Information about Rover (car)

Rover
Subsidary of Ford (Dormant)
Founded1904
HeadquartersBirmingham, United Kingdom
Key peopleJohn Kemp Starley (founder)
William Sutton (founder)
IndustryAutomotive
ProductsLuxury vehicles
Mainstream vehicles
Rover was a British automobile manufacturer and later a marque based at the former Austin Longbridge plant in Birmingham. In recent years it was part of BMW and the MG Rover Group. However, in April 2005, production stopped when the company became insolvent. In July 2005 the Nanjing Automobile Group acquired the assets, with plans to resume production in China and at Longbridge, in 2007. On September 18, 2006 Ford bought the rights to the Rover name from BMW for approximately £6 million. [1] Ford had acquired an option of first refusal to buy the Rover brand as a result of its purchase of Land Rover from BMW in 2000.

History

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Rover badge until 2003
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Rover 1905
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The Rover Six in a 1910 advertisement - £155
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Rover Tourer 1926
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1936 Rover 10
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Rover gas turbine experimental car
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Rover 80]]
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1985 Rover SD1 Vitesse (post-facelift)
The first Rover was a tricycle manufactured by Starley & Sutton Co of Coventry, England in 1883. The company was founded by John Kemp Starley and William Sutton in 1878. Starley had formerly worked with his uncle James Starley (father of the cycle trade) who began in manufacturing sewing machines and switched to bicycles in 1869.

In the early 1880s the cycles available were the relatively dangerous penny-farthings and high-wheel tricycles. J. K. Starley made history in 1885 by producing the Rover Safety Bicycle - a rear-wheel-drive, chain-driven cycle with two similar-sized wheels, making it more stable than the previous high wheeled designs. Cycling Magazine said the Rover had 'set the pattern to the world' and the phrase was used in their advertising for many years. Starley's Rover is usually described by historians as the first recognisably modern bicycle. In 1888 Starley made an electric car, but it never was put into production.

In 1889 the company became J. K. Starley & Co. Ltd and in the late 1890s, the Rover Cycle Company Ltd. Three years after Starley's death in 1901, the Rover company began producing automobiles with the two-seater Rover Eight to the designs of Edmund Lewis who came from Daimler. During the First World War they made motorcycles, lorries to Maudsley designs and not having a suitable one of their own, cars to a Sunbeam design. Bicycle and motorcycle production continued until the Great Depression forced the end of production in 1925. The business was not very successful during the 1920s and did not pay a dividend from 1923 until the mid 1930s. In 1929 when there was a change of management with Spencer Wilks coming in from Hillman as general manager. He set about reorganising the company and moving it up market to cater for people who wanted something "superior" to Fords and Austins. He was joined by his brother Maurice, who had also been at Hillman, as chief engineer in 1930. Spencer Wilks stayed with the company until 1962 and his brother until 1963.

World War II and gas turbines

In the late 1930s, in anticipation of potential hostilities which would become World War II, the British government started a re-armament programme and as part of this "Shadow Factories" were built. These were paid for by the government but staffed and run by private companies. Two were run by Rover, one at Acocks Green, Birmingham started operation in 1937 and a second larger one at Solihull started in 1940. Both were employed making aero engines and airframes. The original main works at Helen Street, Coventry was severely damaged by bombing in 1940 and 1941 and never regained full production.

In early 1940 Rover were approached by the government to support Frank Whittle in developing the gas turbine engine. Whittle's company, Power Jets had no production facilities and the intention was for Rover to take the design and develop it for mass production. Whittle himself was not pleased by this and did not like design changes made without his approval but the first test engines to the W2B design were built in a disused cotton mill in Barnoldswick, Lancashire, in October 1941. Rolls-Royce took an interest in the new technology and an agreement was reached in 1942 that they would take over the engines and Barnoldswick works and in exchange Rover would get the contract for making Meteor tank engines which actually continued until 1964.

After the Second World War, the company abandoned Helen Street and bought the two Shadow Factories. Acocks Green carried on for a while making Meteor engines for tanks and Solihull became the new centre for vehicles with production resuming in 1947 and would become the home of the Land Rover.

Experimental cars

In 1950, designer F. R. Bell and Chief Engineer Maurice Wilks unveiled the first car powered with a gas turbine engine. The two-seater JET1 had the engine positioned behind the seats, air intake grilles on either side of the car and exhaust outlets on the top of the tail. During tests, the car reached top speeds of 88 mph (140 km/h), at a turbine speed of 50,000 rpm. The car ran on petrol, paraffin or diesel oil, but fuel consumption problems proved insurmountable for a production car. It is currently on display at the London Science Museum. Rover and the BRM Formula One team joined forces to produce a gas turbine powered coupe, which entered the 1963 24 hours of Le Mans, driven by Graham Hill and Richie Ginther. It averaged 107.8 mph (173 km/h) and had a top speed of 142 mph (229 km/h).

