 was a single carriageway, but horribly busy, and opposite the junction was a wooden gate into a field. I wasn’t sure I would be able to stop, and was contemplating the thought of going over the road and through the gate, hopefully without hitting anyone.

Thankfully, the car came to a halt with a few feet to spare. Life gives you lessons, and I learned one that day!

Good cars

Cambs_Stuart

3,402 posts

104 months

Yesterday (07:07)
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That is in amazing condition. Possibly the best cared for and cleanest SOTW of all time?

carinaman

23,933 posts

192 months

Yesterday (07:09)
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PSB1967, sending sheddy seasonal thoughts, I'll struggle to remember if my mum ever went in my 620Si.

heisthegaffer

3,994 posts

218 months

Yesterday (07:25)
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Nice to see something like this. A shame what happened to Rover.

Nice that most responses are positive too. A refreshing change.

Wren-went

1,028 posts

58 months

Yesterday (07:27)
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Drove quite a few of these when I was a Rover Foundry engineer, from 620 D & 620 Tis.they weren't bad cars the diesel was ok for the mid 90s & the same with Turbo 620 Ti it wasn't bad at the time. They were quite popular as Company car's.

Diesel were always the same green as this car & the 620 Ti metallic Gold or metallic Red.

This has been the first I've seen in a while

pycraft

1,208 posts

204 months

Yesterday (07:31)
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Has the velour bolster on the driver's side worn through and split? That must take some doing...

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,652 posts

63 months

Yesterday (07:34)
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I love it, but im a sucker for anything from the oft renamed Rover / Austin Rover / BL group.
I don't think this is a shed at all though, it would be a sin to use this car daily and have its wonderful condition decline. This needs to be bought by a Rover beard and treated as the modern classic it already is..

Rob 131 Sport

4,146 posts

72 months

Yesterday (07:34)
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As a person who is fastidious at keeping his cars maintained together with filing all the associated paperwork, it’s great to see cars like this being looked after in the same manner.

Back in the day I did look at the Rover 600, but considered it an old persons car and instead bought a 2.0 CDX Vectra.