Alvis

ALVIS TD21 Review

Looking for some plump classic car motoring? The Alvis TD21 is the classic for you... 

"Make way for the quality!" was a line many motorists would have heard emanating from the cockpit of an Alvis Three-Litre drophead during the last 1960s and early 1970s – shortly before being overtaken by a man with tin legs. Sir Douglas Bader loved his Alvis, which he would drive in a manner most befitting of a former fighter pilot. "Best car in the world" was another epithet applied to the car by another irritable, gritty, patriotic part of British culture; John LeCarre’s creation Jim Prideaux from Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.

Both are right, and both in their manner rather sum up the Alvis TD21. It has a ‘tally-ho’ spirit combined with restrained good taste and sheer Britishness; a cocktail found in no other car.

VITAL STATISTICS

Engine – 2993cc, 6-cyl,

Power - 115bhp@00rpm

Torque - 152lb/ft@5200rpm

Top Speed – 105mph

0-60mph – 13.9seconds

Economy - 18mpg

Gearbox – 4/5 speed manual, 3 speed auto

  

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

Bodywork

Most cars were coachbuilt by Rolls-Royce subsidiary Park Ward, with styling inspired by the TC108G. The roof, bonnet, and bootlid are aluminium, as are Series 2 doors. But that’s where the easy bit ends. Park-Ward bodied Alvises are no stranger to iron oxide, due to their manner of construction. In order to reduce weight the TD21 was produced from thin steel pressings, which were spot-welded together in order to achieve a strong yet light structure. This left water free to worm its way in and corrode ious sections from the inside out. Check the sills, the boot floor, the base of the roof, and the inside of the rear wings. The boot floor is connected to the rear wings by flanges which rust out, and the joint between the inner arches and the wings has been known to do the same. The roof may be floating in mid-air – two easy ways to check are to check the condition of the leather interior trim attached to the roof, and to get in the back, put your hands on the roof, and push up! The rear window also has a wooden frame attached to a crossmember below the parcel shelf – make sure there’s no rot here. 

There are 2 types, Series 1 and Series 2. Principal cosmetic difference is the nose; Series 2s had integral spotlamps, whereas the Series 1 made do with a pair of cooling ducts between the lamps and grille.

 

Engines

Due to an innate company desire to avoid waste, the first 25 TD21s actually had an engine carried over from the previous TC108G, rather than the design intended for the TD. These had a siamesed head, unless the ‘six port’ head of the engine intended for the car. The later engine has improved breathing, higher peak revs and a higher compression ratio, and is generally more desirable. These can be differentiated by the rocker cover and the angle of the induction/exhaust face. Grille slats can deform – this directs air away from the radiator and leads to overheating issues.

 

Running Gear

With the exception of the gearbox it’s all standard Alvis fare – the box being an Austin Healey derived unit with an Alvis-designed selector mechanism. The Healey ‘box isn’t up to the torque of the Alvis engine, and synchromesh on second is problematic. Many fit the later ZF five speed box, or a Getrag unit from a modern BMW. Best of the standard gearboxes is the 3 speed Borg-Warner automatic, for which parts are readily available and relatively inexpensive.

 

Interior

A full retrim will cost an arm and a leg – so make sure it either isn’t necessary or has been done properly in the past. The map pockets and door trim often get overlooked when the car has been retrimmed due to their complexity – a good trimmer should have done these when any work to the seats has been done. If they don’t match, it’s only a partial retrim – don’t let the seller con you. Cars may have been retrimmed with vinyl if working to a budget – check that the material isn’t cloth backed.

That lovely figured walnut won’t be cheap to replace either – make sure everything’s in good order. Same with the carpets – quality isn’t cheap, and only the best will do for an Alvis.

VERDICT

Nothing quite says "class" like an Alvis Three Litre. Unlike Jaguar, Daimler, Royce and Bentley, the image hasn’t been tainted by association with some shadier aspects of the company’s past or present output. They’re very much "old money", and conjure up a picture of this scepter’d isle which is forever golden – it’s the car oft-driven by retired servicemen in country villages, and perhaps sums up this portion of England better than any other metaphor. Get one bought and bask in all those admiring glances – you’ll never look back.

ALVIS SPEED 20 REVIEW

Through soundness of design and excellent workmanship, Alvis gained a consistently good competition career throughout the vintage period, no doubt helping sales along the way. The Alvis Speed 20 was introduced in 1932, one of the first cars to come with an all-synchromesh gearbox. Powered by a 2,511cc six cylinder ohv engine with triple S.U. carburrettors, the Speed 20 could easily reach 75mph, with about 90 miles an hour on hand if the going was right.

ALVIS 12/50 REVIEW

Hugely satisfying to drive, the Alvis 12/50 is generally regarded as one of the definitive vintage cars with an excellent balance of power, road holding and braking. The simplicity of its mechanical design and the strength of its chassis contribute to remarkable durability and reliability. Most bodies were coachbuilt by Cross and Ellis or Carbodies, other companies being used occasionally. The immortal 12/50 Alvis was produced from 1923 to 1933 with some 3616 examples produced, of which 446 are known to have survived.

ALVIS TA14 REVIEW

Introduced the 12/70 model in 1937, a nimble four-cylinder car of 1,842cc capacity and priced marginally more than the contemporary Rover, maintaining the slight extra edge over Rover in the prestige car stakes. When Coventry began the long process of recovering from hostilities, the old 12/70 was re-introduced, marginally modified and now designated the Alvis TA14 and forming the mainstay of early post-war production. With a top speed of around 75mph, the model was seen on occasion at post-war rallies where it never disgraced itself.