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The TVR M series is a line of sports cars built by automaker TVR between 1972 and 1979. The series replaced the outgoing TVR Vixen and Tuscan models, and is characterized by a common chassis and shared body style. As with other TVR models before and since, the M-series cars use a front mid-engine, rear-wheel drive layout and body-on-frame ...
The engine was installed in the TVR White Elephant, a prototype car built for Wheeler by John Ravenscroft. The Holden powered TVR White Elephant was later superseded by the Rover V8 powered Griffith prototype. TVR 290S. With the TVR S Series, first produced in 1986, Wheeler re-introduced the traditional design elements from the M-series.
The TVR Vixen is a hand-built sports car which was produced by TVR in Blackpool, England from 1967 until 1973. Ford-engined in most of its configurations, it succeeded the MGB-engined TVR Grantura 1800S. It is also the basis for the high-performance TVR Tuscan which was available in both V6 and V8 configurations.
The TVR Chimaera is a two-seater sports car manufactured by TVR between 1992 and 2003. ... 11.2 5.0: 4,988: 340 hp (254 kW; 345 PS) 320 lb⋅ft (434 N⋅m)
Tuning a Lada Riva • White van man race: Sir Michael Gambon: 8 December 2002 () 3.43: 9 [8] 9: Cars for the school run: (Renault Espace • Toyota Land Cruiser [broken anchor] • Volvo XC90) • Subaru Forester • Volkswagen Golf R32: MG XPower SV concept • Stripping down a Jaguar XJ-S • Radical SR3 vs an aerobatic plane: Gordon Ramsay
In the early 1980s TVR approached Andy Rouse with a view to using his race-developed 3.9 L (3,946 cc) variant of the V8 in their Rover-powered TVR 350i 'wedge'; Rouse had successfully campaigned a Rover SD1 with a modified V8 on the track. For a number of reasons (primarily cost) Rouse's version was not used, but the concept was passed to ...
This allows black-and-white receivers to display NTSC color signals by simply ignoring the chrominance signal. Some black-and-white TVs sold in the U.S. after the introduction of color broadcasting in 1953 were designed to filter chroma out, but the early B&W sets did not do this and chrominance could be seen as a crawling dot pattern in areas ...
Guide+ in the United States was replaced by Gemstar with a similar service (delivered in the same fashion via VBI like Guide+), called TV Guide On Screen. [48] A small number of televisions, DVD recorders, and digital video recorders were released with TV Guide On Screen capabilities. The service was discontinued in the US in 2013. [49]