Rover P6: 2000, 2200, 3500

James Taylor
The Rover P6 was unquestionably one of the best saloon cars to come out of Britain in the 1960s and was winner of the first-ever European Car of the Year award. It combined a wealth of technical innovation with a distinctive appearance that incorporated exactly the right degree of Italianate sharp-suited appearance for its time. It was, and remains, a great car to drive, and all these qualities were combined with the space and practicality of a four-seat family saloon. Rover P6: 2000, 2200, 3500 - The Complete Story documents its evolution from the earliest ideas in the 1950s to the end of production in 1977. It describes all the models with specification tables and paint and trim options, including NADA and Federal cars and remembers the motorsport successes and failures. It records the manufacturing process at Solihull and CKD overseas and includes a useful chapter on buying and owning a Rover P6.
Rover P6: 2000, 2200, 3500 by James Taylor

About the author

James Taylor has been writing professionally about road transport since the late 1970s, and his interests embrace a wide range of older cars of all makes and nationalities, as well as classic buses, lorries and military vehicles. James has written around 130 books in all, and among them have been several definitive one-make or one-model motoring titles, including a number for Crowood.

Press Reviews

James Taylor brings to bear his usual attention to detail; doing justice to the P6 saga while also providing a fantastic reference to make cars period-correct. The foreword describes the fun he had writing the book and it's easy to see why - it's bursting with pleasing little details from the P6-branded cigarettes at the press launch to crash-test photos.

- Classic and Sports Car

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