Evo

RICHARD PORTER

The Common Sense Car offers a glimmer of hope for British sports car lovers

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‘Traction control, ABS, airbags, lights – one press of a button and they’re all off. We’re better off without them’

IF YOU MISS THE RAW, SIMPLE SPORTS CARS of the past, good news is on its way. ‘I want to put the “great” back into British cars,’ says Sir Ralph Feasby, speaking to evo from his home in Monte Carlo. ‘I’ve tired of the modern crop of so-called sports cars from foreign-owned concerns like Bentley and Jaguar,’ he continues. ‘They’re getting it wrong in so many ways, not least all that nannying from traction control, ABS, airbags and so on. I want to take back control of the driving experience.’

To achieve this aim, Feasby has drawn up plans for ‘a true Brit bruiser’, the ingredient­s for which are ‘V8 thump, independen­t thinking, and two verses of “Rule Britannia”, before it gets bloody well banned no doubt!’ Developmen­t is proceeding under the code name ‘CSC’ or ‘Common Sense Car’.

Feasby claims a bespoke engine will sit in a homegrown chassis, clothed in a ‘beautiful British body’. The car’s looks will be designed by Sir Ralph himself at the newly formed RF Motors, based within the Northampto­nshire headquarte­rs of RFR, the industrial refrigerat­ion equipment giant founded by Feasby in 1983 and now, thanks to a parttakeov­er by Freezeeco of Tempe, Arizona, the third largest supplier of industrial-grade freezing, refrigerat­ion and air conditioni­ng systems in the world. Early work on the car will take place inside RFR’S old Kettering plant, empty since compressor manufactur­ing was moved to India in 2017. However, Feasby reveals that ‘some to most’ of the developmen­t engineerin­g will be undertaken by renowned automotive consultanc­y Ingénierie Complète of Reims.

When asked to define what will make his new sports car unique, Feasby’s answer is immediate: ‘Integrity,’ he says firmly. ‘We have a great passion for engineerin­g in this country and by creating our own car we’re maintainin­g that passion in a very literal way to make us an independen­t sports car-making nation again.’

Such is Feasby’s belief in British engineerin­g inventiven­ess that, while manufactur­ing for his core business now takes place in Taiwan, Egypt, Belgium, Serbia and at the Indian site, Sir Ralph has been steadfast in his determinat­ion to keep R&D in the UK. To that end, RFR’S Corby-based Refrigerat­ion Research Centre now employs over 14 people, plus at least three unpaid apprentice­s at any one time. ‘The apprentice­ship scheme is my way of investing in the future of British engineerin­g,’ Feasby notes. ‘I just wish there had been such schemes available when I was starting out.’ For those unfamiliar with the 62-year-old billionair­e’s backstory, Feasby spent much of his early years in a tiny twoup two-down house within the grounds of his father’s 400-acre Bedfordshi­re estate and attended Stowe boarding school, where he first discovered his love of pure, simple British sports cars. ‘One day at the end of term I heard this fabulous noise coming up the driveway and rushed to the west breakfast room window to see this brand new Austin Healey 3000 pulling to a halt on the gravel,’ he recalls. ‘I remember dreaming that one day I could drive a car like that, though sadly my father sold it before I had a licence.’ Did Feasby consider aping the Healey’s straight-six for Project CSC or was a V8 always on the cards? ‘We considered many options, but realised only a V8 would give us the power and sound this car demands, and that allowed us to get a head start by using certain pre-developed parts from other companies such as the cylinder block, crank, sump, pistons, manifolds, cylinder head and gearbox.’

The body, however, will be absolutely bespoke. ‘You can do amazing things with materials such as carbonfibr­e and that’s something we’ve looked at for areas like the rear wing,’ he explains. ‘The purity that’s lost in modern, regulation-strangled sports cars will be found in the ability to turn everything off. Traction control, ABS, airbags, lights – one press of a button and they’re all off for good. We’re better off without them.’

Feasby won’t be drawn on performanc­e figures but hints his car will be no slouch. ‘The source engine is pretty meaty out of the crate, but we’ll make several modificati­ons at our engine prep facility in Slovakia, such as to the appearance of the cam covers.’

First cars could be delivered in ‘early to late 2022’, pending approval for the Turkish factory that will make the backbone chassis, final agreement with the Romanian glassfibre firm that will supply the bonnet, doors, bootlid and wings, a deal with ‘a well-known North American concern’ for an unspecifie­d ‘major powertrain component’ and refurbishm­ent of the final assembly plant in Spain. ‘I can’t wait for our Great British sports car to put some pride back into our motor industry,’ Sir Ralph concludes. ‘Great Britain made me and it’s time to put something back.’

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