One of the best automotive channels, I came here via Harry's garage. This Tyrrell's channel is excellent, many thanks
@MisterHughes4 жыл бұрын
The "Jam Sandwich" police car of my youth. It still looks fantastic now, huge presence and impression of power even when it's sitting still. I'm envious of the owner.
@Tim1968-l9l3 жыл бұрын
I remember the 'JamButty's' feeling old now :-)
@ivoredwards30212 жыл бұрын
The metropolitan police purchased the last 200 built. 50 went straight in to service, while the other 150 were stored and drip fed into service as older units were retired.
@ChosenHandle1172 жыл бұрын
Got pulled up for speeding, not much maybe 40 in a 30... in 80s in Ickenham, W London. They were being me and had a headlight out!
@philcroxall65752 жыл бұрын
I used to drive these, my boss owned them. I've always been a petrolhead. I loved driving them.
@slartybartfarst97372 жыл бұрын
In the 70s I was on my 500 Kawasaki H1 going South through spaghetti junction Birmingham UK at 1am and I ran out of fuel (as I always did). Rolled to a stop on the hard shoulder when from no where a blue light in my face. The window rolled down and in a Brummi accent "You cant push a vehicle on the motorway" I says "OK ill leave it here". "You cant park a vehicle on the motorway" "Well what do do want me to do carry it!" I said in desperation. "Were only kidding get in we will take you to get petrol" On the journey of 10 miles they said "We saw you tanking down the Southbound do you wanna see how fast we can go?" And they did it......140mph! "She will go quicker and she handles". Learnt a few things that night. Brummi coppers love their jam sandwich Rovers, The M6 has a network of tiny side access roads the police use to get between North and South M6. Dont try outrun a Rover on a 500 Kawasaki and I want an SD1. I worked with Rover at the time on the wiring (not responsible for the gaffs) and despite this went and looked at a used twin plenum Vitesse but it got sold and I went for V12 Jag XJS. The Rover was my first choice, so adaptable 5 door hatch and fun. My modern day equivalent is my 2014 Tesla Model S. Lets say I prioritise fun over build quality, 125,000 miles of free fun, the Tesla a good choice.
@dominiquepeter11 Жыл бұрын
I drove an SD1 for 3 years. A 3500 Vandenplas built 1983. It had the standard 2 SU carburettors and a manual gear box. I bought it second hand in 1988 with 150.000km on the counter and drove another 100.000 problemless km with it. It had the same silver grey exterior coulour and a light bourgondie velours interior. A beautiful combination. The engine was a delight. It had power and strong torque from low revs onwards. Its 4th gear could be used from 40 km/h onwards all the way up to 200. But in those 3 years, I got married and we bought a house, with a loan of course. And the car became too expensive to keep. Fuel consumption was on average over these 100.000km 11,5l/100km. Very good for a 3,5 V8. But still. And specifically road tax was very high. Here in BE road tax is based on engine capacity and a 3,5 litre is considered to be a luxury only for the rich. So I decided to change the car and bought a second hand Ford Sierra 2,3D. It handled pretty well actually but of course it was slow. On the other hand road tax was low and fuel consumption was only 7l/100km. Much better for the budget. I keep the Rover in my memory as a very pleasant car. Probably not the best built car ever, but a very nice looking car and what a fine engine. For pleasure I sometimes started it up, opened the bonnet and put my hands on the engine just to feel how almost vibration free it ran on idle.
@daweigo68512 ай бұрын
Great story....
@FrankWilkinson-ig6co2 ай бұрын
Where's BE please?
@ironmantooltimeАй бұрын
You're conflating Bourgogne and Burgundy into bourgondie 😂 I assume you mean red 👍
@Spartanm3333 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. Nostalgia for me. I drove an uprated Vitesse with fuel injection (maybe the twin plenum), at pace in the Police at 23 years old. To say it made me smile is an understatement. I couldn't wait to get to work... out of my 1.3 Ford Escort into this V8 supercar, my reward for completing the Police panda, then advanced training with a first. At the time, not much on the road could compete with the Police specials and once AR called time, we bought a lot of the parts and kept ours going for several years in Carcroft, SYP. Even when we had the 4WD Sierra Cosworth turbo later, it didn't have the grunt, responsiveness or RWD heroics of the Rover.
@Isochest Жыл бұрын
I can imagine a lot of Coppers loving these to drive at the time🙂
@ksynnott322 Жыл бұрын
I learned to drive in my dads diesel SD1, back then i only wished for the V8 but at 17 i think the diesel was the safer option.
@ColinSands-gn3iy6 ай бұрын
@@ksynnott322.
@liverpoolscottish64303 ай бұрын
I served in the police from 1997 until 2014. I worked with a guy who joined in the late 70's, and he drove the SD1 V8 extensively and he loved it. I knew some people in Traffic who by the late 90's, were using the superb Senator 24V. Aside from the Senator, which is still widely regarded as the best patrol vehicle the police have used, the SD1 is a favourite and it's reputation endures. In terms of sheer physical presence, the SD1 is Top Dog I think. They did look superb back in the 80's, and on the rare occasion you see one of the road today, it's a real head turner. It's a shame Rover went out of business, imagine if they had created a retro design heavily based on the SD1?
@investorbloke4 жыл бұрын
This engine wasn't just a Buick transplant, as insinuated. It was thoroughly re-designed by Rover for sand-casting and with proper steel liners to make it more robust and prevent the cracking and wear to which the Buick design was prone. Changes to oil routing and cooling were also made, as well as better carburation and, of course, later adding the electronic fuel injection we see in the series II SD1s and subsequent Land Rover products. By 1980 It's barely recognisable as having Buick ancestry. JRT (Jaguar Rover Triumph, later Austin Rover) had the potential use of the Triumph V8 as well by the 70's, so wasn't reliant on this engine although it clearly preferred to develop it so much so that it ended up with a 4.6L capacity and modern electronic injection & engine management. It is interesting to imagine the original powerplant plans for Rover: a jet turbine-powered sedan... Vitesse, indeed...
