Skip advert
Advertisement
Features

Jaguar XJ41 – Dead on arrival

The blighted ’80s ‘F-type’, the demise of which led to the creation of the Jaguar XK8 and launched a new era for Aston Martin

Jaguar XJ41

Project XJ41, initiated in 1980 and signed off for production two years later, sounded very promising for Jaguar. Unlike the squidgy, V12-powered XJ-S, this would be a proper sports car with a straight-six engine, double-wishbone suspension and the honour of being the last car to receive the blessing of company founder William Lyons before his death in 1985, anointed on a post-retirement visit to the design studio when he spotted Keith Helfet’s elegant styling proposal and declared, ‘That’s the Jaguar.’ No wonder it was always informally referred to as ‘the F-type’. Unfortunately, soon after Lyons left this world, project XJ41 (and its convertible sister, XJ42) slipped inexorably into development hell.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The first problem was that Jaguar had a tiny engineering department working to budgets no rival would entertain. It was once rumoured that Mercedes spent the same developing the new ‘multi-link’ rear axle of the 190 as Jaguar mustered for the whole of the brand new XJ40, and it was this core saloon project that sucked their slender resources in the middle ’80s, leaving the new sports car on the back burner.

When the all-new XJ eventually went on sale in 1986, two years behind schedule, attention turned to XJ41 and product planners began to worry that, six years after its inception and with a public reveal now sliding towards the dawn of the ’90s, the F-type was going to be outgunned. So, as the project wore on, XJ41 got a twin-turbo, 330bhp version of the straight-six to give it more power, and a four-wheel-drive system to harness that power, and airbags to meet forthcoming US rules, and a targa top to make it seem more versatile, and a wider body to accommodate all these new features.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

As a result, the XJ41 became an object lesson in what NASA would call ‘mission creep’ as the lithe, normally aspirated sports car ballooned into an over-specified, 1800-kilo monster. Jaguar made frantic attempts to bring things to order, binning the four-wheel drive and the twin-turbo engine (only to reinstate the latter in another moment of dithering), but it was too little, too late. When Ford bought Jaguar in late 1989 it started a detailed review of the company’s plans and, in March 1990, ten years after the project had been initiated, the F-type was killed off. One of 23 XJ-S-based engineering mules was saved from the scrapyard and lives on in Jaguar’s heritage collection, alongside two of the visually representative prototypes built by Karmann in 1989. 

Jag XJS

However, the legacy of XJ41 is bigger than that. When the project died, Tom Walkinshaw, the wily TWR boss who ran Jag’s motorsport efforts, asked his in-house designer to take the essence of the XJ41 design and apply it to the underparts of the smaller, narrower XJ-S, and then tried to sell this cost-effective scheme back to Jaguar. When they said no, Walkinshaw asked the designer to turn the Jag proposal into an Aston Martin. The project was approved as a new ‘entry level’ model, and we ended up with the DB7.

Meanwhile, Jaguar realised there was potential in a rehashed XJ-S chassis, which led to the XK8 of 1996, and the success of that car allowed the creation of its aluminium-shelled replacement, the 2005 XK, the hull of which was later cut down and adapted so that, finally, in 2013, Jaguar got to launch a car badged F-type. And the designer overseeing these last two cars was Ian Callum, whose career took off after he created the Aston DB7 using the design themes of the ill‑fated project XJ41.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Lamborghini Cheetah – dead on arrival
Lamborghini 4x4
Features

Lamborghini Cheetah – dead on arrival

How the Italian supercar maker once put its name to a 4x4 intended for the American military
8 Apr 2025
Maserati Quattroporte II – dead on arrival
Maserati Quattroporte II
Features

Maserati Quattroporte II – dead on arrival

Progress on this Citroën SM-derived four-door stalled when the French firm faltered in the mid-’70s
27 Feb 2025
New Jaguar GT seen on the road: 1000bhp production car prepares to launch Jag’s new era
Jaguar 2026 front
News

New Jaguar GT seen on the road: 1000bhp production car prepares to launch Jag’s new era

Jaguar’s new electric GT continues testing ahead its late-2025 reveal
7 Feb 2025
Lancia Fulvia Coupé – dead on arrival
Lancia Fulvia Coupe
Features

Lancia Fulvia Coupé – dead on arrival

It could’ve re-ignited a lust for Lancias, but instead this retro two-seater stalled at the concept stage
2 Jan 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter
Porsche 911 Carrera S – pictures
Reviews

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter

A new Carrera S has arrived with supercar-baiting pace and a £120k starting price – is it the sweet spot of the 992.2 range?
25 Apr 2025
Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car
Aston Martin Vantage V550 – front
Reviews

Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car

One of Aston Martin's last true hand-built models, the ludicrous twin-supercharged Vantage was a muscle car crossed with a stately home
24 Apr 2025
Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k
Ford Mustang (S550) front
In-depth reviews

Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k

The S550 appeared ten years ago as a more sophisticated kind of Mustang, in right-hand drive and with the job of tempting European sports car buyers. …
23 Apr 2025