RE: Travelling without moving: Audi Sport Quattro SWB
RE: Travelling without moving: Audi Sport Quattro SWB
Yesterday

Travelling without moving: Audi Sport Quattro SWB

Still time to buy famed Group B special before our EuroMillions ticket comes up trumps...


You wait for buses, two come at once. The Sport Quattro is a rare old bird by any measure; fewer than 200 ever found customers, and many fewer than that are in the UK. We hadn’t seen one in yonks before a terrific red-coloured example turned up in the summer. The vendor wanted £625k for it, and on the basis of it no longer being for sale, presumably found someone prepared to pay it.

This one, in Alpine White, might be even better. Or at the very least, it is another homologated bus to gawp at in wonder. The asking price is much the same, and that’s appropriate because it has done virtually the same miles and appears to be in equally admirable condition. Probably that has something to do with the very small amount of miles that have been racked up since it was acquired in 2011. 

We can attribute its modest amount of use to pride of place in Jay Kay’s sprawling car collection. The MOT record suggests that the Sport Quattro has not been out and about much in the last few years, although it was returned to road legal status last month and the dealer charged with selling it assures us that it has been regularly maintained in the meantime. 

Needless to say, it looks the business. The world is not short of cars that would look better with some extraneous length removed from the wheelbase, but few surely would benefit quite like the Quattro did. Its maker, of course, was seeking performance gains on world rally stages - yet the stylistic effect, grafted onto a more bluff front end, was equally transformational for the road version. No wonder it is considered a touchstone of Audi design even 40 years later. 

Weight reduction was obsessive, with Kevlar used for the wings, roof and front apron – all of which remain intact on this example. Under the bonnet, you get the legendary 2,133cc five-cylinder turbocharged engine, complete with its advanced 20-valve DOHC head and the 306hp it needed for a sub-5-second 0-62mph time. Sufficient for it to still qualify as fast today; rocket-like for 1985, when it was delivered to its first owner in Switzerland. 

There it remained until the late ‘90s, when it was apparently acquired by a former Audi rally co-driver. Which is who Jay Kay acquired it from. As previous ownership histories go, it’s a notable one - but really it’s about the pugnacious brilliance of the SWB and its almost peerless rally kudos. Is there much chance of the mileage increasing post-sale? Who knows, although the car’s value as an investment is hard to deny. Let’s just hope the next owner has a little more imagination than that...


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Author
Discussion

BigChiefmuffinAgain

Original Poster:

1,506 posts

118 months

Yesterday (15:00)
quotequote all
So back in the day ( we're talking last century ) my father had a small collection of group B and rally cars. In those days, you could knock a 0 off and, if you were lucky, divide by two when it came to the price of these things. They weren't popular other than to a few more dedicated oddballs....

So he ended up with an RS 200, an S4 Stradale and an 037 amongst others. He went to try one of these as was thinking of buying one. And, as said, they really were not so much then. He drove it but didn't like it. For road use ( which was all he was interested in - he wasn't racing or rallying them ), he thought the mid-engine configuration of the others was far better when it came to a driving experience.

Others will doubtless feel otherwise....

RGambo

875 posts

189 months

Yesterday (15:08)
quotequote all
My father had a white one, just like the one shown. he paid £35k for it! I was lucky enough to drive it on a few occasions, It was an acquired taste for sure. I loved it, but I think part of that was because it was what it was ( if that makes sense) I haven't been lucky enough to drive any of the other group B car, so I can't compare. All i say is a sport with 500+bhp in the forest must have been a right handful!!
Pretty sure my fathers went to Belgium.

nismo48

5,840 posts

227 months

Yesterday (16:11)
quotequote all
A true rally legend at a very special price wink

griffdude

1,883 posts

268 months

Yesterday (16:44)
quotequote all
A chap in the village where I grew up was high up in VAG & drove a green one. I remember it spinning all 4 wheels on a snowy morning whilst I was walking to the school bus (which didn t show up).
16 years later I had a black MB Quattro.

rossub

5,352 posts

210 months

Yesterday (18:43)
quotequote all
Do you have to pay extra to have the rusty bolt in the engine bay replaced?

Twinair

958 posts

162 months

Yesterday (20:13)
quotequote all
Oooooof….!

soxboy

7,098 posts

239 months

Yesterday (20:27)
quotequote all
Previously owned by Phil Short - he lives near me and I used to see this being driven round by him.

MrHooky

228 posts

162 months

Yesterday (20:44)
quotequote all
Pretty sure Harry M said in one of his recent videos (Iconic presale) that he has asked Jay Kay to sell him this. Perfect timing, especially off the back of selling his Jag and Lamborghini!

GreatScott2016

2,066 posts

108 months

Yesterday (21:07)
quotequote all
Lovely, no question, but ouch, what a price. I don’t see the value myself, but I’m not a connoisseur. No doubt a lovely addition though for someone’s collection.

GTRene

20,255 posts

244 months

Yesterday (21:50)
quotequote all
rossub said:
Do you have to pay extra to have the rusty bolt in the engine bay replaced?
of course I had to look that up...

That is indeed something you would replace the first thing before selling, the rest look good under there, but that at least one bolt + ring which hold that carbon inlet thing is so rusty, strange, or maybe some cleaning water was a bit holdup there, but still.

It like a lovely lady smiles to you and has one tooth missing at the front or one of such rot


Dapster

8,508 posts

200 months

What's great about the Sport Quattro is just how well developed it is as a road car - beautifully trimmed and finished and with serious road manners. The S4 Stradale and 205 T16 by all accounts are not great as road cars despite being far more successful as competition cars. The Sport Quattro is lottery win definite for me