@malcolmnicholls28933 жыл бұрын
Quite so. Remember reading this a while back. Would've made the Stag a great car for the US. They gave us plenty of support and got crap.
@Daijyobanai3 жыл бұрын
I see everywhere that engine is "a Buick engine that Buick didn't want any more" but that is only the start of the story. What you said is the reason it was in everything from the P5b, P6, RR, TVR, etc etc. Rover engineering was what made it successful. And then the British govt. sold off Rover at a bargain basement price, the traitorous scum. I'm still annoyed!
@MrRea1123 жыл бұрын
@@Daijyobanai The government was a faceless administrator of a disaster caused by blood thirsty union leaders and ideologues and a hapless incompetent management. Meanwhile the engineers toiled on, sadly to no avail. Hope this makes you feel better….
@mgjohn85343 жыл бұрын
Well said C J. In the final analysis, the Rover V8 was a lot like "Trigger's Broom"... Completely reworked. Forty years ago, a less experienced me took a ride in my Boss's 3500 Vitesse. Typical ... lets see what this baby can do ... got into a massive sideways drift at speed on a loosened surface and really worried for a few seconds. Worried what I'd tell my Boss about his new car .. somehow my limited experience and probably a lot of luck, back on track and smooth as silk, continued on my way. Great cars, great days gorn forever sadly. What's triggers broom ...enjoy this :~ kzbin.info/www/bejne/gnLLaXuorruUm7s&ab_channel=MarkAlzano
@mgjohn85343 жыл бұрын
@@MrRea112 Too bluddy right! Only in the ... UK!
@jameswingrove74214 жыл бұрын
That Vitesse is something else with that performance exhaust 😍
@miekkb3 жыл бұрын
definitely....
@geoffreycarter39813 жыл бұрын
I have a US spec 3500 in Santa Barbara I am restoring. This video gives me so much inspiration! Thanks for sharing a wonderful car!
@kenon69683 ай бұрын
That's quite the undertaking in the United States, I imagine there as rare as hen's teeth.
@ironmantooltimeАй бұрын
How's it going?
@ImLeuff4 жыл бұрын
Clicked on this wanting to skip the talk and go straight to the driving bit but I couldn't stop listening to mr Tyrrell's presentation, fascinating.
@ianh96964 жыл бұрын
@Richard Harrold What are those myths you are talking about? Educate us please.
@dlittlester4 жыл бұрын
@Richard Harrold I used to work at a GM dealer (17 years) and I had lots of people asking for parts for their GM marine engine. I had to tell them I had no catalogues and couldn't guarantee interchangeability. Sent them on their way. I learned my lesson when working for a Volvo car dealer. Boaters would try to fool me by ordering parts for a car to use on their boats, thinking they would be cheaper. I remember selling a water pump for a B20 engine to one of these people. He was back a short time later with pump in hand, melted by the salt water. The cars used aluminum pumps, and the boats use cast iron.
@jazzdub4958 Жыл бұрын
I grew up a stone's throw from the old British Leyland factory on Drews Lane in Birmingham in the late 1970s as a little nipper walking to school looking at all the cars thru the fence railings and on occasion seeing these Rover Vitesse beasts in the vast carpark at the side of the main building. Loved how immensely powerful looking they were on the road amongst the Austin Princess' and the MG Montego's lol. Those were the days. Great video, brings back the fond memories.
@JamesDean211210 ай бұрын
What a fantastic car, My first car at 20 years old was a Rover Three Thousand Five (P6 S1 3500) I bought that car to restore, it was a running car in Tobacco Leaf brown and I restored it to a factory look and finished it with Brigade Red. Fantastic car, lovely smooth engine, superb handling. I loved it, it introduced me to a lot of friends via the clubs and got me to a lot of places. I showed it at the NEC twice in one year, went to no end of other shows, even the Rover factory. I had a blast with that P6. It's changed hands a couple of times since myself and is now on the south coast. I'm now 31 and on my 4th Jag although a lot more modern. XK next on the list :D
@paulleggett97354 жыл бұрын
I would rather have this than any of the other cars you've shown. The perfect mix. People can be snooty if they like but what a sound.
@TheManifattura4 жыл бұрын
I had this car for several years until Gemany introduced the catalytic converter regulation. Of all the cars I had, my Rover Vitesse was my great love and will remain in my memory. PS. Many laps on the Nürburgring with the Rover Vitesse were a real pleasure. Greetings from Germany.
@sportshatch4 жыл бұрын
It's not just the wonderful cars, but your incredible knowledge of the cars and their history. Many thanks.
@911engineguy3 жыл бұрын
This comment made me wonder- does he write and memorise a script? How can someone know soooo much???
@thomasdoran23632 жыл бұрын
I bought one in/around 1992 for about £300 at a Car Auction . . . . . it didn't even get me all the way home, before it broke down - Ha ha ha ha Still, I fixed it, and then enjoyed about 2-3 good years in that wet, damp-smelling, rusty car driving from Preston, to Cleveleys every day at 5.00am on almost empty roads - I even fabricated a side exit exhaust that exited just in front of the rear wheel arch - lovely A Great tail-happy, easy to control, car, in wet conditions - big, Big, BIG, fun for a young lad in his late 20's & for embarrassingly cheap money (except for the running costs!)
