RE: McRae-spec Vauxhall Nova Sport for sale
RE: McRae-spec Vauxhall Nova Sport for sale
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McRae-spec Vauxhall Nova Sport for sale

Vanishingly rare homologated curio in timewarp condition - with price to match


Let’s all agree: paying nearly £40k for a 40-year-old Vauxhall Nova is bonkers. It defies reason. Not an unusual sentiment when discussing older cars, of course, many of which are only worth now what someone is prepared to pay for them - but it’s hard to see how anyone of sound mind could justify spending Mercedes-AMG A45 S money on such a rudimentary old hatchback, surely appreciated now only by a middle-aged niche, most of whom would freely admit to the car’s glaring objective weaknesses. 

Nevertheless, if you are of a certain age, the Nova, alongside a smorgasbord of other cheap-to-buy front-drive cars from the ’80s and ‘90s, does tend to provoke memories of summers long gone, when you were freer and lighter and more easily pleased. Thankfully, there are easier and cheaper ways to access those feelings than blowing a small fortune on a used Vauxhall - though, admittedly, if you’re adamant that there's only one way back to the good times, you’re not going to find many better, or rarer, than this. 

To give the Nova Sport its due, its status as a proper homologation special is not in question. This is, after all, the car that a young Colin McRae cut his teeth on. Vauxhall produced 500 examples so that it might have something for Group A rallying, another good reason - beyond the Nova’s usual rate of disintegration - that so few survive. This particular car, in case there was any doubt about the validity of its Polar White paint and model-specific livery, has apparently been authenticated by the archivist at Vauxhall Heritage. 

At any rate, the Sport is recognisable for its distinctive red silencer and modified 1.3-litre motor, which earned twin Weber DCOE carburettors, an Irmscher induction manifold and a performance camshaft for a heady 93hp. Modest though its improvement over the standard SR engine was, the Nova’s lack of extraneous weight meant that it translated into solid performance gains: the vendor’s claim of a two-second improvement to 60mph might even be true. 

Inside, it's predictably spartan, with brown Daytona check Recaro seats that look barely sat in, and an early SR dashboard with orange-needle instruments. Obviously there's no air conditioning, no power steering and definitely nothing as newfangled as airbags. A two-speed fan is the extent of the Sport’s standard luxuries; the only thing foreign to the kit list seems to be 15-inch Compomotive Motorsport alloys, though (assuming they are add-ons) we can all agree they look the part. 

Otherwise, the car is a testament to originality, TLC and considerate use - remarkable, really, given the Sport’s brief. The history does show some light track eventing (would be a shame not to, right?) but with a comprehensive service just completed, including cambelt, water pump and brake overhaul, it’s ready to go. Where to exactly, is harder to fathom. Despite its motorsport provenance, the Nova is surely too humdrum for a serious collection - and yet is arguably too rare and pricey to play thrashy B-road time machine. Suggestions welcome below. Either way, it’ll help to love it a little. 


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Author
Discussion

wistec1

Original Poster:

673 posts

59 months

40K of homologated dilusion. For this money you can have yourself something far more interesting like a Sunbeam Lotus which are on the up.

The only Nova I got to drive was the 1.7 diesel and to be fair it felt really quite quick with plenty of torque. I'd chance it was probably quicker than this offering someone will no doubt know?

It's gonna take a proper Vauxhall crackpot to buy this at that money.
Still it's nice to see a survivor even if it is crazy money and as they say it cost nowt to look.

CLK-GTR

1,600 posts

263 months

Awful things then, awful things now. I dont think I'd pay 40k for that even if it was McRae's actual car.

CH80

265 posts

15 months

wistec1 said:
40K of homologated dilusion. For this money you can have yourself something far more interesting like a Sunbeam Lotus which are on the up.

The only Nova I got to drive was the 1.7 diesel and to be fair it felt really quite quick with plenty of torque. I'd chance it was probably quicker than this offering someone will no doubt know?

It's gonna take a proper Vauxhall crackpot to buy this at that money.
Still it's nice to see a survivor even if it is crazy money and as they say it cost nowt to look.
😂 I have to agree. What a bizarre advert.

el romeral

1,777 posts

155 months

I agree with the bonkers bit.

Jon_S_Rally

4,078 posts

106 months

The price is high, but it's an extremely rare car now, so I wouldn't be surprised if someone pays it.

It's a shame the article is somewhat dismissive in its tone, because I think this is a fantastic car. Sure, it's not the best hot (warm?) hatch ever, but it's a proper rally homologation special. The 1300cc class was super competitive at this time, with cars like the Nova and 205, and the fact they were fitting twin carbs and other bits to a handful of road cars to try and gain an advantage is the sort of thing we could only dream of nowadays.

If someone does fork out for it, good for them, as they'll no doubt be a proper nut for these kinds of interesting cars. We'll never see their like again sadly.

rossub

5,317 posts

208 months

Well I love it and if I was rich, I’d pay it.

RedLightGreenLight

43 posts

42 months

Jon_S_Rally said:
The price is high, but it's an extremely rare car now, so I wouldn't be surprised if someone pays it.