Golden years

The 1950s and '60s were fruitful years for the company, with the Land Rover becoming a runaway success (despite Rover's reputation for making up-market saloons, the utilitarian Land Rover was actually the company's biggest seller throughout the 1950s, '60s and '70s), as well as the P5 and P6 saloons equipped with a 3.5L (215ci) aluminium V8, the design and tooling of which was purchased from Buick, and pioneering research into gas turbine fuelled vehicles. In 1967, Rover became part of the Leyland Motor Corporation, which merged with the British Motor Holdings (formed as a result of the pooling of Bristish Motor Corp., owner of Austin and Morris, and Jaguar) to become British Leyland. This was the beginning of the end for the traditional Rover, as the Solihull based company's heritage drowned beneath the infamous industrial relations and managerial problems that beset the British motor industry throughout the 1970s. In 1970, Rover combined its skill in producing comfortable saloons and the rugged Land Rover 4x4 to produce the Range Rover, the first car to combine off-road ability and comfortable versatility. Powered by the ex-Buick V8 engine, it had innovative features such as a permanent 4 wheel drive system, all-coil spring suspension and disc brakes on all wheels. Able to reach speeds of up to 100 MPH, yet also capable of extreme off-road use, the original Range Rover design was to remain in production for the next 26 years.

As British Leyland struggled through financial turmoil and an industrial-relations crisis during the 70's, it was effectively nationalized after a multi-billion-pound government cash injection in 1975. Michael Edwardes was brought in to head the company.

The Rover SD1 of 1976 was an excellent car, but was beset with so many build quality and reliability issues that it never delivered its great promise. A savage programme of cutbacks in the late 1970s led to the end of car production at the Solihull factory which was turned over for Land Rover production only. All future Rover cars would be made in the former Austin and Morris plants in Longbridge and Cowley, respectively.

Rover and Honda

In 1979, British Leyland began a long relationship with Honda Motor Company of Japan. The result was a cross-holding structure where Honda took a 20 percent stake in the company while the company took a 20 percent stake in Honda's U.K. subsidiary. The deal was thought to be mutually beneficial: Honda used its British operations as a launchpad into Europe, and the company can pool resources with Honda in developing new cars.

Austin Rover Group was formed in 1982 as the mass-market car manufacturing subsidiary of BL. In the 1980s, the slimmed-down BL used the Rover badge on a range of cars co-developed with Honda. The first Honda-sourced model, released in 1984 was the Rover 200, which, like the Triumph Acclaim that it replaced, was based on the Honda Ballade. (Similarly, in Australia, the Honda Quint (known in Europe as the Quintet) and Integra were badged as the Rover Quintet and 416i.)

In 1986, the Rover SD1 was replaced by the Rover 800, developed with the Honda Legend. By this time Austin Rover had moved to a one-marque strategy and its parent BL was renamed simply the Rover Group with the car division becoming Rover Cars. The Austin range were now technically Rovers, though the word "Rover" never actually appeared on the badging — there was instead a badge similar to the Rover Viking shape, without wording. These were replaced by the Rover 400 and Rover 600, based on Honda's Concerto and Accord.

Rover imported Rover 800s, badged as Sterlings, into the United States from 1987 to 1992.

In 1988, the firm went back into private hands when it was bought by British Aerospace.

BMW takeover

This was to prove to be the turn-around point for the company, steadily rebuilding its image to the point where once again Rovers were seen as upmarket alternatives to Fords and Vauxhalls. The 1994 takeover by BMW saw the development of the Rover 75, before the infamous sell-off in 2000. BMW retained the rights to the Rover name (and the associated portfolio of brands such as Riley, Mini and Triumph) after it sold the business, only licensing it to the Phoenix consortium while it was in control of Rover.

One thing that is believed to have led to BMW's sale of Rover due to unprofitability and its subsequent demise at the hands of the Phoenix Consortium is the use of retro styling. In contrast to BMWs at the time in the 1990s (the 3-Series and 5-Series) Rovers were marketed as unsporty premium vehicles similar to Lancia (which is also at present suffering due to this positioning). Rover under BMW made the decision to have the Rover 75 designed to be a retro car imitating the Rover P5. The interior was retro and quite similar to that of the Jaguar XJ (which is also suffering at the hands of retro design). The exterior was similar. The sales of the 75 were disappointing throughout its lifespan and it had the engineering and quality potential to return Rover to the status of a premium brand but the design let it down. Some critics of BMW-Rover management in the 1990s have said that if Rover and BMW had positioned it as a vehicle that actually was between the 3- and 5-Series and marketed as sporty and dynamic like its BMW sisters then it might have succeeded, keeping Rover in the hands of secure BMW ownership. However these assumptions disregard the weak economical basis and lack of brand identity the company had at this time.