@liverpoolscottish64303 жыл бұрын
The sound of that V8 is absolutely glorious through that performance exhaust. It's very reminiscent of Steve McQueen's 68 fastback Mustang in, 'Bullitt.' What a sublime machine, despite it's build quality issues, I can forgive the SD1 for any of it's failings. It's a superb piece of styling by David Bache, it looks far better than any contemporary mass produced car on offer today, it oozes character and charisma. Brilliant video- many thanks! :)
@richardwoodhouse8397 Жыл бұрын
Bullet was the first thing I thought
@liverpoolscottish64303 ай бұрын
@@richardwoodhouse8397 Can you imagine how the SD1 would be regarded today had BL been able to build them to the same standard that BMW built the E30 and E34 too? It's a stunning piece of design that still looks very fresh today. It's extremely galling that BL had a world beating design, and the fudged the build quality and ruined it's chances.
@bernhardwagner57494 жыл бұрын
Great video for a great car. The shape is absolutely timeless. At the moment I am restoring a 3500 from 1978 (in normal case I restore clocks and watches, but I love british cars). One day a friend called me, and asked if I want an old Rover. I said no because I had too many projects. Then he said, that if I dont take it, it will be scrapped, so I had to save it and am now very happy to own it. I hope, that it will be back on the road next year, after 30 years of standing in a barn. I can´t wait for your next video. It is always a joy. It would be great to see a video from you of a Scimitar in the future. Many thanks for your work!
4 жыл бұрын
@@johnsmith1474 So forgettable that everyone remembers it... you dope.
@skylined55343 жыл бұрын
@@johnsmith1474 Hahaha what are you smoking? What a numpty 😂😂😂
@1dejer3 жыл бұрын
You just proved to all of us who know that you have never driven a tuned manual Vitesse...
@stephanusdutoit37964 жыл бұрын
Just opened KZbin with my first coffee of the Sunday morning as a South African in Kansas USA.. Good memories of my Dad's six cylinder 2600. Great start of the day.
@patrickz79084 жыл бұрын
Tyrrell driving that Vitesse with some real finesse!
@joelsmith93113 жыл бұрын
This was such a great car. A friend of mine used to have one of these in manual (a twin plenum), and we drove from the UK to Le Mans in France in it several times back in the day. It was so comfy and practical but looked awesome with a really staunch, low-slung stance on the road - and that assertive front end gave it real presence. For a big car, it never looked clumsy - unlike the Porsche Panamera of today, which I suppose is a similar sort of car. I remember driving the SD1 down "the road to Morley", a beautiful, curving, sweeping road that goes for miles and miles with barely any traffic - and although the steering was a bit light and uncommunicative, the car handled beautifully. Grippy, neutral, engaging and fast, with great punch from that V8. Thanks for bringing back the memories!
@thebitlot3 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised with a 110 inch wheelbase and a 185 inch length it was considered a large car. Over here in the US, most 'large cars' had wheelbases of 115 or more and a length 200 or more.
@joelsmith93113 жыл бұрын
@@thebitlot Yes, that's Britain for you! Our roads and cars have always tended to be much smaller than those in the USA, I think the price of petrol also had something to do with it. I remember thinking that the 3.9 litre V8 in that SD1 was ENORMOUS - most "ordinary" cars in Britain at the time were 2 litres or less with only 4 cylinders usually.
@thebitlot3 жыл бұрын
@@joelsmith9311 It makes me wonder how it shaped the culture differently overseas than here. Like here, up until the oil crisis, the rule was 'no replacement for displacement.' We drove big bulky cars with pushrod engines that spat smog into the air with reckless abandon. We cruised on our motorized couches across hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles of land. And really, the SD1 looks so ahead of its time. Look at what the US was driving in the late 70s to early 80s. The SD1 looks like an early 90s GM W Body (Pontiac Grand Prix, Buick Regal, et al), before the W body. The only way you can tell the thing is from the 70s is the overwhelming amount of BROWN.
@richardprior65013 жыл бұрын
Rover was a fine Car Company before British Leyland acquired it. I owned 2 Rover 2000s & a Tuned 3500 SD1. It was a toss up whether I preferred the uverall quality of the TC and its moderate outright performance or the stronger power, and practicality of the SD1. I habitually cruised the TC at 3 figure speeds safely on wet roads. Brother, a Petrol head also owned an SD1 amongst a ggarage history of 1980s-1990s TVRs (Chimeras & Tuscan) and a good looking DB7. (My garage can be viewed at "RPrior Autocar") The SD1 combined practicality of a family car with strong sporting aspirations. Great Aunt Alice set our hearts on Rover with a fine example of a 1949 Rover 75.
@marcushull124 жыл бұрын
Always loved SD1`s , TVR used the engines too and love the dash design where the the passenger vent is the sterring column hole for left hand drive , so it all "just" swaps over , great idea
@barukkazhad8998 Жыл бұрын
Had one of these as a lad.....if I ever get rich I will have another ...lovely motor
@leeryan1969Ай бұрын
Not 'if' but 'when' 😁😇
@rivaterrier4 жыл бұрын
That lovely little V8 sounds delightful. I do remember the Vitesse being referred to as the poor man’s Aston. Poor is a relative term!
@Haffschlappe3 ай бұрын
Well in Germany it was as expensive as a Jaguar XJ12
@BigCar24 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video as always. Thanks!
@iain_tyrrell4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Enjoy yours too :-)
@BigCar24 жыл бұрын
@@iain_tyrrell Love to do a collaboration sometime if you have an idea for a subject.
