Skip to content

TVR model range — historical overview

This page is a chronological reference to TVR’s road-car model range, from the company’s founding in Blackpool in 1947 through the Peter Wheeler era and into the recent revival attempts. It’s a quick lookup for production years, engines and approximate build numbers — useful when identifying a car, sourcing parts or working out which platform shared what.

TVR was, at its peak in the 1990s, reportedly the third-largest specialist sports car manufacturer in the world. The cars share a common recipe throughout: a tubular steel backbone or spaceframe chassis, glassfibre bodywork, and (usually) a front-mounted engine driving the rear wheels.

The early cars used a mix of bought-in engines from Coventry Climax, MG, Ford and others. Bodies were glassfibre over a tubular steel frame — a formula TVR kept for the rest of its life.

ModelYearsEngine(s)Notes
Grantura1958–1967Coventry Climax, MG, FordFirst production TVR; multiple Mk variants
Griffith 200 / 4001963–1967Ford V8US-market car; named after Jack Griffith
Vixen S1–S41967–19731.6 Ford KentLightweight coupe; replaced the Grantura
Tuscan V81967–1971Ford V8Rare — around 174 built
3000M / 2500M / 2000M1972–1979Ford Essex V6 (and others)Popular in club racing
Taimar1976–1983Ford Essex V6Fixed-head coupe development of the 3000M

The angular Tasmin family — universally nicknamed the “Wedge” — covered a wide spread of engines and body styles (coupe, convertible, 2+2).

ModelYearsEngine(s)Notes
Tasmin / 280i1980–19862.8 Ford Cologne V6The original Wedge
350i, 390SE, 400SE, 420SE, 450SE1983–1989Rover V8 (3.5–4.5)Increasing levels of Rover V8 tune
420 SEAC, 450 SEAC1986–1988Tuned Rover V8Kevlar/carbon-composite bodywork; very rare

The S Series returned to softer, curvier styling and reused a lot of Ford running gear. The V8S grafted the Rover V8 into the same shell. Brake hardware is largely Ford Fiesta Mk3 / Sierra / Saab — see the brake servo cross-reference for details.

ModelYearsEngineApprox. built
S11986–19882.8 Ford Cologne V6197
S21988–19892.9 Ford Cologne V6662
S31989–19932.9 Ford Cologne V6730
S3C / S4C1993–19942.9 Ford Cologne V6411 (S3C)
V8S1991–19944.0 Rover V8~410

This is the period most people picture when they think of TVR: aggressive styling, big power, and from the Cerbera onwards, TVR’s own engines designed by Al Melling — the AJP8 V8 and the Speed Six straight-six.

ModelYearsEngine(s)Approx. built
Griffith1990–2002Rover V8 4.0 / 4.3 / 4.5 / 5.0~2,351
Chimaera1992–2003Rover V8 4.0 / 4.0 HC / 4.3 / 4.5 / 5.0~5,256
Cerbera1996–2006AJP8 (4.2 / 4.5) and Speed Six 4.0~1,490
Tuscan Speed Six1999–2006Speed Six 3.6 / 4.0
Tamora2002–2006Speed Six 3.6
T350C / T350T2002–2006Speed Six 3.6 / 4.0
Sagaris2005–2006Speed Six 4.0 (~406 bhp)~213
Typhon2003–2004Supercharged Speed SixHandful only

The Chimaera was TVR’s highest-volume model. The Cerbera is significant as the first TVR with engines designed in-house rather than bought in from Ford or Rover.

Nikolay Smolensky bought TVR in 2004. Production at the Bristol Avenue factory in Blackpool wound down through 2006 and ceased shortly after. A series of ownership changes and revival attempts followed.

In 2017 a new TVR Griffith was unveiled — a Gordon Murray–designed car with a Cosworth-prepared Ford “Coyote” V8 — but as of writing it has not entered series production.

Compiled from Wikipedia and community sources — production figures vary between references, so treat them as approximate and verify against marque-specific sources before relying on them.