RE: Toyota Supra: Spotted

RE: Toyota Supra: Spotted

Wednesday 17th October 2018

Toyota Supra: Spotted

The fast approaching arrival of a new Supra is all the excuse we need to pine after this Mk4



Toyota Supra fans have had a hard time, haven't they? Production of the previous, fourth-generation Supra ended in 2002, leaving aficionados completely unattended to. An all-new version is finally due out next year and, at first glance, it looks like it could be a real corker, with turbocharged six-cylinder power encased in a front-engined, rear-drive platform. This should please the fans because it stays true to a format the car's predecessor made such good use of. It's also helped to return some spotlight onto the older car, making prices for unmolested examples of the A80 coupe climb.

In truth, there are very few unmodified versions of the A80 in existence; you can thank the Fast & Furious franchise and its ilk for that, motivating owners to swap standard wheels for chintzy rims and replace the car's already fairly potent bodywork with wide arches and protruding splitters. It took time, but now the cars that survived this period of divisive modification are beginning to emerge in growing numbers, with prices that reflect their factory state.


It's not like the A80 Supra was in need of a transformation when it launched. Powered by the 3.0-litre straight six 2JZ-GE motor, the car had 220hp right out of the box, which in 1993 was plenty. But output was eventually boosted - literally - in a twin-turbocharged version that used the 2JZ-GTE to offer up to 330hp. That gave the Supra super-baiting performance, with a 0-60mph time of 4.9 seconds and top speed of 177mph, once the 155mph top speed limit was removed.

This being a performance model hailing from one of the world's richest - in terms of creativity - car nations, it wasn't long before an aftermarket parts catalogue thicker than the Yellow Pages was established by tuners. The 2JZ motor responded excellently to modification, providing owners with substantial gains that made the Supra's role in F&F films more and more understandable. Little wonder so many existing cars have seen much aftermarket work.


Today's Spotted has suffered no such fate. Having been imported from Japan only last year, this 2002 car is in original JDM spec and is one of the very last examples to roll out of Toyota City (some six years after the last official UK imports ended). It gets Japanese RZ-spec parts and trim and uses the most potent turbocharged variable valve engine. It also has that key component: a manual gearbox.

This car's lived a life, having covered 63,000 miles, but it appears to have been cherished by - at the very least - its latest custodian. Proof comes with the full respray, GTechniq ceramic coating and underbody protection work done in Britain. It seems the owner wanted this Supra to look its best - and the pictures suggest it now does. Which begs the question, why does the owner want to sell?


With an asking price of £35,500 this car is far from the cheapest on offer. It is, however, potentially the cleanest late example on the classifieds and a far cry from the automatic, modified Supras that harbour the lower end of the market. To a Supra purist wanting the car in its most evolved form, this is the real deal. It's also a very good reminder of how high the bar is set for the Mk5 Supra.


SPECIFICATION - TOYOTA SUPRA (A80)

Engine: 2,997cc, straight six
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power(hp): 330@5,600rpm
Torque(lb ft): 325@4,800rpm
MPG: 25
CO2: N/A
First registered: 2002
Recorded mileage: 63,000
Price new: £42,839 (UK price 1996)
Yours for: £35,500

See the full ad here.


Author
Discussion

Old Nick

Original Poster:

48 posts

249 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Please stop with the 'right out of the box'-isms. Please.

cerb4.5lee

30,476 posts

180 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
I've always lusted after a UK spec one of these with the manual and the leather interior. The cloth seat pattern in this one is interesting. This one is expensive too.

OzzyR1

5,714 posts

232 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all

Was offered an unmolested UK TT for about £15K several years ago, should have snapped his hand off in hindsight!!

Iamnotkloot

1,422 posts

147 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Great cars; think I’d want leather, though, for that money.

hkz286

146 posts

84 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Iamnotkloot said:
Great cars; think I’d want leather, though, for that money.
if it hasn't been modified then that has the Recaro interior upgrade smile

SonicShadow

2,452 posts

154 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Iamnotkloot said:
Great cars; think I’d want leather, though, for that money.
Those seats are actually an upgrade option - Recaro SR's (not sure if SR2 or SR3) in the rather desirable Le Mans/Confetti pattern.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
SonicShadow said:
Those seats are actually an upgrade option - Recaro SR's (not sure if SR2 or SR3) in the rather desirable Le Mans/Confetti pattern.
Might of been desirable back then but not today!