@iain_tyrrell4 жыл бұрын
I’m up for that but Not quite sure what would fit! Any ideas or suggestions welcome
@MrTitaniumBG3 жыл бұрын
Dad had one talked about it all the time, he’s passed now but I’d love to be able to buy one and restore it
@szymeklawik76363 жыл бұрын
@Greenboff, there's a lovely one selling on eBay 6.5k
@MrTitaniumBG3 жыл бұрын
@@szymeklawik7636 I’ve seen it, light blue, looks really nice Unfortunately looking to buy my first home in the next year or so. Don’t think the mrs would be pleased If I bought it. Hopefully at some point in the future
@nicklloyd92913 жыл бұрын
@@MrTitaniumBG Bloody wives.. I had the opportunity to buy an immaculately restored Opel Kadett Rallye Coupe, she torpedoed my plans.. We're still married, she's happy, but I'm filled with bitter regret every time I look at her face and think about that car. 😢
@brianwhittington50863 жыл бұрын
Go for the highest spec V8 series 2 you can find as they're better trimmed and built, unless you prefer the early series 1 look. Preferably a manual V8 of either series, they can be more economical, you'll get over 30mpg on a run if you maintain and drive it carefully. The V8 is well proven, and they have less mechanical issues than the 4/6 cylinder petrol or diesel engined models.
@miekkb3 жыл бұрын
@@nicklloyd9291 glad u keep her happy....hopefully u can keep ur dream alive and have it someday...
@steelscooter3 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic car. Spacious, comfortable and great looking with a ripper engine. Would love to own one. 🤤
@matthewbrown20374 жыл бұрын
I'd seen this car in the background of your last couple of videos and thought of asking if you'd feature it. But when you look around at the other machinery in your place, at any one time, didn't think there would be any chance, so thank you. I love these cars, and growing up a couple of miles away from Cowley, in Oxfordshire, there were BL products everywhere, many of which owned by people who worked at the plant, so you could see how far they were up the food chain. One of my friends dad's had an oporto red Vitesse, which I thought was fantastic, especially as I really hated almost everything else that company made at the time. I managed to get a 1983 Vitesse, single "plenum", when I was 19. It was £550, so you can imagine it wasn't exactly mint, but it was solid, had a good strong motor, and, surprisingly, all the electrical items worked. I loved this car, and still miss it today, but alas, after six months of crippling, foot permanently welded to the floor, single digit fuel consumption, it had to go. I'd never let anyone drive it before, so had never heard it from the outside, and when the guy who bought it pulled off the driveway and floored it, I felt like crying, as I really hadn't wanted to sell it. I did get another SD1 a couple of years later, this time an 85 Vanden Plas, as it was far too cheap not to buy it, and although I still really liked it, it had the automatic box, and softer suspension, so it wasn't as fun, although still just as greedy when it came to fuel! Unfortunately, the engine let go whilst racing a 205 GTI on the A40, so that was the end of that. I would love to have another Vitesse one day, this time a TP, but like you said, they are getting very rare now, and don't often come up for sale. Besides, the last one I saw they were asking £15k!!Back in the mid 90's when I had mine, a really nice one was only about £2-2.5k.
@goonerinSP3 жыл бұрын
My mum had one of these. 3.5l. Used to be taken to school in it, and the sound was just really cool. Best car outside the school by far hehe.
@Fireblade9184 жыл бұрын
Just to say one of best videos I've seen on youtube. Not the V8 but I had a 2.3 straight 6 SD1 on a V plate 1980 the car was 5 yrs old when I bought it and had heard all types of horror stories about the 2.3 engine, but, it never missed a beat, all you said about that car was true, a great trip down memory lane, thank you.
@stewartsteinecke73014 жыл бұрын
I had the straight 6 auto in my late teens. Such a fun car.
@reglockyer92343 жыл бұрын
@@stewartsteinecke7301 i had the straight six manual.,no electric windows or even power steering but with all those things missing,was even lighter and went like a rocket.3.0S Capris had no chance.
@peterroycroft81623 жыл бұрын
When the 3500 Rover Vitesse was launched in 1982, I was working for a part of Rover at the time and fondly remember driving a metallic blue Vitesse from North Wales down to London (and back the same day) to attend a concert in 1986. What a fun car to drive and the sound it made was glorious.
@tonybalm15134 жыл бұрын
Just love the sound of those Rover V8's. My friends Grandma had the Vitesse Auto.
@Chillmax2 жыл бұрын
Love old ladies with big cars, my Auntie Queenie had a V8 Stag ;-)
@peterdevreter4 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, this was the most beautiful shape of a car ever. Later I learned that they were slapped together by striking workers in the factory with poor quality. But the shape and design.....just epic.
@MLB90004 жыл бұрын
And then the Japanese started selling cars in the UK
@1776-r4j4 жыл бұрын
@@johnsmith1474 Fair points, but the construction of those substandard bit and pieces was shockingly shoddy. No matter how good the parts are, if the guy screwing them together doesn't care you end up with a crap car. And those guys didn't care!
@murrieteacher4 жыл бұрын
@@1776-r4j the workers didn't care, management didn't care. Management made no effort to improve design, construction or service support. Along came the Japanese, with a completely different philosophy. They gave service, support and a willingness to listen to all staff. To listen to buyers, to listen to those that sold the cars. To listen to the people that fixed the faults. They didn't assume that the worker, owner or the seller didn't know anything. They didn't assume that management was some type of superior being. And the union bosses at the Japanese plants also took an interest in the well being of the company. See the philosophy of the person that made Toyota vehicles. The failure of the British car industry falls firmly on the shoulders of both management AND workers. And Australia inherited the same attitude and went the same way. If you want to experience build and service buy a Lexus, a Hyundai or KIA. If it breaks, they are there to support you.
@matty68484 жыл бұрын
Also it was poor management and militant unions that was the death sentence for Rover.
