RE: Essential three-cylinder heroes | Six of the Best

RE: Essential three-cylinder heroes | Six of the Best

Yesterday

Must-have three-cylinder heroes | Six of the Best

Small but mighty, the tiny triple has powered everything from city slicker to supercar


Morgan Super 3, 2025, 50 miles, £39,950

There’s been a pleasing, if small, resurgence for the three-cylinder engine in recent years. Cars that once had four cylinders have been swapped for three in the name of efficiency or they’ve been used to achieve unprecedented levels of power - or they’ve been used to replace a mad old v-twin in the case of this Morgan. In any triple you’re guaranteed a charmingly thrummy soundtrack, and typically very little weight - they’re easy little motors to enjoy very much indeed. The 1.5 found in the Super 3 was a drastic change from the 3-Wheeler’s original motor - gaining a cylinder and dropping half a litre - but still the perfect fit for a uniquely Morgan take on the sports car. Plenty more power was on offer for much-improved fuel consumption, and the new rasp was an ideal accompaniment to the Wacky Races aesthetic. This one is immediately available, meaning no wait for a factory order, and doesn’t carry a premium - summers will never be the same again. 

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Toyota GR Yaris, 2021, 15k, £32,480

Well, course. The GR Yaris features arguably the best known, most lauded three-cylinder car of this decade, its record-breaking specific output, vivacious character and apparent tuneability securing it legendary status. The G16E-GTS was startling enough five years ago, easygoing despite each cylinder providing nearly 90hp and also supremely willing to rev. It’s only become more impressive with time, torquier and more powerful in the latest GR Yaris and up to 300hp in the Corolla. From a 1.6-litre three-cylinder that, officially, scored 35mpg - incredible. Broadly speaking it seems to have been very reliable as well, because this is still a Toyota. Albeit the greatest hatchback it’s ever made. This one appeals with the silver wheels and Circuit Pack and some Litchfield goodies. Because why make do with just the 261hp if more is so easily available?

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Ford Fiesta ST, 2023, 10k, £20,400

The Mk8 Ford Fiesta ST had a tough task on its hands, replacing one of the most entertaining hot hatches of recent times, with a smaller engine that had dropped a cylinder. Nevertheless, the evolution from 1.6-litre, four-pot ST to 1.5-litre turbo triple ST was an extremely successful one; maybe the dinkiest fast Ford wasn’t quite as laugh-out-loud hilarious to throw at a roundabout, but it was more capable, more refined, just as fast and had a much nicer interior. The stuff that matters in a hot hatch when you’re not three-wheeling about the place, basically. And being slightly less of a giggle than a Mk7 ST still made the Mk8 extremely good fun. The 1.5 was 200hp strong from factory (and a bit torquier with the facelift) but easily tickled to a little more from the likes of Mountune. This Mean Green ST-3 should have all the kit you’ll need, including the Performance Pack. Modern fast Fords come little better.

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BMW i8, 2016, 50k, £32,450

Bet you’d forgotten about this one. In among the superminis and small silly stuff, there’s a bonafide modern classic exotic with a three-cylinder engine. The i8 may not have achieved exactly what BMW set out for it more than a decade ago, but it’s easy to be intrigued now with £25k the entry point for a carbon-celled, mid-engined hybrid that still looks to have driven straight from a designer’s mood board. The engine that powered the i8 was BMW’s B38, part of its modular family and therefore effectively half the 3.0-litre B58 that’s gone on to become a famed straight six. It delivered 231hp of the i8’s 367hp total, boasting a soundtrack that, if augmented, did a pretty convincing job of feeling like a six of some kind. They aren’t as scary as might be expected secondhand, either - the PH Buying Guide called the i8 ‘very reliable and largely problem-free.’ This one is said to boast a ‘stellar’ service history - and it’s less than the Yaris… 

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VW Up GTI, 2022, 6k, £17,495

Another dead cert, the GTI was the Up all enthusiasts were clamouring for since the standard car’s 2012 launch. It took five years to arrive, but ticked a lot of the boxes many were hoping for from a junior GTI: a useful power bump, pert good looks, a manual gearbox and plenty of tartan. It was the first Up to boast more than 100hp from the 1.0-litre turbo triple, and still just snuck in under a tonne, meaning the Mk1 Golf GTI comparisons haven’t really stopped since the Up’s reveal. Maybe it wasn’t the most exciting pocket rocket ever made, though it’s hard to argue with the GTI’s sales success: the buying public couldn’t get enough of VW’s baby hot hatch. Yet residuals remain strong, probably helped by price rises during its life: £10k is still the entry point, with late low-miles like this still more than £17,000. But with the GTI’s future electric, you wouldn’t be against the three-cylinder tykes staying collectable. 

