TVR Speed Twelve engine
The
TVR Speed Twelve engine is the name of a
V12 engine manufactured by
TVR for use in the
TVR Speed 12 race car, and later the
TVR Cerbera Speed Twelve road car in which on the Cerbera Speed 12 went into production.
The engine was developed by essentially joining two
Speed Six engine blocks to a common crankshaft. The completed engine displaced 7.7 liters and was originally developed for racing applications in TVR's Speed Twelve. Later on, a version was developed for the prototype of a road car to be called the Cerbera Speed Twelve.
Unusually for an automobile, the Speed Twelve's engine block was not constructed of
cast iron or
aluminum alloy, but rather of
steel.
The racing version of the engine produced approximately 675bhp with its power limited by the intake restrictors required by racing regulations. For the road-version of the engine, the restrictors were not needed so the engine was developed without them. According to reports from TVR engineers, the de-restricted engine snapped the central shaft of their 1000bhp-rated
dynamometer during the bench-test. The engine's output was later estimated (conservatively) at 940bhp. When the prototype vehicle was road-tested by then-owner
Peter Wheeler, he reportedly concluded that the vehicle was too powerful to be practical and the project was scrapped.