@1776-r4j4 жыл бұрын
@@murrieteacher A great shame that it all wound up the way it did.
@wendellfugate4225 Жыл бұрын
So very nice. Many thanks.
@fizzysausage2 жыл бұрын
As a young driver in the 80’s I always had desires on this V8 Rover and it’s beautiful rumble. Great to see that they are still around and there are some extremely clean examples of them around today. Superb insight into the history of this car, love the detail. Keep up the great work on the channel.
@juliethomasbutler99912 жыл бұрын
it brought back lots of fond memories of my first job at rover in 1984 working on sd1s and for the next 34 years with ,Rover,BMW,Ford,JLR
@glenkelly9984 жыл бұрын
My mate bought one in the mid eighties with some compensation he got from a bike accident, we went out in it one night for a kebab, Stockport to Birmingham and back flat out. Brilliant 😃
@truthseeker84834 жыл бұрын
Kebabs in the eighties?...surprised...
@glenkelly9984 жыл бұрын
First kebab shop opened in London in 1971 🌮
@hughoxford87354 жыл бұрын
What compensation did he have to pay for the car accident?
@glenkelly9984 жыл бұрын
@@hughoxford8735 He was knocked off his Yamaha RD 250 by a car doing a U turn in the road. He bought the Rover with the compensation he received for his injuries.
@glenkelly9984 жыл бұрын
@@truthseeker8483 I think the meat was better back then 🥩
@TheOmniscientAtheist4 жыл бұрын
If Britain could be summed up in a car this would be it, talented, classy, a little old fashioned, surprisingly powerful with a splash of help from our American friends, quite thirsty, and don't forget appallingly managed.
@memomomomomo1854 жыл бұрын
Spot on!!
@RobGordon354 жыл бұрын
That's a little idealistic. They trashed the Uk motor industry and got rid of manufacturing to replace it with the oil money from Scotland. Here's how I would sum up Britain: 'it all could have been so great.' -Just like the Rover.
@peterolley71594 жыл бұрын
Brilliant comment mate I love it
@Smarterthanyou-mthrfkr4 жыл бұрын
Dont forget bad teeth😂
@Locost594 жыл бұрын
Bedlington it was futuristic when it came out. Look at what Mercedes and BMW were making then. Audi were up against the Princess, not the SD1.
@slipslider90482 жыл бұрын
My friend’s Dad had one of these in the 80s and I remember being impressed with the interior and the acceleration.. It’s like a British muscle car!
@SWR1123 жыл бұрын
Oh yes…..Love the SD1’s they were on the roads when I was a kid early teens. It’s the kid of Car I love to take on a summers day from Thirsk to Scarborough through all the lovely little villages and i’m saying that only driven the road in question on Holidays. To the owner you have been looking after it well after all you brought it to the Workshop but please keep doing it and know when you do take it out your giving a fair few a wee smile that see it on the road.
@nouvalari4 жыл бұрын
Ouch! Back down memory lane. I used to work for Rovercraft back in the day, so this became one of my favourite engines and cars to work on. So many things were different back then, and i was not a question of re mapping or bolting on goodies, it was down to the engineering talents of the Law brothers Simon and Nick. Watched many a V8 on the rolling road exceed demands. Great video as usual.
@johnperkins92454 жыл бұрын
Great to see you back Iain. I'm in Melbourne in isolation and it's late at night. I noticed the new episode had been uploaded 10 Mins earlier and bloody hell you've already got 30 comments. You'll be up to 3 million in no time.- Well done - keep up the good work.
@saadabdulsamad24924 жыл бұрын
Hands down the best automotive channel on KZbin followed by Harry and Jay lenos Garage . True top class gentleman 👍
@d-d-i4 жыл бұрын
I personally follow these: - This - Harry's Garage - Jay Leno - Doug Demuro - Hagerty - Goodwood Road & Racing - 19Bozzy92, Italiansupercarvideo, MattyB727 (three dudes doing recordings from same events) - VHS Rallies - The Fastlane Basically, the best of the best.
@buggerlugz67534 жыл бұрын
@@d-d-i - I'd recommend Bad Obsession Motorsport too!
@amcluesent4 жыл бұрын
After Goonzsquad!
@johnmetermaid4 жыл бұрын
@@d-d-i Good list. I will follow up with mine in no particular order - Alex on Autos - Ratarossa - ISSIMI Official - SpeedKar99 -19Bozzy92 _ Harry's Garage _ PeterBjorck _ Speed Academy _Hagerty _ Leno _ Big Car _Sloppy Mechanics _ Robert DIY ( a little Volvo help and instruction) _Regular Car Review _ Edd China ( he is stopped again after a few starts on YT when things expired for him on wheeler dealer) _ Jay Emm on Cars _ Savage Geese . . . A few local ones that are of personal interest but now that I see my listing, it appears I might have an obsession issue after all. I would rank this at minimum Top 5 at this point. Very much stop what I am doing to view Tyrells latest offerings.
@MrTimstaaa4 жыл бұрын
Totally agree.
@darrensmith69992 жыл бұрын
Wow !!!! worked for AR Dealer in the 80s, thanks for giving this care some love and help preserve some British motoring history (:
@AELFRAEDsK2 жыл бұрын
I had a van den Plas 3500 for 10 years. My friend took it apart and completely rebuild it. Had to sell it moving to Canada. I still miss it. I loved the roar of the engine. The manual transmission was great. Tuning the two carburetors was lots of fun. I drove it on propane and found out that the hoses to the carburetors had to be of equal length after 8 years.. than it had as much power as on gasoline. Thanks for this great video.
