TVR Cerbera explained

TVR Cerbera
Manufacturer:TVR
Production:1996 - 2006[1]
1,490 produced
Assembly:England: Blackpool
Class:Sports car (S)
Body Style:2-door 2+2 coupé[2]
Layout:Front mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Transmission:5-speed manual
Wheelbase:25661NaN1
Length:42801NaN1
Width:18651NaN1
Height:12201NaN1
Related:TVR Chimaera
Designer:Damian McTaggart[3]
Sp:uk

The TVR Cerbera is a car manufactured by the British company TVR between 1996 and 2006. Its name is derived from Cerberus, the three-headed beast of Greek legend that guarded the entrance of Hades. It is a coupé with a hardtop roof and a 2+2 seating layout that has been described as a sports car and a grand touring car.[4]

Introduced at the 1993 London Motor Show, the Cerbera was the third car manufactured by TVR under the leadership of Peter Wheeler (the first was the Griffith and the second was the Chimaera). The car marked three milestones for the Wheeler-led company:[5]

Engines

Prior to the Cerbera, TVR had purchased V8 engines from Rover and then tuned them for their own use. When Rover was purchased by BMW, Peter Wheeler did not want to risk supply chain problems should the Germans decide to stop manufacturing the engine. In response, he engaged the services of race engineer Al Melling to design a V8 engine that TVR could manufacture in-house and even potentially offer for sale to other car-makers. In an interview for the television programme Top Gear, Wheeler explained "Basically, we designed the engine as a race engine. It was my idea at the time that if we wanted to expand, we ought to make something that we could sell to other people. We've ended up with a 75-degree V8 with a flat-plane crank. The bottom-half of the engine to the heads is exactly as you would see in current Formula One engines."[1]

The result was called the "Speed Eight" (official designation 'AJP8') after Al Melling, John Ravenscroft and Peter Wheeler, a 4.2 litre V8 rated at 3600NaN0 and gave the Cerbera a top speed of 2970NaN0. A 4.5-litre version of the engine was later offered with 4200NaN0.

The AJP8 has one of the highest specific outputs of any naturally aspirated V8 in the automotive world at 83.3 hp/litre for the 4.2 and 93.3 hp/litre for the 4.5. Later models of the 4.5 litre engine had the 'Red Rose' option, which increased output to 4400NaN0 97.7 hp/litre when run with super-unleaded (high octane) petrol. An unmarked button on the dashboard altered the engine mapping.

The engine is also unusually compact for a V8. According to TVR, the total weight of the finished engine is 1210NaN0.

Following the success of the Speed Eight engine program, Peter Wheeler also undertook the design of a "Speed Six" engine. This engine also made its debut in the Cerbera but was a 4.0 litre inline slant six design with four valves per cylinder to the Speed Eight's two. The early engines proved unreliable, with many requiring rebuilding.[6]

Specifications

The Cerbera was designed from the start as a four-seater. The rear seats are smaller than the front, a design commonly referred to as a "2+2". However, the interior is designed so that the passenger seat can slide farther forward than the driver's seat. This allows more room for the person sitting behind the front passenger. TVR have referred to the layout as a "3+1" design.[7]

The Cerbera's weight was quoted by TVR at 11000NaN0, although customers claimed the weight varied between 10600NaN0 and 12000NaN0.

The dashboard was designed especially for the Cerbera and uses a two-spar steering wheel as opposed to the typical three-spar previously found in most TVRs. The reason for this is that minor instruments are located on a small panel below the steering wheel and a third spar in the wheel would have made them difficult to read.[7]

Like all TVRs of the Peter Wheeler era, the Cerbera had a long-travel throttle to compensate for the lack of electronic traction-control and very sharp steering. The V8 powered cars were two turns from lock to lock and the Speed Six car was 2.4 turns. This made it easier for experienced drivers to maintain or regain control of the car in the event of a loss of traction but some less experienced drivers complained that it made the cars feel "twitchy" and more responsive than they would otherwise have preferred.[3]