The BMW management knew that Rover needed a new product lineup to be competitive with Opel/Vauxhall (GM), Volkswagen, Ford and the other leading mainstream volume manufacturers. The 75 was the first part of this lineup. The MINI was the second. To replace both the 200 and the 400 with a more direct successor to the 1980s 200 was the Rover 55 (R30 project) intended to combat the Opel Astra, Ford Focus, and Volkswagen Golf in the competitive and lucrative European small family car segment. This high volume semi-premium vehicle was cancelled in 2000, just as the Rover group was sold.

MG Rover

Main article: MG Rover Group


In 2000, Rover was split into three parts: the MINI marque was retained by BMW (the first generation of which had sold over one million worldwide and more than 200,000 in the U.K.); Land Rover was sold to Ford for an estimated sum of £1.8 billion (which included various other parts of the business); the rest became MG Rover, and was bought for a nominal £10 in May 2000 by a specially-assembled group of businessmen known as the Phoenix Consortium. The consortium was headed by ex-Rover Chief Executive John Towers.

The year before BMW sold MG Rover, it had made losses of an estimated £800million. The four business men who took control of the newly-formed MG Rover Group (previously named Rover Group) are reported to have received around £430million in a dowry from BMW which included unsold stock.

Nanjing Automobile and Ford

The company continued as the MG Rover Group but production ceased on April 15th 2005, when it was declared insolvent. On 22 July 2005, the assets of the collapsed firm were sold to the Nanjing Automobile Group for £53m, who indicated that their preliminary plans involved relocating the Powertrain engine plant to China while splitting car production into Rover lines in China and resumed MG lines in the West Midlands (though not necessarily at Longbridge), where a UK R&D and technical facility would also be developed. On May 30, 2007, Nanjing Automobile Group restarted production of TF sports cars in the Longbridge plant; sales was expected to begin in September or October, 2007.

Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation, who held the intellectual property of Rover 75 (bought for £67m before Rover collapsed) and was also bidding for MG Rover, planned to release their own version of the Rover 75 in late 2006. On July 16th, Shanghai Automotive announced their intent to buy the Rover brandname from BMW to whom it reverted after the collapse of the MG Rover Group.[2] However, due to Ford's contract with BMW (as it relates to the Rover name), Ford took up their option on the company name and bought it on 18 September 2006, in part to protect their right to the use of the name Land Rover. The Rover name will become part of Ford's Premier Automotive Group (PAG), but Ford has no immediate plans for producing any cars with the Rover badge. [1] Due to Shanghai's inability to gain the Rover name, they created their own brand with a similar name and badge, known as Roewe. Roewe was eventually launched in early 2007.

Rover models

References

1. ^ Doran, James. "Ford pays £6m for Rover marque", The Times, 2006-09-19. Retrieved on 2006-09-19. 
2. ^ "BMW agrees to sell Rover brand to SAIC", Reuters. Retrieved on 2006-08-16. (en-GB) 
3. ^ [2]

See also

External links

Rover and related brands car timeline, 1980s-2005      [ e] 
Type1980s1990s2000s
01234567890123456789012345
SuperminiMini
Austin MetroRover MetroRover 100CityRover
Small Family CarTriumph AcclaimRover 200 IRover 200 IIRover 200 IIIRover 25
Rover 400 IRover 400 IIRover 45
Mid-Size Family CarAustin Maestro
Austin Montego
Large family carRover 600Rover 75
Executive carRover 800 IRover 800 II
CoupéRover 200 Coupe
RoadsterMG RV8MG FMG TF
SupercarMG XPower SV


The rise and fall of British Leyland - the car companies and the brands
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JaguarSS CarsJaguarJaguarBMHBritish LeylandJaguarFord
DaimlerDaimlerBSABSA
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MiniBMCAustin RoverBAeBMWBMW MINI
RileyRileyNuffield OrganisationBMW
MGMorris Garages (MG)BMWMGRNanjing
MorrisMorrisMorris
WolseleyWolseley
AustinAustinAustin
Vanden PlasVanden PlasFord
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StandardStandardStandard TriumphLeyland MotorsBMH
TriumphDawsonTriumphBMW Triumph
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Nickname: "Brum = Scum", "Brummagem", "Second City", "Workshop of the World", "City of a Thousand Trades"
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Motto
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John Kemp Starley (1854 - 1901) was an English inventor and industrialist who is widely considered to be the inventor of the modern bicycle, and also originator of the name Rover.