@chrisflemington8194 жыл бұрын
My late father had an automatic version of this car and I recall it’s amazing performance as well as it’s stunning looks. Your video bought back some memories of my driving it whilst he was abroad on business trips which I enjoyed a lot. I’m not surprised you’ve reached the number of subscribers you mentioned as I always look for honesty and integrity when I subscribe and your videos always portray that to a high degree. Many thanks and please keep them coming. Regards, Chris
@andysedgley4 жыл бұрын
It's "its" not "it's"
@pirellli834 жыл бұрын
such a great representer! i simply love the way he describes all the details, great man. A salute from germany, where guys like him dont exist. By the way, what the rover is capable of, has been shown from chris harris in a classic race...
@ChosenHandle1172 жыл бұрын
Iain and Harry are two of a kind! We are lucky.
@alech83364 жыл бұрын
I have just watched this for the third time - what a brilliant video, great commentary. good history. My favourite KZbin channel.
@reyrob4 жыл бұрын
My father had one of these in blue back in 1984. I remember driving to Spain in it and every time he parked it somewhere, when we got back, there was always a crowd admiring it! Still gorgeous today
@stevegreene91497 ай бұрын
As hopeless as BL cars were at the time, I couldn't help but love the SD1: the body design was ahead its time and it still looked fresh in its later production life. Thanks for bringing us this video: what a fantastic example this one is. And that sound.... I'm in love!
@iain_tyrrell7 ай бұрын
Pleasure- totally agree. The SD1 was a potential world- beater, and a missed opportunity
@whitemoor664 жыл бұрын
Absolutely superb. Back in the early 90's as a Land Rover apprentice I lusted after a colleagues twin plenum vitesse and always told him I'd buy it given the chance. He then gave me the chance when I had no money! Regretted ever since not buying it, for what today would be considered buttons!
@iknklst4 жыл бұрын
What an absolute gem. Thanks for showcase, much appreciated.
@MACLAD6666 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for letting me hear that engine again and 140 mph was so smooth in one of those beast's so smooth.
@MarkJVSomers4 жыл бұрын
I'll have one of those. And also, at last a man who's not afraid to rev an engine.
@followthegrow1084 жыл бұрын
Shmee150 is the worst. Never ever revs his engines. Hes such a dweeb
@BlatentlyFakeName4 жыл бұрын
Bad for the engine's health to never use the full rev range :/
@MiltonKeynesStreetLighting4 жыл бұрын
Especially a V8!
@petersnushall24494 жыл бұрын
This is a wonderfully produced and presented story. Thank you.
@stevenspilsbury98014 жыл бұрын
When I was 15 this was a car I coverted, fast forward 40 years and it still is. What a beautiful looking car the owner has.
@davidbooker38524 жыл бұрын
Thank u 4 an amazing vid . I'm 55 now and I remember these beasts! Reminds of mad max interceptor! I think a true muscle car of it's time back in the day especially in this guise. I can c u r a true enthusiast of great cars . God bless u son.
@ErikDB63 жыл бұрын
Of all the the incredible cars I've seen on this channel, quite oddly, this is the one I want the most. It just seems like tremendous fun!
@1dejer3 жыл бұрын
Yep, it has style, AND power, AND speed, AND superb handling AND came very well equipped for it's age - AND you can fix it yourself if anything breaks - what's not to like???
@Elbowbanditest2003 Жыл бұрын
@@1dejer yeah I've heard almost nothing bad about this car from people who've owned or driven one, I wanted one before I heard all the good reveiws of it but now I want one even more
@Paul-tk2my7 ай бұрын
Always loved this car- especially with the 3.5 power plant in it. Only ever drove my mate’s 2.6 automatic. I can’t comment on Longbridge during the 70s, but worked at Land Rover all through the 90s. The workers in the British car industry get a lot of flack over quality, but I remember it quite differently. If we stopped the track for any quality/parts defect issues, we were rounded on by managers who told us to send it through, thus meeting their targets. Our competitors in Europe, especially in the luxury car market, would have addressed the issue with the suppliers and probably sought recompense for lost production, rather than sending the work through, to be reworked on overtime- on THEIR insistence. Don’t believe everything you read!
@rosschamberlain1823 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes.... the British Motor Bungling Consortium. Everybody had a fireproof job and the movers-and-shakers behind all that assumed that top-notch products would just keep rolling off the production lines. I wonder if those involved ever acknowledged the real-world consequences of their actions. Anyway, here in the U.S. the car was known as the Rover 3500. I nearly bought one off a used lot when I was young and immortal. What threw me off was seeing most of the car's electrical system piled up on the front seats. However they looked great even with the idiotic Federal 5mph bumpers and equally idiotic sealed-beam headlights. These days I'd love one. Swap in the later 4.6 version and a T-56 trans behind it, with a lot of tuning elsewhere, and even more fun would be had from one methinks! I just realized I'll have to win the Lottery now thanks to all the ideas I'm getting from this channel. Thanks a lot. :-P
@mwm222222 Жыл бұрын
Wow, I did not expect Vitesse is a such a beast !!!
@davidbarnes64108 ай бұрын
That sounds beautiful.
@Neil4Speed4 жыл бұрын
Loved this video! My father also had one in Canada, a 3500... He bought it from his English boss and loved it. Also, did its job and saved him from a drunk driver when he was T-boned... Thankfully everything was ok, otherwise, I wouldn't be writing this :)
@mjh54374 жыл бұрын
My father had one in the 1980s......Most comfortable car I ever sat in.
@cousinjack28414 жыл бұрын
That was a lovely and informative video; thanks. In '76 I was a first year impoverished first year apprentice in the Lucas Service fuel injection shop in Johannesburg. I wanted one of these V8 Rovers really badly, but they were new and way out of my range. I ended up with a Ford Granada 3.0 two door coupe though, which I loved. Happy memories.
