2000 TVR Cerbera 4.5 LW from UK and Ireland - Comments

16th Feb 2007, 09:56

"Insane spaceship - nothing can touch it for the price"

What things have gone wrong with the car?

Clutch master cylinder seals failed. Replaced for £50.

Clutch fingers snapped. This is a common fault on these AP Racing twin plate clutches, giving them a life of around 20k miles. There are now after-market options where this 'shouldn't' happen - which is what I have fitted now.

Throttle cable tensioning bracket snapped. Weak spot-weld failed, which I got re-welded by a bloke in a metal fabrication place for the moddest price of, 'a listen to the engine revving'!

Purple intake pipes wore out. Engine vibration causes these to wear against the bonnet. Aftermarket replacements combined with a remap offer increased torque & power nearer to the quoted power figures.

Frayed oil cooler pipes. Had to have replacements custom made to avoid a long wait. Cheap though.

Differential bushes worn out. Cheap part to replace, but a pig of a job to do & it takes HOURS, which is obviously not cheap (!).

General comments?

This might be a bit rambling as I remember different features from the car...

Coming from a TVR Chimaera 400 I thought a Cerbera would be similar performance-wise, just with a roof and madder interior. I hadn't really prepared myself though.

As soon as you hit that black button & the engine fires up & the car idles & vibrates, it really reminds you that this is no GTi or hot saloon. There is an amazing sense of occasion.

Performance wise, these cars really are something else. The 4.5 AJP8 is a TVR V8 as found in the Tuscan race cars. It's a very free revving racecar style engine (flat plane crank V8 giving high revs like Ferrari or Lotus Esprit V8 as opposed to the low revving american style or the Rover V8's found in the other TVR V8 cars). Acceleration is violent. 0-60 times are almost irrelevant in a car like this. The real deal is when you give it some at motorway speeds. Putting your foot down in 3rd gear at 70mph will pin you in your seat & it is unrelenting. Sports bikes will move over for you to overtake. Not for the fainthearted. Note that although these engines don't have the instant low down torque of the rover lumps, they do have a lot of it at higher revs & so the uninitiated are still liable to spin the car on down changes if they don't match revs with engine speed!

The engine note is fantastic with LOUD pops and bangs on overrun. With decat pipes you also get flames.

Handling is good. These cars have high levels of grip & it generally feels very well planted. It is unsurprisingly fairly easy to unhook the rear end, but the long travel throttle (TVR traction control) stops this being a major problem so long as you don't allow your concentration to wander! Cold, damp & wet conditions obviously make it more of a handful - it's common to lose a few Cerberas each autumn as new owners from the summer lose it on roundabout exits & sliproads on to motorways especially as the engine comes on cam in 3rd gear.

The T5 gearbox feels nice and chunky, and as the driving position puts you right low down next to the transmission tunnel, it feels like it's in the right place next to the steering wheel.

Clutch can be a bit heavy in traffic. Not an issue on open road driving, but it can be tiresome on a motorway traffic jam or in town. Similarly, the engine can be a bit lumpy around 2.5k rpm making it not so fun town driving.

Big AP racing brakes have awesome stopping power. Of course, there is no ABS which might put some people off.

Steering is assisted, but not light in any way. It has excellent feel - not quite every tiny grain of sand, but enough to feel exactly what the road is doing.

Interior looks fantastic. I think the seats could do with being a bit more supportive though.

So the downsides. Cerberas need maintenance - they like tyres, brake pads, oil, petrol. Servicing isn't cheap. And some parts used by TVR are fragile or poor quality, or sited in daft places where they get too hot resulting in the occasional niggly problem. For example, the light control boxes are prone to burning out. Electric door controls can go mad. AP clutch has a design fault. 100Amp fuse gets hot and disintegrates. Starter motors get too hot and fail.

Also the chassis needs anti corrosion treatment each year (spray on some waxoil) and the windscreen wipers suck.

A £600 service can easily cost a grand & you might need to see a man a couple of times to fix a niggly problem or two. Having said that, parts & work are relatively cheap for a car of this performance compared to say Porsche or Ferrari.

The Cerbera is an amazing experience & I can't think of anything that could replace it this side of 100 grand!


17th Feb 2007, 06:14

No wonder this company went down the pan going by all the probs you've had on such an expensive car in under 50k miles!


19th Feb 2008, 01:27

I had a cerbera 4.5 in 1998 which was brand new from Brandon TVR in Edinburgh. I kept it for about 8 months, but had to get rid of it because I couldn't put up with the reliability issues. The electrics in the car were terrible and kept buggering up. The ECU packed in before the car had even done 1500 miles and had to be replaced under warranty. When I picked the car up there was very little left on the discs which was a bit suss for a brand new car, they had to be changed and the doors were a nightmare in terms of reliability due to the electrics. The starter motor also packed up inside of 2000 miles. The car was an absolute missile when it was running and nithing on the road would come even close to it however, for me the reliabilty issues were just too much too often and every time it needed repaired it had to go back to Brandon which is 2 hours away. A great car when it was running, ballistic... but a nightmare when it wasn't, which was more often than not.


7th Oct 2008, 06:39

Ditto above comment. 1999 new 4.5L Cerbera, loved the car for 1 year then hated it for 2. Sold it and now I want it back.


8th Oct 2008, 03:01

United Kingdom Flag Search for New and Used TVR Cerberas available in the UK

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Hi, Just picked this up from news feed. I am recently in the market for a Cerb. Been put off the Speed Six as theses appear to have more issues (engine) than most and had settled on a V8. The comments here are related to the 2000 model? Are there other years / models you would recommend I stick to? (or know where to get information). I fully expect to have a number of problems along the way, but want the best chance of minimising them by getting off with the right car.

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