If you, like me, watched the World Rally Championship during the 1990s, there are few sights more rousing in your rear-view mirror than a stickered-up Mitsubishi Evo Tommi Mäkinen Edition at maximum attack. Especially when it's framed by the blue wing (and underpinned by the flat-four thrum) of a Subaru Impreza. They're both undisputable legends, and experiencing either would be enough of an event today. Getting both together on the same stretch - with the hungry soundtrack of turbos spooling - feels like a jump back in time to a generation-defining moment in automotive history.
Throughout the late 1980s, 200bhp was the sign of a serious high-performance car. The final roadgoing evolutions of Group A motorsport-derived legends such as the Lancia Delta HF Integrale, Ford Sierra RS Cosworth and BMW's E30 M3 all peaked just above that magic figure. As the 1980s evolved into the 1990s, more mainstream cars were regularly topping 200bhp, and the goalposts for what constituted a genuinely fast car shifted towards the 250bhp mark.
While this barrier had been surpassed by more exotic machinery, a new breed of affordable, giant-slaying Japanese rally weapons was on the horizon. Not only were they unspeakably quick, they were easy to drive and genuinely affordable. Subaru's Impreza officially came to the UK in 1994, and changed the face of performance cars forever. This compact saloon did everything an Integrale could - both on and off a rally stage while offering Japanese reliability and build quality. More importantly, it did it at a price that the Europeans couldn't match.
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Esta historia es de la edición 250 - April 2024 de Octane.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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Will China Change Everything? - China is tearing up modern motor manufacture but is yet to make more than a ripple in the classic car world. That could be about to change dramatically
China now dominates the automotive world in a way even Detroit in its heyday would have struggled to comprehend.Helped by Government incentives, the new car world is dominated by China's industries: whether full cars that undercut Western models by huge amounts, ownership of storied European brands such as Lotus and Volvo, or ownership and access to the vast majority of raw materials that go into EV cars, its influence is far-reaching and deep. However, this automotive enlightenment hasn't manifested itself in the classic world in any meaningful way - until now.
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