Background
The London Taxi Company is, despite its name, based in Coventry. Wholly owned by Chinese automaker Geely, it only produces London taxis (or Hackney carriages, as they are actually known). It builds between 2,000 and 2,500 units per year, with around two-thirds being sold for use in London via a dealership in Islington.
All UK taxis are fitted with the durable 2.5-litre VM turbo diesel engine – and reliability is a must given the 1,000,000 miles most will cover in a ten-year period. And while the TX4 might develop only 101bhp, that relatively lowly output masks a whopping 180lb/ft of torque, a figure that it much more relevant given the work the TX4 does. It’s also pretty fuel-efficient with up to 32mpg available, which is mighty impressive given the taxi’s 1,815-1,975kgs weight.
Most are fitted with an automatic transmission, and all sit on a ladder chassis with bolt-on steel body panels. Front suspension is via double-wishbones, with the rear being suspended via a solid axle with coil springs and a Panhard rod.
An updated and yet instantly recognisable modern interpretation of the legendary Austin FX4, the TX4 meets Euro 4 emissions standards and is far safer than any taxi that went before, while maintaining the car’s legendary reliability, durability and Public Carriage Officer-mandated 25-foot turning circle – and given that industry figures show that each taxi makes half-a-dozen U-turns per hour, every hour, seven-days-a-week, the importance of being able to swing the taxi round between kerbs shouldn’t underestimated.
The price new varied from £27,000 to £35,500 depending on specification, which means this top-of-the-range Elegance, with its extensive saddle leather trim, would have sat at the very top of the price list.







