Big and powerful saloons may be 10 a penny today, but in 1982 when Bentley launched the Mulsanne Turbo they were less common.
It was exactly what the firm needed at the time, though. The Bentley’s direct cousin, the Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit, was outstripping it 20 to one in sales. Rolls-Royce chief executive David Plastow knew something had to be done and that something came in the form of a turbo.
A Garret AiResearch TO4 turbo, to be exact. The long-serving 6.75-litre V8 needed little modification to handle the 50% increase in power, with changes being limited to uprated valves, valve springs and pistons. The result was 298bhp and a sprightly 0-60mph time of around 7 secs.
Little changed in the handling department and the Mulsanne Turbo had to be limited to 135mph due to its high-profile tyres. Those, combined with the softly sprung suspension meant that it – and its 2.5-tons of mass – could quickly turn into a handful when cornered quickly. But to do this would be to miss the point of the car – quick and calm progress was its raison d’etre and it did that like nothing else.