RE: Street-legal sensations | Six of the Best
RE: Street-legal sensations | Six of the Best
Saturday 11th April

Street-legal sensations | Six of the Best

You could have a road car that's handy on track, or you could have a motorsport machine with an MOT...


Ferrari F355, 1997, 57k, £95,000

The place where road cars stop and race cars begin has always been a bit of a grey area, especially when there’s homologation to think of. But one thing is for certain: cars with oversized motorsport influence, however intangible, are cool, and they tend to be spectacular to drive. So high time they were celebrated, right? Because while it’s a grey area, that space between road and race is also a generous one in terms of bandwidth. Take this F355 Challenge as an example: the one-make series used cars that were close to production spec, so much so that plenty have subsequently been converted for road use to create the Challenge Stradale 355 Ferrari never made. Or a more affordable GT Competizione. This one was a road car built to race spec, has competed in Ferrari Owners Club events and boasts ‘just enough civility to enjoy on your favourite B roads as well as on track.’ Sunday mornings will never be the same again. 

See the original advert

Subaru Impreza WRX STI Type R, 1997, 300 miles, £64,995

Call this the sublime to the ridiculous, perhaps. Subaru Imprezas have been modified almost since the first cars arrived from Japan, but this is no ordinary Turbo 2000. It’s a two-door Type R for one thing, just like the rally cars of the time. And there’s a full 22B widebody conversion with some adjustable aero, so it resembles a ‘properly developed competition machine rather than an aesthetic exercise’. Plus there’s the small matter of more than 750hp - in an Impreza! There’s more than 550hp offered from the 2.5-litre EJ flat four on super unleaded, with a peak of 763hp and 680lb ft available using ethanol. It’s enough for this Subaru to run down the quarter mile in 10.4 seconds, without slicks. Maybe not the obvious choice as a road-legal drag car, but all the cooler for it. Quick around a track, too…

See the original advert

Porsche 911 SC, 1981, 157k, £60,990

For a more traditional take on the road racer, we had to have a 911 in. These days it can seem like more modified air-cooled cars exist than standard ones, because the old Porsches respond so well to a bit of optimisation. And, let’s be frank here, tend to look pretty damn cool when they’re styled a bit more classically. To lean into the motorsport and modifying heritage of 911s is popular for good reason. Potentially very time-consuming and expensive, yes, but who hasn’t dreamed of a honking great flat-six, yellow Cibie spotlights and a fancy set of Fuchs at one point or another? It just works. This 1981 3.0 SC was converted to a racier spec back in 2012 by the owner now selling, an overhaul that means brakes, interior, suspension, diff and tyres are all up to a serious track day standard. Apparently it’s been all over Europe as well. A proper old hot rod that would surely be a joy for years to come. All for less than any GT3 you care to mention.

See the original advert

BMW M3, 1990, 108k, PH Auctions

Probably the ultimate homologation hero as far as touring cars go, many an E30 M3 has been converted for more serious track use over the past 40 years. They were little more than five grand once upon a time, remember. But as values have soared (and plenty of the modified cars biffed), so the sorted-for-circuit E30 M3 has become less common. That makes this DTM homage all the more interesting; not only does it look absolutely perfect - complete with gold BBS Super RS set just so - there are a few modifications to really make the best of a legendary platform. Check out the cage, seats and Yokohama Advans for hints of that. This has also been equipped with Bilstein dampers, braided brake hoses and a Milltek exhaust. While still modestly powerful, this M3 promises to make every mile on road - with an MOT until January - or track a riot. Bidding starts on Wednesday… 

See the original advert

Lotus Exige Cup 430, 2019, 17k, £84,950

Prior to the Emira and the EVs, every Lotus on sale felt like a road-legal race car to some extent. They were tricky to get in and out of, stripped of any excess, fast, lightweight - and thrilling to drive like little else. But some were extreme even by those standards, and as Lotus began to extract more power from the supercharged Toyota V6, so we saw more and more of them. Think 3-Eleven, the GT-badged Evoras, and this, the Exige Cup 430. The most powerful Exige that ever existed, there were hints of old school supercar about the Cup with its wild design, manual gearbox and unassisted steering. But the Lotus finesse, combined with formidable power to weight, made the Cup 430 searingly fast around a track as well. This one promises even more than standard, too, with the 475hp Komotec upgrade. There’s even a CarPlay head unit in the list of modifications - what more do you need? See you at Silverstone… 

See the original advert

Aston Martin GT12, 2016, 7k, £289,995

Compared to a 10-second Subaru, a E30 M3 track car and a Lotus Exige with almost 500hp, an Aston Martin Vantage might look just a little bit tame. Just in case the Kermit Green accents hadn’t given it away, though, this is no ordinary Vantage. It’s a GT12, a hugely rare limited edition that stripped 100kg from the V12 Vantage, took the 5.9-litre engine to 600hp, and introduced a level of attitude never before seen on the baby Aston. And it wasn’t exactly mellow to start with. Every modification you’d want to see for a car originally called GT3 (before Porsche made a fuss) was here, from ceramic brakes to a titanium exhaust, carbon panels to totally overhauled suspension. Unsurprisingly, the end result was utterly glorious, the GT12 treading a neat path between road habitability and track prowess. It was wonderful wherever, put most simply. Which is why you’ll still need more than a quarter of a million for one…

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

blue al

Original Poster:

1,355 posts

184 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Scooby looks best value and oddly less shouty than most of the others,
I love the ethos of street racer, Track day car with MOT, but not entirely brought into sticker livery if using it myself to pop to the shops, also feels a little bit like your trying too hard for a track day.
Conversely Having said all that would love to have an Lancia stratos in full Alitalia as never seen one of those as a road car, or a 037 in a Martini dress, or that Aston as pale blue Gulf car.