Starley was born in Walthamstow, Essex, and was the son of a gardener.
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William Sutton VC (1830-16 February, 1888) was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
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Industry (from Latin industrius, "diligent, industrious"), is the segment of economy concerned with production of goods. Industry began in its present form during the 1800s, aided by technological advances, and it has continued to develop to this day.
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automobile (from Greek auto, self and Latin mobile moving, a vehicle that moves itself rather than being moved by another vehicle or animal) or motor car (usually shortened to just car) is a wheeled passenger vehicle that carries its own motor.
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Aspinwall Classification System (Leo Aspinwall, 1958) classifies and rates products based on five variables:
  1. Replacement rate (How frequently is the product repurchased?)
  2. Gross margin (How much profit is obtained from each product?)

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luxury vehicle is a relatively expensive vehicle that includes additional features designed to increase the comfort of the driver and passengers. Luxury vehicles usually place more emphasis on comfort, appearance, and amenities such as technological upgrades and higher quality
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automobile (from Greek auto, self and Latin mobile moving, a vehicle that moves itself rather than being moved by another vehicle or animal) or motor car (usually shortened to just car) is a wheeled passenger vehicle that carries its own motor.
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For other uses of marque, see marque (disambiguation).


A marque (French for "brand" and IPA pronunciation: [mɑ(r)k]) is a make (brand) name, most commonly used for automobile brands.
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Longbridge is an area of Birmingham, England. It is also a ward within the formal district of Northfield.

Since 1905, the area has been dominated by the Longbridge plant, which produced Austin, Nash Metropolitan, Morris, British Leyland, and most recently MG Rover cars.
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City of Birmingham
Birmingham Skyline viewed from Centenary Square

Coat of Arms of the City Council
Nickname: "Brum = Scum", "Brummagem", "Second City", "Workshop of the World", "City of a Thousand Trades"
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Bayerische Motoren Werke AG

Aktiengesellschaft
Founded 1916
Headquarters Munich, Germany

Key people Dr. Norbert Reithofer, Chairman and CEO
Industry Automotive
Products Automobiles
Motorcycles
Revenue €49 billion (2006)
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MG Rover was the last British-owned mass-production car manufacturer in the British motor industry. The company was formed when BMW sold some of the original Rover Group in 2000 to the Phoenix Consortium.
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Insolvency is a financial condition experienced by a person or business entity when their assets no longer exceed their liabilities, commonly referred to as 'balance-sheet' insolvency
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Nanjing Automobile (Group) Corporation
(Chinese: 南京汽车集团有限公司 or 南京汽車集団有限公司)


State-owned enterprise
Founded 1945
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September 18 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

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Land Rover

Subsidiary of Ford Premier Automotive Group
Founded 1948
Founder Rover
Headquarters Gaydon, Warwickshire, United Kingdom

Key people Geoff Polites, ceo
Industry Automotive
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tricycle (often abbreviated to trike) is a three-wheeled vehicle.

Tricycles generally follow one of three layouts:
  • delta, with two wheels at the back and one at the front (the usual layout).

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Coventry is a metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. With a population of 303,475 at the 2001 Census (306,000 est. 2007), Coventry is the ninth largest city in England and the eleventh largest in the United Kingdom.
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John Kemp Starley (1854 - 1901) was an English inventor and industrialist who is widely considered to be the inventor of the modern bicycle, and also originator of the name Rover.

Starley was born in Walthamstow, Essex, and was the son of a gardener.
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racing bicycle is built using lightweight, shaped aluminium tubing and carbon fiber stays and forks. It sports a drop handlebar and thin tires and wheels for efficiency and aerodynamics.
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ordinary, high wheel or penny-farthing was the first true bicycle with which actual speed and distance could be achieved in a practical manner. Given the absence of a gearing system, larger and larger wheels were built with the intention of increasing speed and
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bicycle chain is a chain that transfers power from the pedals to the drive-wheel of a bicycle thus propelling it.

The chain in use on modern bicycles is a roller chain with a 1/2" pitch. Chain comes in either 1/8", 3/32" or 3/16" widths.
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The Rover 8 was a name given to three early models of car from the British Rover car company. The original one, produced between 1904 and 1912, was the first production Rover car.
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Daimler (pronounced Dame-ler) has, since 1896, been the motor car marque of the British Daimler Motor Company, based in Coventry. The company was a subsidiary of BSA from 1910 up until 1960, when it became part of Jaguar and the brand was used for their luxury models.
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