RE: Forever garage hot hatches | Six of the Best

RE: Forever garage hot hatches | Six of the Best

Saturday 17th May

Forever garage hot hatches | Six of the Best

Want something quick and vaguely practical to cling to when the world has gone battery-powered? Try these


Renault Clio V6, 2004, 48k, £49,995

The thing to like about hot hatches - indeed, the whole point of them - is accessibility, both in terms of cost and ease of use. The standard temperature hatchback is the Swiss Army knife of modern automobiling; the heated-up version was intended to be the same, just with some fancier tools. But because blokes can’t leave anything alone for a second, the go-faster concept was always destined to be taken out beyond the Thunderdome, where virtually anything could happen. Many are magnificent in their own way; some have achieved outright greatness - but the qualifying criteria here is simply that we liked them enough to cling to when combustion has gone the way of the horse-drawn carriage. First among them the humble Renault Clio with an immodest V6 inserted into its back cabin. Is it the quickest, best-handling, best-built hot hatch in the world? Lord, no. But you absolutely won’t forget what it’s like to drive one. Big money is required to acquire one, of course - and rightly so because they are rare and bonkers and brilliant. Looks the business in Black Gold, too. 

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Honda Civic Type R Mugen, 2010, 25k, £17,995 

Okay, granted - there’s an element of wishful thinking involved here, as PH was lucky enough to drive the strictly limited (and absurdly expensive) 2.2-litre Mugen back in the day, which came with more power and drove with such naked exuberance that it stuck in the memory like a teenage reading of 'The Right Stuff'. But the slightly tamer, halfway house version was still very nice indeed, and a rare sight given there were only 200 sold. Subsequent Type Rs have tended to make the FN2 look a bit anaemic on the output front, although we’d argue that getting to wring the famed VTEC's neck more often and for longer is now a defining part of the CTR joy. This one, having covered just 25k under the shoes of two owners in 15 years, has clearly been cherished. That is exactly what you want from a used Type R, especially one priced from a fiver under £18k. 

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Mercedes-AMG A45, 2014, 50k, £16,989

Having said that, if it’s value for money you’re looking for - and hot hatches are always more appealing when bought cheap - the original generation A45 makes a fine case for itself. Sure, the later versions got quicker still and much cleverer, but let’s not forget that this was the first car through the hyper-hatch wall and arguably one of AMG’s defining achievements of the last 20 years. With 360hp available on demand, it still has the capacity to turn a B-road commute into a tarmac rally stage, and (not for nothing) it looks a lot more discreet than some of the later derivatives, especially if you forgo the stuck-on rear spoiler, as this example does. Better yet, owing to its popularity at the time, depreciation found the A45 fairly swiftly - meaning that a decade on from leaving the showroom, you can have this one for less than £17k. It’s hard to think of a car that delivers more pumped-up energy for less. 

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Ford Focus RS MP350, 2010, 30k, PH Auction

If the second-generation of Ford Focus RS were a person, it’d almost be old enough to drive now. Presumably with an appropriately scallywag sort of attitude. It was July 2008 that an Ultimate Green Focus stole the (motor) show at Excel, and it hasn’t been anything less than fast Ford royalty ever since. Never before had so much power been diverted through the front wheels of a hot hatch; there was a concern, after the unruly first RS with 212hp, that a 300hp, five-cylinder follow-up might be undrivable. Not a bit of it: the Revoknuckle worked wonders for containing front axle fury. With the character of the 2.5 engine, the chassis’ sense of humour and rally car styling, the RS has never been so in demand. This upcoming PH auction is dream-grade: Mountune fettling to 350hp, just 30,000 miles, not a single advisory in its life and in great condition. A hot hatch hero of the highest order.

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Peugeot 106 Rallye S2, 1998, 107k, £16,950

For those that prefer pocket rockets to mega hatches, there’s little beating a classic French three-door. Citroen, Renault and Peugeot have all produced their fair share of icons over the years, and there are hints that the glory days may be returning if cars like the Alpine A290 are anything to go by. As you might expect, we'll be sticking with the old school here, and they don’t come much more old school than a 106 Rallye: willing little four-pot, pert supermini shape and pretty much zero extraneous mass. The 1.6-litre Phase 2 Rallye may have lacked the homologation kudos of the mad-cap 1.3-litre original, but it’ll still feel raw, exciting and demanding like little from this century. Given the age, mileage and intent of a car like this (i.e. drive it like your Francois Delecour everywhere) this one seems to scrub up very nicely indeed. A recent significant spend - very nearly £10k - means it should be better than ever, in fact. Probably as much fun as it’s possible to have on four wheels. Or three. 

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Lancia Delta 16v Integrale, 1990, 67k, £45,995

It says a lot of the Delta’s significance that, three decades after the last one was made, it’s still a must-have in a list like this. A left-hand-drive-only hot hatch, remember, from a pretty niche manufacturer - even when they were selling cars here. This isn’t an Escort Cossie or a Golf GTI, a flagship version of a family car everybody knows. This was always a rare groove thing, which probably makes the folk keen on Deltas - the old rally fans like us - even keener to preserve the legacy. Like quattros before it and Evos after it, the Lancia was the definitive rally car for a period; despite very humble origins, it became a Group A stage superstar. This one is pre-Evo but 16-valve, and arrived here from Japan a few years ago. Which might help explain the lovely condition. That and all the money spent since. Probably not as viable an everyday option as some others, but to many people classic cars - especially five-door ones - don't come any cooler.

