Nova
Richard Oakes made his design debut in 1970 with the Tramp beach buggy, one
of the few originally styled buggies of the British boom. In its
year-and-a-half, production life, 75 were made.
It was Oakes' next project which put him on the map. The Nova, conceived
and styled by Oakes and engineered by Phil Sayers, was completed in December
1971. When launched early the following year, it caused a storm. Nothing
quite like it, with the exception of the Lamborghini Miura, had ever been
seen before. Motor magazine called it `one of the prettiest cars ever made'.
It was available in kit form forjust 750 pounds, high by kit car standards
but still very low by comparison with sports cars of the time.
The centrepiece of the dramatically styled Nova was the lifting canopy
which allowed entry to its two occupants. The fact that it was based on the
humblest of floorpans, that of the VW Beetle, did not dissuade a healthy line
of customers for the car.
Licensed production began in the USA in 1973 with the Sterling. This was
the tip of a future iceberg, with modifed Nova production starting in France,
Italy, Switzerland, Austria, South Africa, and elsewhere.
In Britain, however, the Nova's price told against it during the oil
crisis, when car sales slumped overall. In 1975, Automotive Design &
Development, the makers of the Nova, went bust, having sold 180 cars. Oakes'
fully redesigned Nova replacement never even reached the prototype stage.
Reaction to the Nova had been such that it could not be allowed to die -
though the tangled-spaghetti story which followed made some people wish that
it had. From 1977, three separate moulds for the Nova began churning out
bodyshells from different enterprises, often to a questionable standard of
finish. The `official' version ended up in the hands of Vic Elam in 1978 and
the two others joined forces to produce the Nova SSD, which lasted until
1979.
Elam's Nova Cars re-established the exotic, im-
proving it with body mods in 1981 and even mooting
a tubular chassis the next year. By 1984, production
was running at 12 per month and a Bermuda targa roof
version was available.
From this time on, the Nova became more and more of a part-time project
and in 1996 it was finally abandoned.
© and Copy, 1996-1998:
Paul Negyesi npaul@hu.inter.net