Vintage Thing No.43 - the Terrero

Four wheel drives trucks should look like they can climb Mount Everest. Here was one that looked like it was doing 100mph standing still. It also passed the Thunderbird puppet test - could I honestly see Virgil or Gordon behind the wheel of one of these? The answer to all three of these was yes.
Vehma International, owned by Magna International, a Canadian automotive parts supplier, exhibited the 8.2-litre 4x4 Terrero as a highly developed concept car at the 1989 Geneva show. It was a wide-hipped, fat flared off-road sportscar, which sounds great until you see the flush fitting glass and expensive interior, but at the time I was impressed by it. I still think it looks great and with 535bhp it could do the 0-60 dash in 7 seconds and the standing quarter in 15, despite weighing 2.2 tons.
So it should be a lot lighter and nowadays a common rail diesel would be a better engine. Even though it's a twenty year old design, I still think it looks good - better than many of today's SUVs, in fact. It's timeless lines are attributable to Steve Winter and Charles W Perry of Designworks, which became part of Vehma during the project.

Manfred Gingl, CEO of Vehma, wrote a Statement of Purpose to define the Terrero. It was to be the ultimate sports-luxury recreation vehicle of the future. It was to have four wheel drive whilst not primarily be for off-roading and when the Torrero was unveiled at the 1989 Geneva Show it caused something of a stir. Looking back, it probably heralded all the awful Sport Utiliy Vehicles I've to abhor.
But as my old tutor Dave Brown would have said - "I find myself liking it."

Bin all that posh stuff and when we exercise the performance maybe we could say yes if anyone asks us if we were having fun yet.

Suspension was by unequal length wishbones all round with 4 wheel vented disc brakes. Pirelli had to be invited to design new tyres for it. The gearbox was an automatic, so the Terrero dropped a couple of desirability points in my reckoning.
But because it inspired my amazement and curiosity, the Torrero qualifies as a Vintage Thing. It has the potential to become even more of a Vintage Thing if it ever won the Paris-Dakar Rally.

Sport Utilities that have four doors are like sports saloons - a contradiction in terms. Some sports saloons - Triumph Dolomite Sprint anyone? - work but most do not. And four door SUVS are just UVs.
As for the Thunderbird puppet test, I reckon Thunderbird 2 has a pod full of Terreros for each member of the Tracy family - none of whom were ever called Tarquin or Jocasta.
Labels: Designworks, Eagle Engines, Vehma International