Life's full of contradictions driving

Lincsls1

3,952 posts

165 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Scooby for me!
550+bhp in a car that doesn't weigh as much as the moon! What 1300kg? It's gonna be lively!

Jamesas86

33 posts

119 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
A cool list of cars. Ferrari for me (just), and I would de-sticker etc. funnily enough I was just speccing up a 22b replica build yesterday after revisiting the Evo story. I would happily own any of that list.

2172cc

1,771 posts

122 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
That 911 looks very odd to me with the nose down stance ..... If it's really like that rather than the photo taken at an odd angle, it must have some interesting handling characteristics

GreatScott2016

2,332 posts

113 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Impreza. The end smile

hammo19

7,267 posts

221 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
AM everyday.

S600BSB

7,675 posts

131 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
That’s a cool list.

Billy_Whizzzz

2,572 posts

168 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Gorgeous 911. And the M3 isn’t bad.

paddy1970

1,365 posts

134 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
GreatScott2016 said:
Impreza. The end smile
Even though it is technically road legal, this thing would be pretty miserable to use on the road. It is basically a race car with a number plate. You have got a proper twin-plate clutch, and a sequential gearbox that will be loud, clunky and not very forgiving at low speeds. It will be noisy, harsh, and constantly demanding your attention. On top of that, an engine making this sort of power is happiest when it is being pushed hard, not driving 4/10 on the road, so you are likely to run into heat and drivability issues pretty quickly.

The “300 miles” sounds reassuring at first, but it is actually the opposite. It just means it has done 300 miles since the rebuild, not that it has been proven over time. At this level of power, everything is under serious stress, and issues often only show up after more miles and proper use. So rather than being a benefit, it basically means the car is still in its testing phase, and you would be the one finding out what works and what does not.

Its Just Adz

18,126 posts

234 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Interesting list.

I thought I would be alone choosing the Impreza, but it seems not.

Bill

57,637 posts

280 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
paddy1970 said:
The 300 miles sounds reassuring at first...
A 1/4 mile at a time.

It's probably due a rebuild! hehe


pb8g09

3,094 posts

94 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
I’d go for the Lotus. Almost looks like a supercar. I’m not a big fan of cars covered in decals.

Julian Thompson

2,672 posts

263 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
That Subaru is truly a work of art. Someone has spent a lot of money and love on it.

Bill

57,637 posts

280 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
pb8g09 said:
I d go for the Lotus. Almost looks like a supercar.
yes Similar specs to an F40...

LotusOmega375D

9,113 posts

178 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Just buy an obsolete pukka racing car converted and registered for the road. That’s what our parents did. I think this was Christmas Day ca. 1990.

Us in our 1980 Lola T590 as our 1972 Alfa Romeo GTV 2000 looks on.




GreatScott2016

2,332 posts

113 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
paddy1970 said:
GreatScott2016 said:
Impreza. The end smile
Even though it is technically road legal, this thing would be pretty miserable to use on the road. It is basically a race car with a number plate. You have got a proper twin-plate clutch, and a sequential gearbox that will be loud, clunky and not very forgiving at low speeds. It will be noisy, harsh, and constantly demanding your attention. On top of that, an engine making this sort of power is happiest when it is being pushed hard, not driving 4/10 on the road, so you are likely to run into heat and drivability issues pretty quickly.

The 300 miles sounds reassuring at first, but it is actually the opposite. It just means it has done 300 miles since the rebuild, not that it has been proven over time. At this level of power, everything is under serious stress, and issues often only show up after more miles and proper use. So rather than being a benefit, it basically means the car is still in its testing phase, and you would be the one finding out what works and what does not.
I m not doubting what you say, I just chose the Impreza because of my history and what this one potentially delivers. It would clearly not be a daily, but would be wonderful when exploited in the right conditions smile. Oh, I think it’s already sold. Someone is going to have a lot of fun smile.



Edited by GreatScott2016 on Saturday 11th April 09:32

Tickle

6,152 posts

229 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
The 355 and Exige, great list!

sam.rog

1,430 posts

103 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
That subaru sold a few weeks ago.

Cryssys

838 posts

63 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
Scooby is just an old garage queen which is probably no longer fit for purpose and in need of recommissioning. Can't see it ever being tracked which is a shame really.

Exige for me please.

CountyLines

4,857 posts

28 months

Saturday 11th April
quotequote all
You'd feel a bit of a knob getting dusted by an A45 or Ionic 5N in most of these.

M3 looks the part though. My favourite touring car.