Skip to main content

Here's a rare chance to buy a brand new, street-legal classic 1950s race car

If you have a tendency to drool when you see awesome cars, get a towel ready. The Lister Motor Company, one of the most famous British racing marques, has brought back a winning FIA Appendix K class current spec racer from the late 1950s and announced a limited run continuation build of street legal versions of the 1958 Lister Knobbly.

Introducing The Road Legal Lister Knobbly

In the early 1950s, the Lister MG started racing with a modified MG 4-cylinder engine, winning its first race in 1954. Looking to boost power, Lister tried a Maserati engine in 1956 but soon switched to a 3.8-liter inline 6-cylinder Jaguar engine. That engine and car’s distinctive bodywork referred to as “knobbly” evolved into the 1958 Lister Knobbly.

Legendary Lister ‘Knobbly’ lives on

Lister produced other models in the interim since the late 1950s, including the Lister Storm based on a 12-cylinder Jaguar engine that was converted to a hybrid race car in 2005. Lister announced a new model in 2013, a $3.2 million 1,000 horsepower hypercar.

Recommended Videos

To celebrate the company’s anniversary in 2014, Lister built 10 1958 Works Lister Knobbly 60th Anniversary Editions built to meet FIA racing standards. But it is the latest Lister model that is causing excitement.

The new 1958 Lister Knobbly model is a street-legal car that is essentially the same vehicle manufactured in 1958. The car has a tubular chassis made from the original engineering jigs — structures that both hold the parts in place while they are being worked on and ensure the fit and fittings are in the correct places. The Knobbly has hammered aluminum body panels the company says to take about 500 hours to beat into the correct shape.

The six-cylinder Jaguar 3.8-liter engines and four-speed transmissions are almost identical to those used in the 1950s. The engines are built from original Jaguar blocks with new remanufactured parts.

The engine looks and runs like the original, but don’t think that the performance pales by any measure. According to Lister, the “new” 1958 Knobbly is rated at 330 horsepower and can accelerate from zero to 60 mph in 4.3 seconds and reach a top speed of 181 mph.

There are a number of changes in the road-ready version of the Knobbly. Lister states the most notable changes were carefully integrated into the original design. Major changes include a collapsible steering column, rollover protection, turn-signal indicators, side repeater flashers, and a rear fog lamp. The cars also have brake fluid and low fuel level warning lights, a sunken fuel filler cap, rearview mirrors, and a ratchet handbrake. Instead of a windscreen the Knobbly now has a wind deflector, and the wheel spinners have been removed so you won’t slice pedestrian shins or knees if they get too close to the car when it’s moving. (The car pictured below built for a single customer has wheel spinners.)

Lister is building only 10 road-ready Knobblys, with two six-cylinder engine choices. If you order the car with a 4.2-liter the price is about $291,000. Equipped with the even-more-original 3.8-liter motor the Knobbly costs about $381,000.

According to Lister, the new street-legal car is the first of “more future road-going Lister models, too.”

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
Plug-in hybrids are becoming more popular. Why? And will it continue?
Kia Niro EV Charging Port

There's a lot of talk about the idea that the growth in electric car sales has kind of slowed a little. It's not all that surprising -- EVs are still expensive, early adopters all have one by now, and they're still new enough to where there aren't too many ultra-affordable used EVs available. But plenty of people still want a greener vehicle, and that has given rise to an explosion in hybrid vehicle sales.

That's especially true of plug-in hybrid vehicles, which can be charged like an EV and driven in all-electric mode for short distances, and have a gas engine as a backup for longer distances or to be used in combination with electric mode for more efficient driving.

Read more
EV drivers are not going back to gas cars, global survey says
ev drivers are not going back to gas cars global survey says screenshot

Nearly all current owners of electric vehicles (EVs) are either satisfied or very satisfied with the experience, and 92% of them plan to buy another EV, according to a survey by the Global EV Drivers Alliance.

The survey of 23,000 EV drivers worldwide found that only 1% would return to a petrol or diesel car, while 4% would opt for a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) if they had to replace their car.

Read more
Trump team in sync with Tesla on ending crash-reporting requirements, report says
Beta of Tesla's FSD in a car.

The transition team of President-elect Donald Trump is planning to end existing car-crash reporting requirements to safety regulators, according to a Reuters report.

The report cites a document obtained by Reuters that lays out the transition team’s 100-day strategy for automotive policy. In the document, the team says the crash-reporting requirement leads to “excessive” data collection, Reuters says.

Read more