In 2000, TVR changed the styling of the car slightly by modifying the headlights to more closely resemble those seen on the Tuscan. The "facelift" features were available with all three engine configurations. In addition, the cars equipped with the 4.5 litre engine were offered with the "lightweight" option, reducing the overall weight through the use of lighter body panels and a slightly reworked interior.[7]

Performance

ModelCapacity (cc)typePower (hp)TorqueMax speed0–97 km/h (0-60 mph) (s)
4.0 L Speed Six 3,996 straight-6 DOHC 24v3500NaN0 at 6,800 rpm 3300NaN0 at 5,000 rpm 1700NaN04.4
4.2 L Speed Eight 4,185 75° V8 SOHC 16v3600NaN0 at 6,500 rpm 320lbft at 4,500 rpm1800NaN04.2
4.5 L Speed Eight 4,475 75° V8 SOHC 16v4200NaN0 at 6,750 rpm 380lbft at 5,500 rpm 185NaN4.1
4.5 L Speed Eight 'Red Rose' 4,475 75° V8 SOHC 16v4400NaN0 at 7,250 rpm 402lbft at 5,500 rpm 193mph3.9

The Last Cerbera

In August 2006, TVR held an online auction for what it billed as "The Last Cerbera". According to thelastcerbera.com, the website that TVR created especially for the auction, TVR's owner and chairman, Nikolay Smolensky brought the design out of retirement for one more unit as an homage to the "beautiful but brutish bygone British sports car." The "last Cerbera" was a 4.5 Lightweight right-hand drive car in Pepper white with Prussian blue leather interior trim.[8] The auction failed to meet its reserve price but TVR still decided to sell the car to the high bidder. The final bid was under £45,000 to which 5% plus 17.5% VAT would be added.

Cerbera Speed 12

See main article: TVR Cerbera Speed 12.

The TVR Cerbera Speed 12, originally known as the Project 7/12, is a high performance sports car designed by TVR in 1997. Based on the TVR Cerbera, the vehicle was intended to be both the world's highest performance road car and the basis for a GT1 class endurance racer. However, problems during its development, changing GT1 class regulations and the eventual decision that it was simply incapable of being used as a road car forced TVR executives to abandon its development.

The engine, displacing 7.7 L (469.9 cu in) and having twelve cylinders, was reportedly capable of producing nearly 1,000 hp (746 kW), although an exact measurement was never made. Nonetheless, it was claimed to have a top speed greater than that of the McLaren F1.[9]

References

Sources
Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Why The Crazy TVR Cerbera Is A Proper 90s Hero Car. Graham. King. Car Throttle. 5 August 2020.
  2. Web site: Brave new world: TVR Cerbera vs Lotus Esprit. 27 September 2018. Ross. Alkureshi. Classic and Sports Car Magazine. 11 August 2020.
  3. Web site: TVR Cerbera 4.2 vs. Lotus Esprit V8 GT. 4 May 2018. Ross. Alkureishi. Drive-my. 6 August 2020.
  4. Web site: TVR auctions the last Cerbera. 25 July 2006. Piston Heads. 11 August 2020.
  5. Web site: TVR Cerbera (1996 - 2005) used car review. 8 November 2005. RAC. 5 August 2020.
  6. Web site: TVR Cerbera. https://web.archive.org/web/20160918154518/https://www.classiccars4sale.net/classic-car-review/c2c-tvr-cerbera . 2016-09-18 . 9 July 2015. Classic Motoring . 5 August 2020 . Aceville Publications Ltd . usurped .
  7. Web site: TVR Cerbera. www.tvr-car-club.co.uk. 6 August 2020.
  8. Web site: The Last TVR Cerbera 4.5 V8: where is it?. 4 February 2008. Alvise Marco . Seno. TVR Blog. 6 August 2020.
  9. Web site: TVR Cerbera Speed 12 (2000) Statistics. TVRTalk.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20090305021619/http://tvrtalk.com/information/info.php?car=TVR%20Cerbera%20Speed%2012%20(2000) . 5 March 2009 .