@literallyshaking80193 жыл бұрын
Wish more SD1s found their way to the States. The soundtrack is familiar, but the album cover would definitely turn heads on this side of the pond.
@mgjohn85343 жыл бұрын
Haha.. Over here in the UK, car nuts like me watch Chasing Classic Cars .. presented by American Wayne Carini. One in the series he visited a car collector and all around his property, parked up in the woodland, a shed load of Rover SD1s. Some under tarpaulin covers. Yes, quite a few made it to the USA.
@mescko2 жыл бұрын
Actually, Rover did try to sell them here. Unfortunately, early SD1's were, let's face it, complete bodge jobs. Awful quality and reliability, coupled with the reputation Rover had already suffered in the US over the reputation of the P6, spelled doom. There were unsold SD1's sitting up to two years after it's only sales year, 1980. Later versions were much improved, but far too late. The Sterling debacle was the last time Rover tried selling in the US.
@kennycrichton34704 жыл бұрын
Let’s see the XJC in detail, please.
@MrDejast4 жыл бұрын
I agree 👍
@bradcollins96474 жыл бұрын
Yesss...please!
@Daniel53434 жыл бұрын
I completely agree, i think a video of the history of the Jaguar V12 engine would be an interesting watch, there always seems to be a plentiful supply of Jaguar's in Ian's workshop.
@Gavin-oq5tt4 жыл бұрын
From a boy, always loved the 3500 - seemed very modern at the time. Another vote for the XJC please!
@arronjones69854 жыл бұрын
XJC for me too. 👌
@davidhynd44354 жыл бұрын
Another amazing British Leyland "If only". So many wasted opportunities. As soon as we invent time travel someone needs to go back to the 1970's and bang some heads together at BL.
@gplusgplus22864 жыл бұрын
And then bang them again. And again.
@gazzafloss4 жыл бұрын
Trade unions at work to dismantle industry, so consumed with themselves, now where are the jobs...
@roberttaylor74624 жыл бұрын
The Rover Solihull Plant is still in operation under JLR so point about the unions and jobs is wrong
@PenzancePete4 жыл бұрын
Right car built by the wrong people.
@paulfitzgerald75134 жыл бұрын
@@roberttaylor7462 Absolutely no thanks to the unions! They screwed everything up..
@Nathan.Guthrie4 жыл бұрын
Congrats on getting onto trending Iain and team! Very much deserved.
@mikematthews2k1813 жыл бұрын
I remember the SD1 from my old Rover mechanic days. I was also a mechanic in the Toyo Fast Road championship!. We raced an Maestro Turbo. The SD1'S where absolutely stunning on track for such a big car . Back to the boat engine theme. Remember the later Rover 825 diesel. That had individual cylinder heads because it was a marine engine.
@petersimpson83863 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic video and so nicely narrated. Just couldn't believe the pull and sound from the old Rover, you have a new subscription.
@TheSimonhammond Жыл бұрын
The best thing about this car is that it's not a boring Ford.
@andrewstoffel11704 жыл бұрын
Looked forward to this for months, one of the best cars I ever had!
@Pete...NoNotThatOne4 жыл бұрын
Andrew Stoffel you really need a moustache and a pair of Aviators to drive this. But damn that sounds nice!
@skylined55343 жыл бұрын
@@Pete...NoNotThatOne Haha that's a comical yet cool image!
@Noex63 Жыл бұрын
We used the alloy V8 alot here in Australia... my Dad had them in his Leyland truck and I could lift the engine block up as a boy... we even used them in beach buggies because they were so light and powerful
@jesperremington12043 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love Rover SD1, my dad bought brand new one in 1979
@combatwombat55352 жыл бұрын
My father had 5 in a row as company cars and my god the velour. All v8s, all manual, last one was gold…
@bjdb4 жыл бұрын
I was launched the same year and despite being a car mad child didn’t like these. Fascinating to see this one and I have more respect and some love for the dashboard. The V8 always a gem. Great to see an exotic everyday car in the workshop.
@herseem4 жыл бұрын
I actually quite liked the original dashboard with the pod containing the instruments. The passenger side vent could do with being at the side though rather than interrupting that wood strip in such an ugly way.
@muddyboots18814 жыл бұрын
Love it! What a cracking bit of kit! And it does what it says on the tin (vitesse). Rover/Leyland was an enigma - brilliant engineers vs rubbish management
@gusgornall4 жыл бұрын
And militant work force
@charlesc.90123 жыл бұрын
The Triumph Dolomite was also a great car that was let down by everything else in BL.
@benshephard95634 жыл бұрын
Quality car, thanks for sharing. I love the sound of those old V8s! It's such a shame that the build quality with British Leyland wasn't consistent. Most needed rebuilding/attention after a short time because of circumstances already mentioned. It's nice to see that some people have managed to keep them tickin' over
@mu0chn4 жыл бұрын
Lovely car. Great video, thank you. I left school in 75 and started at the local BL garage. Did a few PDI's on rovers, the 2 door range rovers and SD1's. We had the Vitesse model in and still remember a nice dark blue metallic one. MG made good use of that motor as well.
@mjiles29223 жыл бұрын
I have always loved the SD1 V8 father in law had an auto, Great engine I have a 78 Range Rover and it still works great
@RustyPetterson4 жыл бұрын
Brilliant! Thanks for listening to the requests from the audience; I was one of the people who asked for it! Iain, I'd love to know how the owners react to this - do you ask permission to feature their cars? If so, how does that conversation go? Do customers know that you have a growing following on KZbin?
