LISTER STORM: THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BEST & WORST YEARS βοΈ
Reliability, Performance, Ownership & Full V12 Analysis (1993β1996)
π WHAT IS THE LISTER STORM? DEFINITION & ORIGINS
The Lister Storm is a hand-built British supercar and homologation special produced by Lister Cars from 1993 to 1996. Powered by a monstrous 7.0-liter Jaguar V12 producing 546 bhp and 590 lb-ft torque, it was designed to compete in FIA GT racing. Only 4 road-legal units exist, making it rarer than a McLaren F1. The best years deliver sorted engineering, while the worst years suffer from first-model electrical and cooling gremlins. This guide covers definition, types (road vs race), why model years matter, and a complete reliability index.
546 hp, 6-speed manual, 0-60 in 4.1 sec, weight ~1650 kg. Luxurious interior with Connolly leather.
FIA GT1/GT2 spec, 600+ hp, sequential gearbox, multiple championship wins (1999β2000).
1993 (2 units), 1994 (1), 1995 (0?), 1996 (1 final). Rarity defines value.
β WHY FOCUS ON BEST & WORST YEARS OF LISTER STORM?
Because Lister made rolling changes: 1993 models had fragile wiring looms, overheating radiators, and tricky shift linkage. By 1995β1996, the factory refined engine cooling, ECU mapping, suspension bushings, and interior electronics. Collectors and investors must differentiate because repair costs vary by $40k+. The best year (1996) commands nearly double the value of a worst year (1993).
π COMPLETE YEAR-BY-YEAR DEEP DIVE (BEST VS WORST)
| Model Year | Production # (Road) | Reliability Score | Key Strengths | Critical Weaknesses | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | 2 units | β 2/10 | Raw, unadulterated V12 soundtrack, homologation history | Electrical shorts, fuel vapor lock, no cabin ventilation, fragile dash | WORST YEAR β Avoid unless full restoration |
| 1994 | 1 unit | βββ 5/10 | Improved engine mapping, better clutch hydraulics | Cooling still marginal, intermittent wipers failure | Mediocre but acceptable |
| 1995 | 0 (race focus) | ββββ 7/10 | Suspension bushings upgraded, revised radiator fan control | Hard to find road cars; race cars fragile gearbox | Good, but rare |
| 1996 | 1 (chassis #SA9STRM1S1R100004) | βββββ 9.5/10 | Ultimate cooling system, perfect gearbox syncros, AP brakes, premium leather | Sky-high price, parts scarcity | BEST YEAR β Peak Storm |
| Race 1997-1998 | ~12 race cars | βββ 4/10 | Lightweight, downforce, raw speed | Overheating in endurance races, dogbox failure | Only for track veterans |
| Race 1999-2000 | ~10 race cars | βββββ 9/10 | Winning pedigree (British GT), bulletproof engine oil system, sequential gearbox | High running costs | BEST race years |
π οΈ HOW TO CHOOSE THE RIGHT LISTER STORM YEAR (Buyerβs Guide)
1οΈβ£ 1993 check: Run a full thermal camera on cooling system β ask for electrical rewiring proof.
2οΈβ£ 1994-1995: Verify radiator upgrade and aftermarket fan relay kit.
3οΈβ£ 1996: Inspect original tool kit, service records β best long-term hold.
4οΈβ£ Race chassis: Demand logbooks, engine rebuild intervals (1999+ preferred).
5οΈβ£ Always get a compression test & borescope β V12 liners can crack on early cars.
Pro tip: Best year for daily usability = 1996 road car Worst year to buy blindly = 1993
π‘οΈ IS THE LISTER STORM SAFE? (Safety by Model Year)
The Lister Storm has no airbags, ABS, or traction control. However, the tubular spaceframe chassis offers excellent rigidity. The best year for safety-related improvements is 1996 with better brake cooling ducts and optional racing harness mounts. The worst year (1993) had no fire suppression and outdated braking balance. For modern use, always add a fire extinguisher and upgrade to modern brake fluid. Is it safe for road use? In dry conditions with experienced driver, yes. But avoid rain β no electronic aids.
β ADVANTAGES & β DISADVANTAGES: Best vs Worst Years Compared
β Reliable electrical architecture
β Adjustable coilovers with race valving
β No overheating even in traffic
β Highest collector value (+$200k vs 1993)
β Original AP Racing disc brakes
β Chronic electrical gremlins (dashboard flicker)
β Engine runs hot after 20 minutes
β Weak gearbox synchromesh (2nd gear grind)
β Hard to source unique 1993-only ECU
β Value depreciation without extensive restoration
π° FULL COST OF OWNERSHIP BY YEAR (Estimated)
Purchase: $350kβ450k
Annual maintenance: $12kβ20k (electrical repairs common)
Worst depreciation risk
Purchase: $500kβ600k
Annual: $8kβ12k
Solid mid-range option
Purchase: $750kβ1.2M
Annual: $7kβ10k (most sorted)
Best investment upside
π USE CASES: WHICH YEAR FITS YOUR NEED?
- π Track & Historic Racing: Target 1999β2000 race car β proven victory record and robust coolers.
- π£οΈ Weekend Collector Drives: 1996 road car (reliable, refined) or a fully restored 1995.
- π Investment Portfolio: 1996 model is the blue chip. Avoid 1993 unless concours restored.
- π§ DIY Enthusiast / Project: 1994 β cheaper entry but expect cooling rework.
π FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (MORE DETAILS)
β‘ PERFORMANCE COMPARISON TABLE (1993 vs 1996 vs Race 2000)
| Spec | 1993 (Worst) | 1996 (Best Road) | 2000 Race Car |
|---|---|---|---|
| Power | 546 bhp | 546 bhp (but smoother delivery) | ~620 bhp (unrestricted) |
| 0-60 mph | 4.2s (erratic launch) | 4.0s consistent | 3.5s |
| Cooling Reliability | Poor (overheat risk) | Excellent (triple core rad) | Race-optimized |
| Parts Availability | Extremely scarce | Better (shared with later Jag V12) | Specialist only |