It's a shame the article is somewhat dismissive in its tone, because I think this is a fantastic car. Sure, it's not the best hot (warm?) hatch ever, but it's a proper rally homologation special. The 1300cc class was super competitive at this time, with cars like the Nova and 205, and the fact they were fitting twin carbs and other bits to a handful of road cars to try and gain an advantage is the sort of thing we could only dream of nowadays.

If someone does fork out for it, good for them, as they'll no doubt be a proper nut for these kinds of interesting cars. We'll never see their like again sadly.
This… very well said and my thoughts too

Dynion Araf Uchaf

4,950 posts

241 months

40k for that. A mid 80s 1300 100hp homologation special.

Will a mid 90s 1300 100hp homologation special reach the same money in 10 years. #106rallye

Gtijem

11 posts

152 months

rossub said:
Well I love it and if I was rich, I d pay it.
Agree

GreatScott2016

2,000 posts

106 months

I think an avid collector would love this, personally, it’s very strong money, but given its rarity etc., I wouldn’t be surprised to see this go at list price or marginally less.

Scoobysaurus

319 posts

115 months

I actually saw the young Colin McRae crash out of the RAC Rally in his one, in 1987 at Dalby (a google search reminds me..)



Edited by Scoobysaurus on Sunday 26th October 08:20

Robertb

2,945 posts

256 months

Jon_S_Rally said:
The price is high, but it's an extremely rare car now, so I wouldn't be surprised if someone pays it.

It's a shame the article is somewhat dismissive in its tone, because I think this is a fantastic car. Sure, it's not the best hot (warm?) hatch ever, but it's a proper rally homologation special. The 1300cc class was super competitive at this time, with cars like the Nova and 205, and the fact they were fitting twin carbs and other bits to a handful of road cars to try and gain an advantage is the sort of thing we could only dream of nowadays.

If someone does fork out for it, good for them, as they'll no doubt be a proper nut for these kinds of interesting cars. We'll never see their like again sadly.
It’s the law. We’re only allowed to get excited about mega money old Fords.

NDNDNDND

2,523 posts

201 months

RedLightGreenLight said:
Jon_S_Rally said:
The price is high, but it's an extremely rare car now, so I wouldn't be surprised if someone pays it.

It's a shame the article is somewhat dismissive in its tone, because I think this is a fantastic car. Sure, it's not the best hot (warm?) hatch ever, but it's a proper rally homologation special. The 1300cc class was super competitive at this time, with cars like the Nova and 205, and the fact they were fitting twin carbs and other bits to a handful of road cars to try and gain an advantage is the sort of thing we could only dream of nowadays.

If someone does fork out for it, good for them, as they'll no doubt be a proper nut for these kinds of interesting cars. We'll never see their like again sadly.
This very well said and my thoughts too
I agree, the tone of this article comes across as bitter and ignorant.

dontlookdown

2,257 posts

111 months

I bet that's a hoot to drive. Lightweight, fwd, and a buzzy tuned engine. Even the standard 1.3 Nova SRs were much more fun than car lore in 2025 allows, probably because they are Vauxhalls not Fords.

But at 40k no-one will be driving this further than from the transporter into the garage/display area. Shame really.

S600BSB

6,853 posts

124 months

Bonkers.

Taz73

308 posts

30 months

Jon_S_Rally said:
The price is high, but it's an extremely rare car now, so I wouldn't be surprised if someone pays it.

It's a shame the article is somewhat dismissive in its tone, because I think this is a fantastic car. Sure, it's not the best hot (warm?) hatch ever, but it's a proper rally homologation special. The 1300cc class was super competitive at this time, with cars like the Nova and 205, and the fact they were fitting twin carbs and other bits to a handful of road cars to try and gain an advantage is the sort of thing we could only dream of nowadays.

If someone does fork out for it, good for them, as they'll no doubt be a proper nut for these kinds of interesting cars. We'll never see their like again sadly.
Exactly this, really interesting little homologation special, yes it bonkers money, I haven’t a clue as to its real value compared with its peers, but it’s rarity and condition have to count for something.
Love it.

BigMon

5,473 posts

147 months

My mate had a a J reg white 1.4SR bought from almost new with black steel wheels and, objectively, it's one of the best cars both he and I ever owned.

It was a fantastic package. Looked the part, nice interior (great seats IIRC), fast enough and handled well.

He had it about 4 years when we were in our late teens\early twenties and I have nothing but fond memories of it. It was very reliable too.

Justin-ow582

535 posts

123 months

Who would be making a choice between this and an A45 (or any other modern hatchback) anyway?
I hope a collector negotiates a good deal and cherishes the Nova.

ST3.14159265358979323846

236 posts

29 months

First car I bought after starting work was a six months old Nova SRi. Did everything I wanted/needed at the time. Sold for £1,000 more than I paid after 9 months and 14,000 miles. The only car I've ever made money on.

A real rally connoisseur with deep pockets will buy this car. It's an IYKYK car, no one is throwing £40k at one to find out.

Ozzer2006

119 posts

59 months

I had two in the 90s Used mine for sprints and hillclimbs. Forget the vauxhall hate and think of it in the same way as the euro spec 205 rallye and it makes more sense.. who doesn't love the induction noise of twin 40 webbers. But at 38k probably best left as a distant memory