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eyland Rover BS experimental car
Three-seater experimental BS (B = Buick) (S = Sport) Grand Tourer with 3.5 litre V8 engine
amidships; superb traction and roadholding; 140 m.p.h. and tremendous acceleration,
comfortable and refined.
For the past eight years, mid-engined cars have utterly dominated the international
racing scene yet the influence of this reigning breed on production sports and GT design
has been virtually nil. The handful of extravagant exotics like Ferrari, Lamborghini and Ford's
GT 40 are separated from the clutch of much cheaper, but largely impractical,
mid-engined fun cars like the Lotus Europa and Unipower GT by only one really sane
member of the family, Matra's M530. And even on this, the major inherent advantage
of the layout a rearward weight bias for good traction is barely exploited by the
engine's modest power. (Anyone who has driven, say, an American sporting compact will
know all about the embarrassing limitations of wet-road adhesion in a powerful
front-engined rear-drive car). But traction isn't the only advantage of a midengined road car:
with the engine tucked away behind, the bonnet can be short and raked to give a commanding view out,
while lightly laden front wheels permit featherweight, yet high geared, steering without recourse
to power assistance. The only real stumbling block, so we had been led to believe by most existing
designs, was how to fit people and luggage round an engine and gearbox that occupied so much
valuable space in the structure.
Enter, here, the Leyland Rover BS experimental car which not only convincingly endorses
the predictable virtues of a mid-engined layout but also demonstrates that ingenuity
can overcome the problem of accommodation, even in a compact car with a wheelbase
only three inches longer than that of an MGB.
So we will not explain here how and why it came into existence.
Briefly, it was designed as a really modern, compact grand tourer that could match
the best sporting machinery in traction, roadholding and performance, and a
civilized saloon in comfort and refinement at a selling price of around £1,500.
It is a very low, striking, three seater which is no more impractical than a 2+2
with a slightly tuned 185 b.h.p. version of Rover's light alloy 3.5 litre V8, nestling
suitably shrouded to keep the noise level impressively low-behind your neck (or by your
side if you are in the back as the engine is offset to the right): it drives the massive
back wheels through a four-speed manual gearbox. Whether you use all the gears or not
(and the notchy change did not inspire frequent ratio changes) the performance is
terrific and the traction, despite the car's modest weight of little more than a
ton, probably superior to that of any other road car around.
As a secret prototype, it had never been driven in earnest on public roads before our
testing session in the Scottish Highlands so we discovered, perhaps before even Rover
found out for themselves, how supremely agile and inspiring it is to drive fast, despite
a few detail faults like excessively low-geared steering, spongy brakes and an unprogressive
throttle action all of which would very quickly be eradicated by further development.
To us, perhaps the most impressive thing about the car is that it could almost have passed for a
fully-sorted, finished product: it is hard to believe that, as a low-priority project, it has in
fact undergone little more than spare time development since being
built (at the Alvis factory) straight from Spen King's design office using as many existing Rover
components as possible.
Safe, usable performance was only part of the brief, though, because the BS, even in this one-off
prototype form, is quite a refined and comfortable car. Like the Rover 2000 (from which the de
Dion rear suspension comes) it rides superbly without pitch or roll, and little or no further
work would be necessary to reduce the already faint wind and road noise. While there are inevitable
deficiencies and faults in the car's equipment, it is significant that, were we to treat this as a
normal road test report, our criticisms would be aimed only at details, not fundamentals.
To have got a car so very nearly right without any serious development suggests not only competent
design work but also that the finished product really could be a world beater.
Performance and economy
To changes to the carburation and exhaust of the otherwise
standard lightweight V8 boosted power to 185 b.h.p. 25 more than the big 3.5 litre coupe has in
a car weighing half a ton less. The resultant healthy power/weight ratio of 175 b.h.p. per
ton spells capital P Performance. Even in this still relatively mild state of tune the BS
will match a 4.2 E-type to 100 m.p.h. and actually beat it to 60 m.p.h. Consider
that the engine is capable of giving well over 300 b.h.p. and that the prototype's
drag coefficient could no doubt be improved and you begin to realise the car's enormous
untapped potential, not just for high-speed road work but perhaps for competition too.
Clearly, the car's maximum speed was much too fast for MIRA's banked track; as we didn't
take it abroad, either, the exact top speed remains unknown both to us and to Rover,
who have never fully extended the car. Assuming it could reach peak power revs (5,200 r.p.m.)
in top, though, the maximum would be somewhere around the 140 m.p.h. mark in its present form;
but with 300 b.h.p. in a more aerodynamic shell....
Restricted breathing on the standard V8 limits its effective r.p.m. to little more than 5,000 before
the power tails off. The modified BS version, which inhales through bigger carburetters and discharges
through a free-flow exhaust, has a hearty, responsive pull from 600 to 6,000 r.p.m. (mechanically,
the engine is safe to even higher speeds though not with the standard hydraulic tappets as oil
frothing can occur and destroy the lifting cushion). Despite exceptionally high gearing the engine
will pull from under 20 m.p.h. in top in a brisk, clean surge, the rise in torque as the revs
increase just about matching the build up in drag, witness the 80-100 m.p.h. time of 9.1 seconds barely
a second longer than that needed from 20 to 40 m.p.h. Third gear performance is even more impressive
as it will thump the car vigorously from 10 to 100 m.p.h. (no 20 m.p.h. increase takes more than 4
to 6 seconds) and is therefore a splendid B road ratio that will drag you smartly out of sharp
corners and waffle along smoothly at 70 m.p.h. between them.
