RE: Nissan Almera GTI: Spotted

RE: Nissan Almera GTI: Spotted

Wednesday 24th April 2019

Nissan Almera GTI: Spotted

Has the urge to own an Almera GTI suddenly arrived after 20 years? There won't be a better one than this...



Fear not: this Spotted is not some missive on how the Almera GTI is a misunderstood icon, deserving of a complete reassessment in the annals of hot hatch history. Even by the fairly ordinary standards of 1990s' pocket rockets, the Almera was never top of the tree; it was better than it's typically given credit for, though, but more on that later.

Like so many almost interesting cars of not that long ago, the Almera GTI has been nearly wiped out of existence. Of course they were never on every street corner, yet the GTI's demise has been truly savage: more than 2,000 were registered in 2001, a figure that now stands at 71. For some context, a Honda Civic Jordan is still comfortably in triple figures, despite there never being more than 500 in the country.

The Almera's problem was always going to be that it was never deemed worth saving. It wasn't a limited edition (like the Jordan was), and it was neither the fastest not the best to drive hot hatch out there. Nissan didn't have a lot of kudos - Skylines aside - for making fast cars, and so plonking a GTI badge on the Almera was never quite going to hit the spot with UK buyers like it might have from other manufacturers.


Which isn't to say the Almera was terrible - far from it. Auto Express described it as a 'cracking hot hatch' (no, really) and a Performance Car review lauded the GTI as fantastic to drive and 'a triumph of ability over appearance', with both good steering and handling. Bet you weren't expecting that.

Combine those attributes to the people who did know with the Almera's staid appearance, tediously dependable nature and lack of prestige to those who just wanted transport, and Almera GTIs were always going to be used. And used a lot. So discovering an Almera GTI like this 20 years later is a find of such historical significance it probably should have emerged from a tomb.

With just two owners in the logbook and 24,877 miles under its Potenzas, this Almera is seemingly flawless. Every single MOT certificate is there, as is evidence of a Mobil 1 Track Record maintenance programme - a service the first owner had to pay for to ensure only premium oils were used at service time. For an Almera!


You're waiting for the price, aren't you? No point skirting around it any longer: it's £6,495. Given Almeras have only featured as Sheds previously on PH - even without that, in fact - it looks like a lotta cash. But, as the old adage goes, find another - it could well take a while. The Almera won't be to all tastes, of course, though it is an interesting curio from a simpler time. And better than everybody will think.

Furthermore, that's far from the silliest that 90s' hot hatch prices get. This Escort RS2000 has nearly twice the mileage of the Almera and is £12k, and this Golf V6 4Motion is £7k with 85,000 miles - neither will be remembered as an icon of the breed, either.

So although the sensible money will go on a Peugeot 306 of this era, or else on something from the hot hatch's 21st century renaissance, there shall be no apologies for featuring the Almera on PH. As an immaculate example of car with an undeservedly bad rep, it more than anything deserves 15 minutes of fame - the next owner may take some finding, but imagine how chuffed they're going to be.


SPECIFICATION - NISSAN ALMERA GTI
Engine: 1,998cc, 4-cyl
Transmission: 5-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 143@6,400rpm
Torque (lb ft): 131@4,800rpm
MPG: 34.9
CO2: 211g/km
First registered: 1999
Recorded mileage: 24,877
Price new: £14,420
Yours for: £6,495

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

jason61c

Original Poster:

5,978 posts

174 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
These were one of the few cars with a front and rear strut brace as standard. Really were great cars to drive, thats why they got such great reviews at the time. An rs2000 etc wouldn't see which way one went down a winding road. Lovely gear change and an engine that would never pop.

Great cars.

AJB88

12,377 posts

171 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
I never knew so many Almera's existed until I moved to Milton Keynes, they all seem to be here.

GTEYE

2,094 posts

210 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Nice to see a survivor, but it’s a very niche market at that price.

If only it had looked a bit better, but sadly these were 90s bland at its very worst.

Omega1987

38 posts

72 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
I must admit I'm struggling to understand the mindset of someone who'd pay this kind of money for an Almera GTI.

Nostalgia sells, I get that but you should really take into account the merits of the car and the vastly superior alternatives you can buy for less when it come to performance, safety, reliability, economy, etc.

I would love to buy my first moped back (Cagiva 50cc) as a toy but I would never part more that a few hundred quid for one.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Cool car but I bet it will be hard to find a buyer at that price even if it is worth it for a 26k mile car.

LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Wasn’t there a predecessor that was slightly straighter edged and a bit better looking?

Ilovejapcrap

3,280 posts

112 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
I remember the advert for these on TV.


