Another Subaru BRZ update!
Subaru fettles here and tinkers there with Boxer, Rear Wheel Drive, Zenith in Japan - expect the changes here soon
Even as ardent fans of the GT86/BRZ duo, even we cannot pretend this latest update of the Subaru coupe is comprehensive. As previously seen, most notably with the 2017 refresh, this new car is the result of continuous tweaking and refining to incrementally improve on the much lauded coupe.
Fundamentally this is still the same car that made its debut in 2012, so look elsewhere for drastic measures. Indeed even by the standards of refreshes this is modest but, rather like you'll look for every last social media update from that one particularly special person - even the really boring ones - so we'll keep abreast of the latest BRZ developments.
Ready? This BRZ now boasts "fins to suppress the turbulence of air at the rear of the body to the rear wheel arch part", plus further optimisation of the dampers tuning. The Japan only RA Racing gets a roll cage and new seatbelt and... well, it really isn't much, is it?
Still, for a lot of people the BRZ/GT86 didn't need much improvement. The sports car that many detractors want is never the one that Subaru and Toyota will make, because more power means more weight, which means heavier components and very quickly a significantly altered car. It's been suggested that this facelifted car won't be in the UK until 2019, without anything official announced yet. Should, however, you be content to have a BRZ without the very best rear arch fins that Subaru can find, early cars are now available for less than £15k; broaden that search to include the more common GT86 and the price gets ever temptingly closer to £10,000...
These changes will make no difference
A new set of cams, or some porting or airflow work, certainly some remapping (I know there have been a few tweaks to this over the years), maybe a lightened flywheel to make it feel more revvy?... who knows what the answer is... but I can't believe they haven't found it yet!
A decent NA tune of the cams, some breathing mods and a remap out of the factory would go very far to turn this car from a nearly ran to something more complete. Yes you could argue that you can do this yourself with mods or the aforementioned Cosworth kits but not many people in the UK are happy about modding a car still under warranty. Subaru\Toyota should do the upgrades to the base car and offer it as an extra trim level or offer a factory backed, warrantied upgrade path ala Cosworth. As it is, this was the one big weakness of the car when it was released and it still hasn't been addressed 6 years later.
A new set of cams, or some porting or airflow work, certainly some remapping (I know there have been a few tweaks to this over the years), maybe a lightened flywheel to make it feel more revvy?... who knows what the answer is... but I can't believe they haven't found it yet!
On a subjective note, whether you regard the twins engine as sufficient depends on where you're coming from and if you are or aren't corrupted by modern turbo engines. I initially tried out a GT86 coming from a mapped MK5 GTI (250hp, bags of torque). The GT86 sure felt slow after this. (Was not helped by the fact that the owner discouraged me from wringing it out, saying that he'd very much like to head back home in one piece: ). Sold the MK5 and drove round in an economy car from the 90s. 1.6 NA, 100 hp. Stripped out, made sufficient progress considering it only weighed a ton. So coming from this and trying out another BRZ/86, it felt just fine. So bought a GT86.
In conclusion, does the GT86 make better progress in the low rpm range than a modern 1.5-2.0 litre turbo? No, of course not. Is it faster when overtaking than a 250hp GTI, even if changing down? No, of course not. But is it actually sufficient for city and highway? To me, it is. After all, it's a 2.0 NA propelling around only 1.2 tons. Does it make a better sound than a bland R4 turbo (not talking about mega hatches)? To me it does, sounds mechanical (albeit being piped). And what does it do on the back road when giving it the full beans and holding it at 10/10ths? It makes me grin from ear to ear like few cars I've owned have (Clio 172, EP3 R...). It makes you concentrate to get the most out of it. As such to me it's very different from modern cars in which driving fast has become a) too easy (psst, boring) and b) not rewarding enough.
So the twins and their engines can either viewed as a missed opportunity and a step backwards in the wrong direction or a step backwards in the right direction. Different jokes for different folks.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUhLXvxlQR4
A new set of cams, or some porting or airflow work, certainly some remapping (I know there have been a few tweaks to this over the years), maybe a lightened flywheel to make it feel more revvy?... who knows what the answer is... but I can't believe they haven't found it yet!
A new set of cams, or some porting or airflow work, certainly some remapping (I know there have been a few tweaks to this over the years), maybe a lightened flywheel to make it feel more revvy?... who knows what the answer is... but I can't believe they haven't found it yet!
On a subjective note, whether you regard the twins engine as sufficient depends on where you're coming from and if you are or aren't corrupted by modern turbo engines. I initially tried out a GT86 coming from a mapped MK5 GTI (250hp, bags of torque). The GT86 sure felt slow after this. (Was not helped by the fact that the owner discouraged me from wringing it out, saying that he'd very much like to head back home in one piece: ). Sold the MK5 and drove round in an economy car from the 90s. 1.6 NA, 100 hp. Stripped out, made sufficient progress considering it only weighed a ton. So coming from this and trying out another BRZ/86, it felt just fine. So bought a GT86.
In conclusion, does the GT86 make better progress in the low rpm range than a modern 1.5-2.0 litre turbo? No, of course not. Is it faster when overtaking than a 250hp GTI, even if changing down? No, of course not. But is it actually sufficient for city and highway? To me, it is. After all, it's a 2.0 NA propelling around only 1.2 tons. Does it make a better sound than a bland R4 turbo (not talking about mega hatches)? To me it does, sounds mechanical (albeit being piped). And what does it do on the back road when giving it the full beans and holding it at 10/10ths? It makes me grin from ear to ear like few cars I've owned have (Clio 172, EP3 R...). It makes you concentrate to get the most out of it. As such to me it's very different from modern cars in which driving fast has become a) too easy (psst, boring) and b) not rewarding enough.
So the twins and their engines can either viewed as a missed opportunity and a step backwards in the wrong direction or a step backwards in the right direction. Different jokes for different folks.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUhLXvxlQR4
There is nothing wrong with the cams on the 86 and the aftermarket work (in NA tune) to give the car that bit more verve some people crave is actually quite simple ... removal of a big fat cat in the manifold, a better flowing exhaust, filter and re-map. Toyota could easily achieve this if they were allowed to and I suspect without adding any cost or reliability issues to the package.
I completely get that not everybody is into aftermarket tuning (me included !!) but the fundamentals of the way the car drives and makes you feel make it a worthwhile consideration in this instance, the conclusion above is spot on and exactly how I feel about the car.
- I'm lazy.
These changes will make no difference
blimey, one figure's almost 8x the other
yet the EU population is 54 percent larger than that of the US
I don't mind, one way or the other, and my comment is not intended as a complaint
but on things like retail prices, total cost of ownership, disposable income, and the like, the maths are different -- and the consequent patterns of behaviour distinct, one side of the Atlantic and the other
These changes will make no difference
blimey, one figure's almost 8x the other
yet the EU population is 54 percent larger than that of the US
I don't mind, one way or the other, and my comment is not intended as a complaint
but on things like retail prices, total cost of ownership, disposable income, and the like, the maths are different -- and the consequent patterns of behaviour distinct, one side of the Atlantic and the other
Hence the better sales figures.
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