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Smart ForTwo Brabus Widestar, 1998, 50k, £19,950

A wild card to finish with. Because this is very far from an average example of the original Smart, in case you’d missed the £20k asking price. This is a Brabus Smart, from a time before Brabus Smarts were officially a thing, a one-of-three coachbuilt special. Specifically, it’s a Widestar 450, and apparently the other two were made at the turn of the century for Gordon Murray and David Coulthard. So there. The Brabus overhaul was more than cosmetic as well, with a power boost for the 600cc three-cylinder, Bilstein suspension, disc brakes all round, wider tracks (clue’s in the name!) plus the usual flurry of Bottrop trinkets. This one certainly seems to have lived a life over a quarter of a century and 50,000 miles, if the stickers are anything to go by, and it’s hard to resist a smile seeing those Brabus rims separated by what looks like half a metre of wheelbase. Freshly MOT’d, too…

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Author
Discussion

blue al

Original Poster:

1,140 posts

173 months

Yesterday (05:43)
quotequote all
Smart car and 20k….er no, maybe the roadster version but not this

Bill

55,674 posts

269 months

Yesterday (06:17)
quotequote all
Yeah, the BMW looks incredible value compared to the Up, nevermind the Smart car.

Really want the Morgan, fancy the Yaris, would accept the Fiesta (and Up I guess) as a sensible compromise, and the i8 is other worldly. The less said about the Smart the better. biggrin




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wistec1

617 posts

55 months

Yesterday (06:32)
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What's with all the fridge magnets on the centre consul of the Brabus? Surely not standard fitment. GRY and I've already got mine.

mooseracer

2,357 posts

184 months

Yesterday (06:43)
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Any of those except the Smart (I have a 23 ST). If you're looking for a Fiesta get one with heated seats and steering wheel which the linked one doesn't have.

I know many on here rave about the Up but to me they're not worth the money they go for.

Oh and the colour is not good on that Morgan.

Edited by mooseracer on Saturday 28th June 08:55

biggbn

27,071 posts

234 months

Yesterday (07:06)
quotequote all
I had a Smart Brabus, absolute hoot, yet not significantly more fun than the standard car. Owned four in total, brilliant little things.

GreatScott2016

1,854 posts

102 months

Yesterday (07:26)
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Would love a go in a GRY, but my favourite here by a country mile is the ST smile

andrewpandrew

522 posts

3 months

Yesterday (08:13)
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Interesting that the dealer has the up! GTI listed as Kings Red. I’d bet money it’s actually Tornado Red. Strong money for a car with no options ticked.

The_Doc

5,476 posts

234 months

Yesterday (08:17)
quotequote all
andrewpandrew said:
Interesting that the dealer has the up! GTI listed as Kings Red. I d bet money it s actually Tornado Red. Strong money for a car with no options ticked.
Indeed. £4,000 more than I paid brand new for mine, with options.

Augustus Windsock

3,608 posts

169 months

Yesterday (08:18)
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Am I the only person that when they see the Morgan, they think Andrew ‘Freddy’ Flintoff..?

andrewpandrew

522 posts

3 months

Yesterday (08:19)
quotequote all
The_Doc said:
andrewpandrew said:
Interesting that the dealer has the up! GTI listed as Kings Red. I d bet money it s actually Tornado Red. Strong money for a car with no options ticked.
Indeed. £4,000 more than I paid brand new for mine, with options.
Ha, yeah my first one was £14100 with everything ticked, even the sunroof.

cerb4.5lee

36,994 posts

194 months

Yesterday (08:47)
quotequote all
I was only saying yesterday how I don't get along with 3 cylinder engines funnily enough. I've used the BMW B38 3 cylinder 1.5 engine a few times in loaners now(118i/X2/Clubman Cooper etc), and the engine has never failed to disappoint me.

It could be argued that if you're going to settle for only 3 cylinders, then you may as well go the whole hog...and just settle for electric instead in my mind. I'm probably too cylinder count and capacity led though really I think.

