Lancia Delta Integrale Evo II | Spotted
A car that needs no introduction or any excuses. The Integrale is just a truly great classic...

We did a ‘Time Capsule’ Six of the Best at the weekend. In that, I referenced the Lancia Delta Integrale in relation to one of the models featured, which was the GR Yaris. That’s because another motoring hack had recently mentioned that the Toyota reminded him of the all-conquering Lancia. So it’s no coincidence that I found myself on the PH classifieds this morning, wondering what Integrales were kicking about. I found this: a very tidy-looking Evo II.
We did a video last year on the Audi Sport Quattro, which surprised me by being a fantastic road car, but the most extreme version of the famous Quattro wasn’t the most successful of all the Group B rally cars. As bespoke as it was, with its hacked-up wheelbase and all the motorsport trimmings, the Sport Quattro was launched at a time when other manufacturers were throwing money like it was confetti at their Group B programmes. So the Sport Quattro found itself up against rivals like the Peugeot 205 T16 – essentially a custom-made, mid-engined rally car that happened to look like the series-production model with the same name.
The Integrale was different, though. For a start, it was more closely aligned with the showroom version thanks to the changes in homologation rules that swept away the balls-out Group B and replaced it with Group A. Unlike the Sport Quattro, the Integrale wasn’t just a fantastic road car, but a dominator of the rally stages, too. It was launched in 1987 – the first year of Group A – and cleaned up straight out of the blocks in the expert hands of Juha Kankkunen. That year it took the constructors’ and the drivers’ championships, and the Integrale just kept on winning. In total, it claimed 46 WRC wins, six constructors’ championships and four drivers’ titles. Not a bad record, really.


Of course, with its motorsport pedigree climbing ever higher, it became a pinup road car towards the end of the ‘80s and into the early ‘90s. Yet it deserved its legendary status not just because of its competition success, but because it really was a fantastically accomplished B-road monster. Even today, it’s a car that needs no excuses. Sure, it’s not as quick as more modern machinery in a straight line, but it still displays all the hallmarks of a properly designed and engineered car. Great steering, a nicely balanced chassis, fantastically absorbent suspension and four-wheel-drive traction to blast you from one corner to the next.
The Integrale’s allure doesn’t stop there, though. On top of its brilliance as a road and track car, it’s still a fantastic-looking thing. That’s not necessarily something you can say about the Sport Quattro. As interesting as that was, throughout the days we were filming it I was never captivated by its elegance – my gaze was held by the incongruity of its cut-and-shut stumpiness. The Integrale, on the other hand, is the full package. The neat hatchback styling of the basic Delta was only made more compelling by its exaggerated arches and wider tracks. It has just the right amount of aggression without spoiling the proportions.
Competition doesn’t stand still. In the world of motorsport, you’re only as good as your last race and Lancia’s rivals were always battling to catch up. It meant the Integrale was consistently improved and just got better and better. This is Evo II is the culmination of Lancia’s efforts, although by this stage it was more about maintaining the original Evo’s performance after the addition of catalytic converters. As a result, we’re talking about a car with 215hp and a power-to-weight ratio of more than 160hp per tonne. That was impressive at the time, but, as I said, nothing to write home about today. That’s fine, though. It’s fast enough to excite, but brilliant enough in every other respect to stir your soul in ways few modern cars can – which, of course, is what makes the GR Yaris so exciting.
Specification | Lancia Delta Integrale Evo II
Engine: 1,995cc, four-cylinder, turbocharged
Transmission: Five-speed manual, four-wheel drive
Power (hp): 215 @ 5,750rpm
Torque (lb ft): 232 @ 2,500rpm
CO2: N/A
MPG: N/A
Recorded mileage: 48,000
Year registered: 1994
Price new: £25,000
Yours for: £99,995




my gf was screaming in the back seat as he took corner after corner with absolute confidence, i was rather quiet.
One of my regrets of cars I didn't buy together with an NSX
My ‘90s pin up and almost 20 years ago I found myself working for a while at a Lancia specialist and many dreams came true.
There were gorgeous Aurelius, Fulvias, Flaminias, a few Betas and Montecarlos, a Gamma(!) and even a Thema 8.32 which j had the pleasure of driving once.
But nothing compared to the Integrale. Be it an earlier 16v or an Evo, they were all a hoot, but the Evo 2 was so special, with those little detail changes, the Momo wheel and the big seats, it was every bit as good you’d hope. The steering was kart-like sublime, the wider track, grip and brilliant damping made it effortless cross country and when the turbos kicked in it was plenty fast enough…
We had a Giallo car in once for sale, ex Eddie Irvine from his time in Italy, with his on the original reg docs. Was immaculate, but sadly it had a subsequently been chipped and had cats removed so couldn’t pass an MOT at the time.
Sadly too many were getting leggy, even then. And high maintenance.
They were cheap enough back then and too many owners weren’t committed to looking after them, even if they did drive them hard.
They were complicated and mechanically fragile - so many hoses and bushes constantly needed replacement - the service intervals were tiny (10000km, I seem to recall!) and even a small job took forever and cost loads of labour.
But I’d still absolutely love one, they are just a joy. Giallo like this, please, or maybe Lord blue over tan alcantara…
Only Rhd I've ever scene was the wheeler dealers HF Turbo which was a factory conversion.
Lovely motor , if this is £100,000 for a car with just under 50,000 miles how much is a really low mileage worth, however much I love it so many more cars id have over it, must be only 10 years at the most were a good low mileage intergrale was £30,000 tops.

By the way, it also took part in the 2005 Integrale London to Brighton run prior to my ownership, so is probably in that photo above.
It's not my dad's type of car so a definitive NO from him.
Funnily, the offer before this was a Peugeot 205 gti and I see they have an article on that this week in PH.
They must be going through the catalogue

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