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Having got rid of a reliable German sports car and now driving a Range Rover I have become accustomed to disappointing reliability, large repair bills and crazy running costs.

 

Whilst I am in this place, I am thinking that my next purchase should be a TVR. I have always wanted one and the summer will be here before you can say "mid life crisis".

 

So, learned people of PW, which TVR is the one to have?

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I had a 4.5 Chimaera for a few years, and because I bought it tax free I sold it for more than I paid for it. I had no reliabilty issues at all with it. It was comfortable and classy inside though devoid of gadgets, frighteningly quick with an awesome engine note. Handling was interesting! Generally stuck to the road like **** to a blanket but the back end could step out with very little warning if leathering it. The V8 bubble was awesome.

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In had a '96 plate chimaera and it was a shocker, never ran right and cost me a lot of time and money. I love TVR's but never again. If you really want to take the risk I would see how many times it's changed hands, if it seems a lot it's prob because it's got a recurring fault like mine. And if you find a silver N reg one you like drop me a pm to make sure it's not the dog that I got rid of!

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I had a 99 Chimaera 500, while it was awfully fun i could never truely enjoy it through fear of it breaking. I had a few problems with mine, power steering pump went and a few other niggly bits. As others have said they are so much fun to drive and so raw and simple in nature, non of this fancy hi tech lark, handling can be lively especially in the wet :oops:

 

My uncle bought a sagaris brand spankers, kept it for a good few years but was always going back for work ended up getting rid and replacing with a porsche

 

ATB

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I came very very close to purchasing the Tuscan which I still think is the nicest looking TVR produced, however seen the light at the last minute and gladly got the M3. The clinchers for me were the following:

 

1. Called up to enquire about a lovely Rolex blue Tuscan that a private seller had advertised, after some chit chat the guy ended up telling me he had nothing but hassle with it and had spent thousands keeping it going. I thought this was very nice of him especially when his parting words were "Dont buy this one mate!"

2. Called the nearest TVR specialist garage for some advice on buying the Tuscan and after spending around 20mins telling what goes wrong with them, his final comments were "GOOD LUCK FINDING A GOOD ONE!" Not exactly selling it to me!!!

3. When in Horseless Carriages garage I asked why there was silver gaffer tape around the rear window? Reply "Because they leak mate! but dont worry we will sort it before you take it away" mmm in that case why not sort it before I came to view it?? There was also more than a few pieces of trim not quite where TVR had intended them to be! i.e. they had fallen off!

 

Anyway I now have a very boring in comparison 340bhp rear wheel drive soft top that if I choose I can turn off the traction control systems. It also has the following boring systems that TVR never got round to fitting lol ABS, multiple airbags, crumple zones and rollover protection :lol: Dont get me wrong it aint going to put a point in your pecker like the TVR but it aint half bad :good:

 

If you have cash to spare and dont mind your motor letting you down on a semi regular basis then go ahead, if its reliability your after forget it LOL

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Owned a 420 SEAC from new. Spent more time on the back of a low loader than I spent driving it so sold it after 2 years. Last of the great wedge models with bits from at least a dozen other cars inc Capri door handles and XR3i indicator stalks.

 

But when it was running the noise was awesum. Saw it for sale last year again last year and went to buy it back as weekend fun car but arrived late and the dealer had sold it.

 

Best advice when using anything like this is the most expensive one you buy will be the cheapest you will own.

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Whilst they are undoubtedly huge fun when running well (I've driven griffs, chimeras and cerberas) they are truly scary in the wet. My mate used to sell them for a living and the warranty work levels were staggering, one even caught fire in a customers garage and destroyed the guys other car and kitchen - traced to an electrical fault.

 

Have you thought about a Westfield? Much more reliable and also silly fast.

 

Ped

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I had a 450 SEAC years ago. What a car! Utterly unreliable, drank petrol like Ollie Read drank whisky, was a nightmare in the mildly damp and undriveable in the wet, leaked a bit and as said had all the build quality of a British Leyland Metro!!! :blink:

 

 

Bu **** me, I'd have another one in the blink of an eye and still regularly kick myself for selling mine!!!! Of all the cars I've owned that is the one that stirs the loins, the roar and tone of that engine when you hit the loud pedal, the raw acceleration, the on the edge handling are all things of a bygone age and something I deeply miss! I looked at getting another, but £17k for a weekend car was too rich for my tastes!

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Have you thought about a Westfield? Much more reliable and also silly fast.

 

Ped

 

Or a Caterham, also impractical, basic and stupidly quick, but with pin sharp handling and reasonably reliable (mine was anyway).

 

Edit: Too slow, but Dunkield and I are on the same sheet.

Edited by -Mongrel-
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I had a 450 SEAC years ago. What a car! Utterly unreliable, drank petrol like Ollie Read drank whisky, was a nightmare in the mildly damp and undriveable in the wet, leaked a bit and as said had all the build quality of a British Leyland Metro!!! :blink:

 

 

Bu **** me, I'd have another one in the blink of an eye and still regularly kick myself for selling mine!!!! Of all the cars I've owned that is the one that stirs the loins, the roar and tone of that engine when you hit the loud pedal, the raw acceleration, the on the edge handling are all things of a bygone age and something I deeply miss! I looked at getting another, but £17k for a weekend car was too rich for my tastes!

 

I think this is absoulutely the point. TVRs are terrible, but awesome. Buy with your eyes open and enjoy every minute it is working. I love the wedgies (Had a mate with a 280 many years go, owned from new and run it as a daily car, never let him down in 4 years) but the Cerbera is the prettiest by far, IMHO.

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