It would be naïve to suggest that the Oliver Winterbottom-styled Tasmin, launched more than a decade after the Trident’s demise, was Martin completing unfinished business, but it is ironic that by the time the Tasmin reached production the ‘wedge’ style was already looking dated, while the Trident would have been at the forefront of the new wave.
The benefit of distance has damped Martin’s anger, and today he is philosophical about the Trident, saying: “We should have done it, but it’s just one of those things.
“At that stage we didn’t have the money to build it so we stuck with the 1800S. It would have been nice if we could have built it as a TVR; it would have been quite a different ballgame.”
And how. It is impossible to know how TVR’s fortunes would have turned out had the Trident reached production, but it’s certain that it would have matured into a more rounded car maker, one capable of more than the overpowered, under-engineered white-knuckle rides for which it will be remembered.
Just as the Cobra evolved into the sophisticate AC 428, a swift, elegant GT born of a blood-and-guts racer for the road, so its on-track rival the Griffith could – and should – have spawned the Trident.
Like the AC, it will go down in history as one of the car industry’s great missed opportunities.
Images: Tony Baker
Thanks to: David Gerald TVR Sportscars
This was first in our September 2008 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
TVR Tina: Fiore, Fissore and Lilley’s other collaboration
The TVR Tina was a Hillman Imp Sport-based design by Fiore and built by Fissore
Although relatively unsung, Trevor Fiore was a big hitter in the realm of ’60s British low-volume sports cars.
“I first got to know about Frost when I was at Chelsea College [of Art & Design],” says Martin Lilley. “He was doing the Elva [GT160] and I was a mad enthusiast – I had been building cars since I was 16.”
Fiore also designed the Bond Equipe 2-litre, and the Trident wasn’t his only project for TVR.
In 1965, Martin asked Fiore to come up with a Hillman Imp Sport-based baby 2+2.
“I went out to Fissore for a fair bit of time, designing it from scratch,” he says. “Trevor was a good body designer, but he didn’t do chassis design at all.”
It was built by Fissore and named Tina after the daughter of Gerry Marshall, Martin’s friend and colleague – he ran Lilly’s Barnet Motor Co when Martin went to save TVR.
A convertible was unveiled at the 1966 Turin Salon, joined by a pretty coupé (above) for the London Motor Show later in the year.
Strong interest prompted the Hoo Hill works to announce the car would go on sale in early 1968. But even with glassfibre bodies instead of the prototypes’ steel, the volumes required to make a profit were beyond the factory’s capabilities.
“We were trying to get a tie-up with Rootes and Jensen,” explains Martin, “but the figures didn’t add up. So it was back to the old, ‘genuine’ TVRs.”
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Alastair Clements
Alastair is Editor in Chief of Classic & Sports Car and has been associated with the brand for more than 20 years