There were, however, two distinct and separate vibration periods on the prototype which marred its
otherwise silken pull. One a hard rat-a-tat-was evident under vicious acceleration in first or second,
and possibly caused by engine torque twisting the exhaust, or some other component, into physical
contact with the chassis: the other, which Rover thought could be eliminated by changing the engine
mounts, was a much milder shake at about 2,500 r.p.m. Apart from this, the V8 was magnificent:
it 'blipped' like a racing engine and even the exhaust note well muffled but sufficiently strident
at high revs to be exciting seemed just right for a refined sports car, though the intake hiss
from the carburetters (displayed above the engine deck in a transparent plastic eye which stares
at you through the mirror) could well be reduced. As there were no silencing air filters in the
big 2-inch SUs it is surprising, really, that there isn't even more intake roar.
As in performance, so in economy, the BS is uncannily like the E-type: for both, the top gear
consumption curve extends from around 30 m.p.g. at 30 m.p.h. to 20 m.p.g. at 100 m.p.h.,
the Jaguar's bigger engine perhaps being offset by better streamlining. All our spirited
test driving was done on deserted roads in Argyllshire the sort of streak and brake driving
which, from past experience, we have found to be the heaviest on fuel. So it is quite likely
that under more typical conditions, our overall consumption would have been well into the twenties.
And for a three-seater 140 m.p.h. car, you can't grumble at that.
Transmission
Reference to the description and drawing will reveal details of the ingenious transmission design.
From the driver's viewpoint, though, it seems entirely conventional except for a slight whine in
top which betrays that all the gears are indirect. In fact third gear, unusually, is quieter than top,
another point in its favour for secondary road driving. The strengthened, offset 2000 manual gearbox,
driven by a chain from the clutch on the forward end of the engine, has a splendid set of ratios
closely spaced and all high so that second, even first, can be used to catapult the car past quite
fast moving traffic. At 27 m.p.h. /1,000 r.p.m. top gear is exceptionally high so the engine is
spinning gently and quietly at a mere 3,700 r.p.m. at 100 m.p.h.
Handling and brakes
Our first session with the car one cold, bleak Sunday at the MIRA test track was, from a handling
point of view, disappointing. It seemed to suffer from excessive understeer under power and a
sudden reversal to neutral, or oversteer, when you lifted the throttle an action which called for
rapid untwirling of the rather low geared steering if the car was not to leave the road on the inside
of the corner. Hindsight makes it clear that a lot of this untidy behaviour stemmed from driving,
for the first time, round an anti-clockwise circuit on tyres that had been well and truly worn off
on a clockwise one. Certainly, with new tyres and less flexibly mounted steering gear, the car's
handling and roadholding felt vastly improved and by any standards very impressive for road work.
Half way through our test in Scotland we had the second (of two) front anti-roll bars removed (it
had been added as an experiment after someone had spun the car during a Mallory Park session):
this reduced the understeer to a level that we thought just about right without making the car
at all unstable. With massive 7 1/2 inch wide back tyres (against 5 1/2 inch front ones) it was
virtually impossible to power slide the car, so, on a dry road at least, full throttle could be used
in second out of quite sharp corners without getting out of line. In fact we cannot recall driving
any other road car with more sheer glued-on adhesion than this one on its special Pirelli
Cinturatos.
Comfort and controls
To achieve optimum standards in roadholding and riding comfort may still demand theoretically
incompatible suspension designs but the BS proved that the practical compromise can be so good as
virtually to disprove the rule. Certainly, this Rover would gallop over indifferent roads with
impressively little body movement and its behaviour on, say, sharp hump-backs (which seem to abound
in the Western Highlands) was exemplary: instead of a crashing thud down to earth after a sudden
vertical lift, the body is lowered gently on its extended springs. Apart from a slight side-to-side
oscillation over certain surfaces, the ride is conspicuous for the almost total absence
of pitch, roll and rock on normal roads. The comfortable, resilient bucket seats
(borrowed from an E-type) provide good lateral support though we tended (as in the 2000) to
slide forward on the rather flat-mounted cushions. Without any forward engine or transmission bulges,
the footwells extend right forward to give really generous leg-stretching room though the front wheel
arches intrude quite prominently and force the pedals towards the centre of the car. Not that the
offset is uncomfortable, or even noticeable after a time. The smallish wood trimmed steering wheel
is mounted on Rover's familiar tilting column which, allied with really generous seat adjustment,
ensured a splendid extended arm driving position, of which the only penalty was that it left the
gearlever too far forward.
Although the seats are very low, you don't feel at all buried or hemmed in as the windows are very
big and the sills and scuttle low. Since there is no trouble in getting in or out, and there is
room for three adults, the overall size and layout of the car seemed to us ideal, especially as
relatively minor styling alterations could perhaps have made even better use of the available space.
To have made the car any bigger would probably have marred one of its greatest intrinsic charms
that of wieldy compact size.
Fittings and furniture
To dwell on this aspect of the car's design would be a bit pointless since further development
would probably change the layout in detail, if not in concept. It is by no means a makeshift lash-up,
though, the surprisingly good finish, electric windows, carpeted floor, built-in door pockets
and magnificent instrument layout indicate how the designers were thinking. The clear, colourful
and superbly illuminated instrument dials, housed behind plastic windows, are the result of a previous
and we hope not wasted exercise by the styling department. Rover 2000 stalks operate the flashers,
horn, dip and indicators. The front bonnet locker is entirely filled by the spare wheel and fuel tank
but there is a useful hold deep if rather narrow behind the engine.
Thanx to Michael Scarlett from the carmagazine "Autocar". and Shirley Rimmer.
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