FPC

87 posts

65 months

Yesterday (08:49)
quotequote all
No mention for the Daihatsu Charade GTti! Doing the thrummy 3 cylinder thing long before these young upstarts.
I loved mine for it's soundtrack and the drama of the turbo boost light on the dash! J548BWP can't believe it soldiered on until 2014.

cerb4.5lee

36,994 posts

194 months

Yesterday (08:52)
quotequote all
FPC said:
No mention for the Daihatsu Charade GTti! Doing the thrummy 3 cylinder thing long before these young upstarts.
I loved mine for it's soundtrack and the drama of the turbo boost light on the dash! J548BWP can't believe it soldiered on until 2014.
That was a fantastic era for cars for me, and I always remember reading about the Charade GTti at the time as well. thumbup

biggbn

27,071 posts

234 months

Yesterday (08:53)
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
I was only saying yesterday how I don't get along with 3 cylinder engines funnily enough. I've used the BMW B38 3 cylinder 1.5 engine a few times in loaners now(118i/X2/Clubman Cooper etc), and the engine has never failed to disappoint me.

It could be argued that if you're going to settle for only 3 cylinders, then you may as well go the whole hog...and just settle for electric instead in my mind. I'm probably too cylinder count and capacity led though really I think.
Really rate my three pot Mini mate, characterful, frugal, hasn't missed a beat in 140k miles

ducnick

2,046 posts

257 months

Yesterday (08:56)
quotequote all
I’ve never driven or ridden a vehicle with a 3 cylinder engine that made me want to own one. Three is not a good number for cylinders in an inline engine. It might work on a radial, but in an inline engine it causes horrible imbalance with very little packaging benefit for a car that could accommodate a 4 cylinder instead. I can understand the packaging benefits on a motorcycle might outweigh the balance issues.
I clearly remember getting off a triumph 675 triple and vowing to buy a two or 4 cylinder bike! And the triumph was a good triple by all accounts.

All of these cars apart from the Morgan would be better with a 4 pot. The Morgan would of course benefit from a big air cooled v twin.


Maccmike8

1,327 posts

68 months

Yesterday (08:59)
quotequote all
Bar the barbs, great selection.
The Yaris doesn't look right with silver wheels and Im normally a big fan of silver on dark colours but prefer the dark wheels.

andrewpandrew

522 posts

3 months

Yesterday (09:03)
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
I was only saying yesterday how I don't get along with 3 cylinder engines funnily enough. I've used the BMW B38 3 cylinder 1.5 engine a few times in loaners now(118i/X2/Clubman Cooper etc), and the engine has never failed to disappoint me.
Yeah, it’s weird. I’ve driven the 118i and X2 with the 1.5 3 and thought the engine was rubbish. Likewise with the Fiesta ST Line. I almost feel in those applications the manufacturer has chosen to lessen the character. In contrast, two up! GTIs and loved the engine.

Leon R

3,431 posts

110 months

Yesterday (09:04)
quotequote all
Does that Yaris actually have warranty given it has been modified by Litchfield.

cerb4.5lee

36,994 posts

194 months

Yesterday (09:07)
quotequote all
biggbn said:
cerb4.5lee said:
I was only saying yesterday how I don't get along with 3 cylinder engines funnily enough. I've used the BMW B38 3 cylinder 1.5 engine a few times in loaners now(118i/X2/Clubman Cooper etc), and the engine has never failed to disappoint me.

It could be argued that if you're going to settle for only 3 cylinders, then you may as well go the whole hog...and just settle for electric instead in my mind. I'm probably too cylinder count and capacity led though really I think.
Really rate my three pot Mini mate, characterful, frugal, hasn't missed a beat in 140k miles
thumbup

I just let cylinder count and capacity rule me a bit too much I think bud that's all.

I blame my Dad having a 5.0 V8 Mustang for 10 years from when I was only 7 years old to be honest, so generally I've mostly had a mindset of bigger is better in that regard I think. Yet the daft thing was, it only had 140bhp at the time though! The exact same bhp figure as my small 4 cylinder 1.8 engine in my Caterham. Mad really.

cerb4.5lee

36,994 posts

194 months

Yesterday (09:13)
quotequote all
Maccmike8 said:
Bar the barbs, great selection.
The Yaris doesn't look right with silver wheels and Im normally a big fan of silver on dark colours but prefer the dark wheels.
I like the silver wheels on that, but I'm knocking on a bit, so I grew up when almost all cars had silver wheels(or at least silver/grey wheel trims anyway). I like how you get to see all the details of the wheels with silver, whereas you tend to miss that with darker wheels to me.