StescoG66

2,116 posts

143 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
LaurasOtherHalf said:
Wasn’t there a predecessor that was slightly straighter edged and a bit better looking?
Sunny 2.0 GTi was its predecessor. Both cars used the SR20DE from the Primera GT. I had 2 Primera GT’s (Primerii????). Bloody brilliant cars

mooseracer

1,877 posts

170 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
jason61c said:
These were one of the few cars with a front and rear strut brace as standard. Really were great cars to drive, thats why they got such great reviews at the time. An rs2000 etc wouldn't see which way one went down a winding road. Lovely gear change and an engine that would never pop.

Great cars.
Add to that an engine that responded very well to tuning.

Image, and the fact they really did like to rust, means they were and are totally under-rated.

mooseracer

1,877 posts

170 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Omega1987 said:
Nostalgia sells, I get that but you should really take into account the merits of the car and the vastly superior alternatives you can buy for less when it come to performance, safety, reliability, economy, etc.
There really aren't many alternatives from the time that are vastly superior at all. 306 aside the late 90s wasn't a great time for hot hatches.

harleywilma

517 posts

243 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
HOW MUCH......

rallycross

12,783 posts

237 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
This dealer wins the award for the most over priced cars advertised every year.

These cars were good to drive and very few left, but that does not make it worth this sort of money.


LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
StescoG66 said:
LaurasOtherHalf said:
Wasn’t there a predecessor that was slightly straighter edged and a bit better looking?
Sunny 2.0 GTi was its predecessor. Both cars used the SR20DE from the Primera GT. I had 2 Primera GT’s (Primerii????). Bloody brilliant cars
It must have been the Almera then, I used to know a lad who had one when we were all younger. I remember it shared a lot with the Primara GT that was a bit of an underground hit at the time.

Good cars, flew under the radar a little.


ZX10R NIN

27,572 posts

125 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
A good car but a bit to much, saying that I've been looking for a nice Tipo 16V for someone & nice ones of those aren't cheap either so maybe it's not as overpriced as I feel it is.

Omega1987

38 posts

72 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all

[/quote]

There really aren't many alternatives from the time that are vastly superior at all. 306 aside the late 90s wasn't a great time for hot hatches.

[/quote]

Personally I'd be looking at slightly more modern and cheaper alternatives such as Focus ST170, Focus ST 5cly, EP3 CTR, Mazda 3 MPS, RS Megan, ect. All cheaper and offer more in the way of Performance. I'm sure the Almera is a great car and Nissans of this pre Renault era were exceptionally reliable but I just can't see it being worth anything like what's being asked.

davey83

877 posts

89 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Had a red ph2 for 8 years and loved it. Rare cars, strong SR20DE engine, handle well, sound good, N/A throttle response, ultra reliable, easy to work on and never let me down once unless it was something I messed with.

Full bolt on ASP equal length full merged header, Tomei cams, Ur pulleys, decat, 2.5' stainless cat back, piperX carbon enclosed air filter, afpr - rolling tune of fuel/ignition timing 196bhp and went well weighing less than1135kg.



Edited by davey83 on Wednesday 24th April 08:18

Jamescrs

4,476 posts

65 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
Wow brings back memories of me as an 18 year old fresh out of college and working as an office junior at an estate agents (how times change).
One of the guys in the same office as me on the level above me had an Almera Si (I think the model was) in the same shape and I used to drive it regularly, I remember being very impressed with the way it drove, the handling was really very good, the acceleration seemed very impressive at the time too.

If this GTi was a more sensible price I'd be tempted myself for a bit of nostalga

ImpGT

22 posts

61 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
I had a Sunny GTI and looked at one of these back in the day but cane across a Pulsar (Almera) VZR 1.6. I bought it after travelling quite a way on the train to view it. Fresh import in white with the party piece being a 1.6 with 200bhp that revved to 8800rpm.

Weight wise it was, after a few choice weight reductions, about a 1000kg. Straight line acceleration, well a friend had a Peugeot 306 Rallye and it pulled bus lengths on it in a matter of a few seconds. Handled ok, better than expected.

Sold it to buy an Integra Type R which was less comfortable and probably slower.

Augustus Windsock

3,359 posts

155 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
A friend of mine sold his River 216GTi Twin Cam and had one of these
Being cops at the time we had various descriptions for various cars, and his Almeria (as he called it) GTi was what we called a ‘bank robbers car’
Why?
Imagine a bank robbery occurring and the miscreants making good their escape by means of motorised transport. Cops then ask witnesses what sort of car the robbers were using.
‘Er, um, dunno, a dark coloured hatch, not sure of the make. Or model. Or colour....’
Totally anonymous in other words.
Which isn’t a bad thing as my friend used to be able to make progress without drawing attention to himself
Iirc it drove very well although the engine didn’t seem as ‘zingy’ as that in his Rover...

jason61c

Original Poster:

5,978 posts

174 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
mooseracer said:
Add to that an engine that responded very well to tuning.

Image, and the fact they really did like to rust, means they were and are totally under-rated.
I think they were the best all round over anything of that period. I had a Gti-6 but the endless issues put me in one of these. Amazing memories.

It’s priced steep though I think.

I’d happily pay about 5k for it.