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Author
Discussion

MyV10BarksAndBites

Original Poster:

1,284 posts

63 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Great list beer.. Not a fan of the Pug tho...getmecoat

Mahalo

711 posts

193 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Also not a fan of the Peugeot - would have included 205GTi 1.9 instead. Practicality is also dubious with quite a few entries too
To keep some of these long term would be a nightmare in terms of parts availability.

wistec1

603 posts

55 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Clio, Lancia & Honda in that order please.

SpudLink

6,939 posts

206 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
article said:
Want something quick and vaguely practical
And then starts with a car that has an engine whereas the back seats should be.

Don’t get me wrong, I love the idea of a mad mid-engined hatchback. But if you’re sacrificing the practicality of a hatchback, you might as well put an Exige or Cayman on the list.


Edited by SpudLink on Saturday 17th May 06:32

Motormouth88

555 posts

74 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
That v6 Clio will sell so quickly, seems a reasonable price considering where they’re at these days.

ST330

110 posts

25 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
The integrale was a car I always wanted.
A mate ran an HF turbo for his then girlfriend, my direct manager in my first job had an 8v integrale, both cars bought new, both cars kept local Lancia garages and specialists in mortgage payments, nice holidays and new cars.
Never did buy one.

RS is an oddball. Volvo 5 pot can convert petrol to exhaust gases at an alarming rate. RS is brutal where ST is more of a usable allrounder. I've found an ST gives 80% of the performance for 50% of the running costs going from a MK3 RS to MK4 ST. RS has an RS tax especially for insurance.

Tickle

5,532 posts

218 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Some lovely cars, especially the Rallye, Clio and Lancia.


wc98

11,715 posts

154 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
A45, Focus RS and the Clio would be my choice but all of them are great cars.

Earthdweller

15,796 posts

140 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Probably betraying my age but for me it'd be a decade earlier

I'd keep the integrale, add a Strada 130TC in black or red, a Renault 5 GTT Raider, a P205 GTI 1.9 pref in white, VW Golf GTI 16v MK2 in oak green and the sixth possibly an Escort Rs turbo

I owned one of the above .. would take me right back to my youth smile

ST330

110 posts

25 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
130TC is a good shout, I had a 105TC back in the day.
I'd add a 2dr Manta GT/E to that in white or dark metallic blue.

200Plus Club

11,878 posts

292 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
A good set other than the little Pug.
Honda looks tidy n fresh and better value than some in the list. Also £50k for the cooking Lancia is too strong really, tidy as it is, you'll always wish you bought the full fat version.

Edited by 200Plus Club on Saturday 17th May 07:35

Nick325911

22 posts

43 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all

I think this will be coming to the Pistonheads classified section soon as it’s just been listed for sale at Millennium Heros - Clio 182 Trophy - 001.

https://www.millenniumheroes.com/cars/renault-clio...

LotusOmega375D

8,560 posts

167 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Used to have these two hot hatches to choose from. I paid less than £6k for each one.





Edited by LotusOmega375D on Saturday 17th May 08:21

akashzimzimma

244 posts

91 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
What's vaguely practical about a mid engined 2 seat V6 Clio?

Another poorly written PH piece...

Vsix and Vtec

946 posts

32 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Adore that little 106 Rallye, from an era when Peugeot was a fun brand for the young, kept honest by Renault pushing out stuff like the Clio RT and Williams. I'd probably have the FN2 as well, so I'd got something that I know I can drive when the pug has its inevitable "French" moment and doesn't want to go.

The Focus and the Integrale would sorely tempt me too.

GreatScott2016

1,810 posts

102 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
If I had to pick one of these for a days driving, I’d grab the RS keys in a heartbeat. Still love the look of these and I’ll never grow tired of that engine note. Slightly biased as I’ve owned a couple of Mark 2s and have nothing but great memories driving

Earthdweller

15,796 posts

140 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
ST330 said:
130TC is a good shout, I had a 105TC back in the day.
I'd add a 2dr Manta GT/E to that in white or dark metallic blue.
When I was 18 the rich kid in the 6th form got a brand new Strada as an 18th birthday present, it was 83/84 so not sure whether it would have been a 105/130 but it was bloody lovely .. I meanwhile had saved up and bought a rusty old Moggy, long before anyone thought they were a classic!

jehst82

8 posts

214 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
£50k for a v6 Clio... there's a lot of options for that money!

cerb4.5lee

36,525 posts

194 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Mahalo said:
Also not a fan of the Peugeot - would have included 205GTi 1.9 instead. Practicality is also dubious with quite a few entries too
To keep some of these long term would be a nightmare in terms of parts availability.
I don't mind the Pug overall, but I've never been able to get past the ugly steel white wheels on them though. Horrible for me, and you can also get them on the current Land Rover Defender too, and I don't like them on those either.

cerb4.5lee

36,525 posts

194 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Motormouth88 said:
That v6 Clio will sell so quickly, seems a reasonable price considering where they’re at these days.
I'll never forget the first time that I saw a V6 Phase 1 at the motorshow, and I completely fell in love with it for sure. cool