Car manufacturers like Ford, Toyota, and Mazda spend billions and employ small armies of highly trained engineers to create polished products through years of development and millions of miles of testing. It would be hubris to think that some people on an industrial estate can improve on those cars, wouldn't it?
Well, there are plenty of smaller but well-established companies that disagree, with thousands of customers to back them up.
After all, the car manufacturers always leave something on the table because, while their adverts are populated by suave, well-mannered people, they know some of their cars will end up in the hands of less genteel enthusiasts who don't rate the concepts of mechanical sympathy or regular servicing. Meeting emissions targets and needing to make a profit aren't conducive to making big power, either.
Here to argue the case for tinkering, then, are the Toyota GR Yaris by Litchfield the Mountune Ford Focus ST M365, and a previous-generation Mazda MX-5 2.0-litre with BBR GTi's Stage 1 Supercharger kit.
Now, these three cars were very different propositions when they came out of the factory - we've got a five-door front-wheel-drive hot hatch, a three-door four-wheel-drive one and a two-seat rear-drive roadster modified to different extents.
And while all of them, on a basic level, have been made faster by their respective fettlers, there are actually three rather different philosophies at play here.
Mountune's recipe is ostensibly the simplest: it's a Ford Focus ST, but more so. Mountune is an engine builder, historically, and has designed uprated powerplants for various race series, so a more potent 2.3-litre four-cylinder is clearly what this Focus is all about.
To produce 360bhp instead of a mere 276bhp, Mountune doesn't actually need to touch any of the internals, although it does recommend some breathing mods to keep everything in one piece.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The venomous nature of the Cobra
Last week, Matt Prior drove a totally new kind of AC Cobra. This is a car with one of the strongest allures of all - but also an incredibly complex and controversial history.
SKODA KAMIQ
A long getting-to-know-you trip to Spain reveals all
THE SEVEN-YEAR TITCH
Outgoing baby Jag is plush, practical and now eminently affordable
'Our time has come'
Honda may be late to the EV party, but a barrage of bold new battery-powered cars is on the way. JAMES ATTWOOD speaks to boss Toshihiro Mibe at its R&D base to find out what's in store
Lion kings
Plush, powerful four-door cars are an endangered species - and now Peugeot has called time on its latest, the 508 PSE. STEPHEN DOBIE compares it with its most significant ancestor, the 505 GTI
VOLKSWAGEN GOLF
Wolfsburg gives the lesser-known Golf PHEV a big-impact refresh
PORSCHE PANAMERA GTS
Stuttgart's latest 'bahnstormer targets driver appeal over outright punch
MERCEDES-AMG GT 63 PRO
Hardcore variant of V8 sports car engineered with track days in mind
TESLA REVEALS ROBOTAXI
Firm unveils Cybercab coupé and 20-seat Robovan in autonomy push
DACIA PLOTS AMBITIOUS EXPANDED EURO LINE-UP
Firm teases something different’ ahead of impending C-segment reveal