@charlescrisp28144 жыл бұрын
The rover v8 was one of the great sounds of my childhood.I am nearly 38 years old and i still love the engine to this day.This vitesse sounds awesome
@LOTPOR04024 жыл бұрын
Sounded even better in a TVR
@Nige11464 жыл бұрын
I used to live opposite a bloke who had a Tr7 V8. I don't know what he'd done to it but wow it looked and sounded great also.
@spacekiller874 жыл бұрын
When the throttle opened up fully for the first time, I just started giggling :) Excellent commentary, keep up the great work!
@rods-stuff5 ай бұрын
This was a YT suggested video, and all I can say is WOW!! Thanks for the memories of my mid 20's (mid 80's - early 90's) during which time I was lucky enough to have owned 5 SD1's and had way more fun than was probably allowed. You're correct in saying they'd get to 140+ MPH, one night I had a race with a Ferrari up the A12 from Chelmsford to Colchester - it lost, but I had the pleasure of literally seeing the fuel gauge move downwards! I'd really love another one, but sadly, it will never be...
@iain_tyrrell5 ай бұрын
Thanks for your memories too! Under more normal conditions they were comparatively economical too!
@kevinhansford3929 Жыл бұрын
Sounds absolutely fantastic
@cblandblueyonder4 жыл бұрын
I do love the sound of a Rover V8 - a particularly burbley quality (this one did sound a bit more feisty than usual!). A great video as always!!
@coptotermes4 жыл бұрын
My brother had an SD1 back in the eighties, such a lovely car to look at. I remember he had some horrible electrical problems with it, lol. I Particularly remember a trip we did from Geraldton to Perth in West Aus at night. It was about 360km and I drove most of it. It was my first experience driving a European car On an empty dark highway and it was fantastic, yep we broke the speed limit a few times that night... You didn’t mention that the same engine was used in a bunch of other British car brands. I had the pleasure to own a Triumph TR7 V8 in the mid nineties, a 1982 model I think. Fantastic car with such an awesome V8 exhaust note! I really wish I still had that car now... sigh.
@lancewhite36313 жыл бұрын
I used to go to the drive- in cinema as a kid in South Africa in that model.I remember the the interior lights for the passengers in the rear.For that I thought it was such a cool car. Now I see it has much more than cool interior lighting ? lol
@wadehampton44994 жыл бұрын
Always watch this channel. Iain's knowledge is encyclopaedic, he just makes everything interesting and clearly loves what he does for a living. I particularly relish the mechanical and bodywork rebuild and restoration content, the piece on the yellow Miura was nothing short of fascinating. It's the best car oriented channel (although Harry Metcalfe and M539 Restorations come quite close)
@markdoyle64147 ай бұрын
That's the best thing I've heard on KZbin.
@markmoore26252 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic video. That snarling V8 sound is hypnotic. Your subject knowledge is top notch and professionally presented. I'll be watching more of this channel from now on.
@mr.pac.46144 жыл бұрын
It’s great to see some old classics again. Brings back memories of my old 3.5 SD1, Lovely sound.
@MaShcode4 жыл бұрын
The dash layout really stands out for its compactness, quite unique for late 70’s car design engineering. Interesting story. Thank you.
@pdsnpsnldlqnop33304 жыл бұрын
The passenger air vent get me though. For LHD/RHD this air vent filled the hole not used by the steering wheel hence its location. The odd thing is that I wish more cars were built this way, for instance with mirrors, door handles and other parts that could go either side to cut down on the parts list.
@michaelhayward75724 жыл бұрын
@@johnsmith1474 concur. Dreadful cheap looking interior and dash. That steering wheel! What were they thinking? However... that motor and manual box! I've been in some tuned 4.2, 4.6 versions in the passenger seat - scary fast.
@ingopaul674 жыл бұрын
Was very futuristic for the 70s, now reminds me of the new digital dash on the Merc A Class.
@carmadme4 жыл бұрын
The whole cluster was also the same I believe it was simply screwed down to the dash
@daveshongkongchinachannel4 жыл бұрын
Another great classic from my childhood and what a lovely example. Great to see you actually driving it properly too and not just walking around it and admiring it.
@evo5dave3 жыл бұрын
I love how this guy just stands there without a script, sharing an enormous knowledge of these cars.
@chrispearse56162 жыл бұрын
Loved this video, my Dad had 2 SD1s, the first was the 2600 which was smashed up during its first service by the dealer and the second a V8 3500 that followed being loaned said dealer’s MDs V8 whilst the first was repaired! Courtesy of James Edwards in Chester. Travelled all over Europe as a family in it, Spain, Italy, Germany etc and the car stayed in the family it’s whole career with my Grandad and Uncle having afterwards.
@stephen98694 жыл бұрын
4 minutes in and I have subscribed. I like this presenter.
@minatormyth4 жыл бұрын
Wow brings back memories. I had a twin plenum vitesse, for a year or so. Also fitted one to a Triumph TR7 convertible and twin turbocharged it using Janspeed manifolds (another name from the past ey😉) This was years before the internet so it was down to studying books like David Hardcastles book on the Rover V8. My engine even had a girdle and was stroked for a bigger capacity, the turbos were T0-4Bs🤔 Miss both cars🤗 Great channel this, thanks🤗
@93455Driver4 жыл бұрын
Look at the visibility out of the greenhouse, amazing how thick A pillars have become. Had a factory V8 MGB for a short time, characterful car for sure.
@hughoxford87354 жыл бұрын
A pillars are now so thick it's a liability. I have a Toyota Yaris and it's a real problem.
@keithshop13 жыл бұрын
Tony Pond, legend!
@lawnmowerjones31606 ай бұрын
I had an early SD1 V8 Manual about 30 years ago, i would love to get another one one day, Great review thanks.