It seems that old British automakers never die. But they don't really seem to fade away entirely, either, drifting in and out of solvency and suffering the indignity of dead-end revival attempt after dead-end revival attempt. Witness poor MG, which the Chinese are attempting to badge-engineer back into existence. Or Daimler, which Tata presumably bought along with Jaguar. Another example? TVR, which apparently went extinct for good in 2012. As Autocar reports, however, the small automaker's moldering corpse may be showing some signs of life. That TVR may have a future isn't all that surprising -- after all, it's had a rocky path that saw it get awfully close to the brink before. The company was founded in 1947 by Trevor Wilkinson and earned some notice for building underweight, overpowered sportscars with unforgiving handling -- in other words, the right mix of endearing quirks to spawn a small cult following. Wilkinson owned the company from then until 1965; after that, it changed hands several times. It was most recently purchased by the Russian banker Nikolai Smolensky in 2004, but his tenure didn't see the creation of a viable automaker, either. Smolensky recently divested himself of all TVR-related assets, including naming and manufacturing rights. Here's where it gets interesting: A certain “TVR Motor Cars Ltd.†has been registered in Kent, England since April. Read more: TVR showing signs of life, maybe - Autoweek
TVR'S NEW OWNER: PH MEETS (PistonHeads.com) Read the rest of the interview: TVR'S NEW OWNER: PH MEETS