The unit was tuned to be more road-friendly and now produces a dyno-supported 415bhp at 6000rpm and 385lb ft of torque, versus the factory’s 2002 claims of 440bhp at 7400rpm and 350lb ft.
The TVR T440R’s rose-jointed suspension is put to work on broken South Downs roads
That just left ZNG’s body, which was repainted in Candy Apple Ruby Pearl, closely mimicking its 2002 hue, and replacement of the suspension’s original fixed Bilstein damper units with adjustable items from Öhlins.
You never forget your first Wheeler TVR – for me it was road testing Tuscans for Autocar, so at least I remember that entering the cabin involves feeling for a button under the door mirror to trigger the latch.
Even today, the T440R’s interior feels shockingly avant-garde, with the exception of its manual handbrake and incongruously basic-looking three-spoke wheel.
Floor-mounted pedals complete the TVR T440R’s road-racer appeal
The exceptional quality of the swathe of leather that adorns everything from the dash to the broad centre console is likely an improvement on what would have emerged from Bristol Avenue 20-plus years ago.
You sit low, facing a chunky, hide-wrapped binnacle that houses a digital display, which you can scroll through to bring up multiple engine and speed readouts – everything, that is, apart from a rev counter, which is replaced by a line of change-up lights running above the display.
Other than a pod atop the dash housing the audio unit, and small, unmarked window buttons set into the twin shafts that connect console to dash, all other controls gather behind the steering wheel, which adjusts for rake but not reach.
Adjustable floor-mounted aluminium pedals complete the picture.
The TVR T440R has a tubular-steel chassis shrouded by a carbonfibre body
Nothing more elaborate than a twist of a key brings the T440R to life with a hearty rumble, but at once the engine feels tractable and untemperamental.
A fairly light clutch and wonderfully mechanical-feeling, medium-throw gearchange make bumbling around at urban speeds surprisingly effortless.
I’m not sure this car’s gearing, combined with its more road-friendly power and torque characteristics, would allow you to see 215mph – it’s tricky to estimate without a rev counter.
Even so, first is tall, with the intermediate ratios closely stacked.
Although 25 customer cars were required to satisfy FIA homologation, just four Tuscan Rs were built including two pre-production cars
You also need to dial in plenty of revs before you start to engage with the meat of this TVR’s performance – and, given how box-fresh the motor is, we’re being circumspect today.
But there’s an elasticity to the way its power is deployed, which can still be enjoyed at medium revs.
Push harder on the long-travel throttle and it sounds like a steroid-injected Healey 3000 – guttural, raw and wholesome as only a big-capacity ‘six’ can be, amplified by the stiff carbon body.
This is, we should not forget, a pretty close copy of a race car.
Unlike the TVR Tuscan, the T440R’s revamped rear end tapers upwards
The touchy-feely directness you’d find in a regular Tuscan’s helm is replaced by something a little less sensitive, which, if you were carving down the Mulsanne at the double-ton, would be welcome.
As we head across gnarled South Downs roads to the coast, the rose-jointed suspension is at times quite punishing, sending loud retorts through the cabin.
Yet find a well-sighted, smooth stretch and you’re rewarded with a level of control and grip – helped by extreme Toyo Proxes tyres – that would confound any regular TVR driver.
The TVR T440R is a homologation special that burned brightly but briefly – the British marque slipped beneath the waves soon after
But it’s the thought that this car is essentially a Le Mans racer with numberplates that really takes your breath away.
The Tuscan R was Wheeler’s final throw of his TVR dice, and I can think of no better tribute to the indelible mark he left on a once maverick brand.
Images: John Bradshaw
Thanks to: Stephen Woodrow, TVR 101; Drew Wheeler Sports & Classics
TVR at Le Mans: Wheeler’s 24-hour dream comes true
TVR T400Rs raced at Le Mans from 2003-’05 © Getty
Initially campaigned in the British GT Championship for the 2001-’02 season, TVR’s T400Rs made their first appearance at the Le Mans 24 Hours in 2003, run by the Racesport Salisbury team, sponsored by DeWalt.
Neither car finished the race, with one crashing and the other retiring due to transmission failure.
Better fortune was to follow in 2004, though, with the Chamberlain-Synergy Motorsport-entered T400Rs (above) coming 21st and 22nd overall, and eighth and ninth in the LM GT class.
Two T400Rs were entered again in the 2005 event, but only the example run by Racesport Peninsula TVR competed in the GT2 class, with an unclassified finish.
Factfile
TVR T440R
- Sold/number built 2002-’03/four (pre-production and production cars)
- Construction steel tubular chassis, aluminium-honeycomb floor, carbonfibre body
- Engine all-alloy, dohc 4397cc ‘six’, electronic fuel injection
- Max power 415bhp @ 6000rpm
- Max torque 385lb ft @ 6000rpm
- Transmission five-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension independent, by double wishbones, coil springs, adjustable telescopic dampers f/r; front anti-roll bar
- Steering power-assisted rack and pinion
- Brakes ventilated front, solid rear discs
- Length 14ft 5¼in (4404mm)
- Width 6ft ¾in (1850mm)
- Height 3ft 11¼in (1200mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 5¼in (2574mm)
- Weight 2314lb (1050kg)
- Mpg n/a
- 0-60mph 3.8 secs
- Top speed 215mph
- Price new £74,995
- Price now £240,000*
*Price correct at date of original publication
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Simon Hucknall
Simon Hucknall is a senior contributor to Classic & Sports Car