TUESDAY - Early sprint up the M1 to Cosworth, to watch the bosses of the new TVR company, Les Edgar and John Chasey, fire up their new car’s Le Mans V8 engine for the first time.
It was a stirring occasion, not just because of the epic way the engine performed and sounded (at one stage, the dyno shut itself down because torque exceeded anticipated limits) but for the joy on the faces of the company’s backers, car lovers of the highest order.
As anyone in business knows, you have to wade through plenty of boring stuff to set up a new car company, but this was definitely one of the better parts of their job.
The fire-up was great news for prospective TVR buyers, too: Chasey and Edgar insist there will be a clear and simple relationship between the car you buy for the road and the edition they race at Le Mans.
As for Cosworth, it’s years since I’ve visited the famous Northampton-based engine maker. It was a bit of a shock to see how rapidly the company has developed into a highly mechanised maker of ultra-high-tech components.
WEDNESDAY - Into central London to meet Mitsubishi’s chairman and CEO, Osamu Masuko, who was in the UK to pat local employees and dealers on the back for lifting Outlander PHEV’s UK sales into the stratosphere.
Our interview was conducted through an interpreter, and such encounters can sometimes be a bit flat. Not this one. It was soon clear that Masuko-san speaks good English. He was also amusing and full of fascinating info.
Japan’s big interest in battery electric cars is helping to drive world electric car progress, he told me. In 2009, Mitsubishi’s new i-MiEV had a cruising distance of 93 miles and its battery cost £11,000. Now the figures are 124 miles and around £4000. Even quicker progress is coming, he says, with the pollution-hating Japanese government doing more than most to drive it.
THURSDAY - Quick visit to Zenos, the Norfolk-based sports car maker whose two founders used to run Caterham Cars. When they were there, the indomitable pair came up with a proposal for some impressive modern variants, but the shareholders didn’t adopt their ideas, so they set up a company of their own. This was my first sight of their terrific aluminium backbone chassis, and I must say I was deeply impressed.
Despite Lotus and its 50-year history at nearby Hethel, I still find it curious that such go-ahead companies as Zenos can thrive so far from The Smoke or what motorsport types call the Oxford Triangle.
Newly appointed Zenos CEO Mark Edwards says Lotus suppliers and ex-Lotus technicians living locally make talent abundant. “We find the supply chain will travel,” he says, “but the skills won’t.”
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Superstevie, I couldnt agree
I would normally berate the
Proud Britain