SonicShadow

2,452 posts

154 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
ruprechtmonkeyboy said:
SonicShadow said:
Those seats are actually an upgrade option - Recaro SR's (not sure if SR2 or SR3) in the rather desirable Le Mans/Confetti pattern.
Might of been desirable back then but not today!
Disagree, and those seats in excellent condition sell for pretty much the same price as brand new ones (that pattern is long discontinued), but we're all entitled to our own opinions.

cerb4.5lee

30,476 posts

180 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
I love Recaro seats big time, but those seem to really date it and make the interior look even more cheap. Jap interiors always look cheap, but I think the leather interior helps to make it feel a little more special.

cocopop

1,300 posts

205 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
I had those Recaros in mine. Very comfortable as well as supportive, pattern was definitely a bit marmite though.

Sold my '98 VVTI TT6 for 12k back in 2011. Bugger.

Type R Tom

3,861 posts

149 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Another to add to the ever growing list of cars that I always wanted but will probably never own now.

Dr G

15,164 posts

242 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Zero surprise that the best cars of this generation are appreciating now; the comments on this thread are probably not at all dissimilar to what a generation once said about Minis, then about MK2 Escorts, then E30 BMWs... I would however want £50 off that asking price to allow me to bin the revolting blue ebay dash LEDs wink

I've no idea what these cars actually change hands for but if that figure is at least reasonably representative it could make for a pretty sound ownership proposition. It'll lose nothing in purchase price (compared to a used Cayman or TTS, for example) and probably be cheaper to maintain.

fernando the frog

298 posts

68 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
SonicShadow said:
Disagree, and those seats in excellent condition sell for pretty much the same price as brand new ones (that pattern is long discontinued), but we're all entitled to our own opinions.
also disagree, I like cloth seats over leather, these seats and this car is perfect. can't believe how much they've gone up in value...sigh

AI1694

854 posts

94 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
That is perfection for me. I’d love a stock untouched Supra.
Eye watering price however!

s m

23,218 posts

203 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
SonicShadow said:
ruprechtmonkeyboy said:
SonicShadow said:
Those seats are actually an upgrade option - Recaro SR's (not sure if SR2 or SR3) in the rather desirable Le Mans/Confetti pattern.
Might of been desirable back then but not today!
Disagree, and those seats in excellent condition sell for pretty much the same price as brand new ones (that pattern is long discontinued), but we're all entitled to our own opinions.
They had similar cloth patterns on a lot of the hot hatches of the time ( 306, Saxo ) and stuff like the Primera GT - I quite like it

Never wanted one really but I like this shape of Supra
Featured in a few head to heads with the E36 M3 in the mags

I can completely understand why they fetch big money

Atomic12C

5,180 posts

217 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
The current market price of the old MkIVs are silly expensive. I don't know what sort of mindset you'd need to pay those prices for them.
They were of course a good GT car, with the twin turbo versions having a proper LSD and in manual form they do offer a good driver's car option.
But not for anything over £20k.




s m

23,218 posts

203 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Plus I always think of the Smokey Nagata episode when I see these....or Jamie P's drifting video


bloomen

6,891 posts

159 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Iamnotkloot said:
Great cars; think I’d want leather, though, for that money.
Japanese leather, especially Japanese market leather, usually looks weird, baggy and nasty in most of their cars. I'd go for cloth.

TommoAE86

2,665 posts

127 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
Atomic12C said:
The current market price of the old MkIVs are silly expensive. I don't know what sort of mindset you'd need to pay those prices for them.
They were of course a good GT car, with the twin turbo versions having a proper LSD and in manual form they do offer a good driver's car option.
But not for anything over £20k.
I would say £25k-£28k would be a good starting point for this car. If you look at other JDM legends they are equally marching north in terms of prices. R34 GTT's are approaching £20k and they are the "lesser" model in most people's eyes.

I hope I'll be able to experience one of the top models one day if my R33 GTS-T is anything to go by they are all amazing and deserving of praise.

fakenews

452 posts

77 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Yeah...love these but at that price other classics are in reach. Suppose they've seen a bump from being allowed to be imported into the US now.