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Expert Insights: Q&A with Premcar CEO Bernie Quinn

Expert Insights: Q&A with Premcar CEO Bernie Quinn

Posted on July 18, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Expert Insights: Q&A with Premcar CEO Bernie Quinn

He may not be your typical automotive industry executive, but Bernie Quinn has assembled some formidable feathers in his cap during a near 30-year engineering career that has produced some of this country’s most iconic vehicles.

These days he’s the CEO of Premcar, which most people recognise as the engineering company that helped transform the Nissan Navara ute and Patrol SUV into hardcore Warrior-branded off-roaders, more than 10,000 of which have now been produced.

First established in 2019, Nissan’s Warrior sub-brand has been so successful it’s being replicated in other markets starting with South Africa, where Premcar has formed a joint venture to produce Navara Warriors in Nissan’s Rosslyn factory.

A Melbourne engineering firm born out of the death of Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV), Premcar can trace its roots back to the 1996 launch of the Tickford Vehicle Engineering-enhanced Ford EL Falcon GT, followed by the 1998 TS50, TE50 and TL50, and the 2001 Mustang converted locally to right-hand drive by Tickford.

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FPV was then formed in a joint venture between Ford and Prodrive, which bought out Tickford, and the first fruit was the 2003 BA Falcon-based FPV GT. But Prodrive also helped develop Mazda Australia’s MX-5 SP and Toyota Australia’s TRD-badged HiLux and Aurion.

After it developed the supercharged 5.0-litre ‘Miami’ V8 for FPV’s Falcon-based range, Prodrive became Premcar in 2012 and it immediately produced the 335kW FG Falcon-based FPV GT, followed by the 351kW FPV GT-F in 2014, and then the 325kW FG-X Falcon XR6 Sprint and XR8 Sprint sports sedans based on the final and finest Falcons in 2016.

A year earlier, Premcar also began its extensive defence industry work, and even co-developed its first helicopter for a major corporation, before teaming up with Nissan to become one of Australia’s two largest automotive engineering companies alongside Walkinshaw Automotive.

We sat down with Bernie to ask him about what’s next for Premcar, the Warrior brand, and the Australian auto industry as it undergoes rapid change amid an influx of new brands and products.

Why is local new-vehicle enhancement so popular in Australia?

There are a couple of reasons why.

First of all, many new-car buyers in Australia are very particular. I’ve said this a few times over the years. A lot of Australian car buyers grew up when we had local car manufacturing.

You had Falcons and Commodores, for example, and you could effectively customise them to the spec you wanted when new. You could have almost any colour.

There were utes, sedans and wagons; sports, executive and luxury; long-wheelbase and short-wheelbase; various engines such as V8, V6, I6, turbo, supercharged; pretty much every permutation and combination you could have. Australians became very used to customising their cars to their own specifications.