Tag: Fast Car Legends

  • CAR LEGENDS #34 – BMW E30 3-SERIES

    Although BMW have a history of motorsport success going back the best part of a century, it was the release of the E30 3-Series in the early 1980s that put BMW firmly on the map of the UK tuning scene. Light, good looking, tunable, rear-wheel drive, reliable and fun, the E30 ticked all the boxes, and even nearly 40 years after it appeared, it’s still a very popular car to tune.

    While the E30 brought us the first of the legendary M3 models, with its high-revving four-cylinder engine and wide box arches, it was the far more common and affordable E30s, especially the BMW 325i, that became the tuner’s car of choice, and it still is today.

    Wide body BMW E30Wide body BMW E30

    Thanks to the solid BMW build quality, huge amount of tuning parts available and component interchangeability with other BMWs, E30s are very easy to turn into real performance monsters. From turbocharged straight-sixes to big V8 and even V12 engine swaps, they’re also far smaller and lighter than most modern rear-drive cars.

    Although prices are getting higher as E30s get scarcer and gain classic car status, they are still affordable and make a great base for some crazy rear-wheel-drive action. The newer E36 3-Series BMWs are currently cheaper than the E30, and if we’re being totally honest, they are better performing overall, but there is just something about the E30 that makes them still the one to have.

    bmw 325i sport e30bmw 325i sport e30

    And the fact that almost anything that fits into an E36 also fits the smaller, lighter E30 is a bonus, of course. With big-power E30s still cropping up all over the world, this is one legendary car that won’t be forgotten for a very long time.

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  • CAR LEGENDS #33 – MERKUR XR4TI

    What was initially a stop-gap car for Ford Motorsport while the RS500 was developed actually became a surprise success. We take a look at the Merkur XR4Ti…

    In many ways, you could call the Merkur XR4Ti of the ’80s the ‘Sierra-that-wasn’t’. Although it used the same body style as the XR4i, it had a turbocharged Ford USA four-cylinder, was built by Karmann in Germany, and was marketed as a ‘Merkur’ (Merkur means ‘Mercury’ in German).

    The engine was a single OHC 2.3-litre, closely related to the European Pinto, as used in the Mustang SHO of the period. Sold principally in the USA (but never in the UK), it was built from 1984 to 1988 – and a total of 45,748 machines were eventually produced.

    MERKUR XR4TIMERKUR XR4TI

    When Stuart Turner returned to run Ford’s European motorsport programme in 1983, he needed to develop a new Group A race car, and was soon persuaded that the answer could be a very special version of the Sierra, which we now know as the RS500 Cosworth.

    In the meantime, he contracted teams like Eggenberger and Andy Rouse to develop an interim race car based on the XR4Ti, for the chassis could be shared with the still-to-come RS500, and the engine was already known to be raceworthy in North America.

    There wasn’t time to produce a special car, so the twin-rear wing, three-side-window style was retained. It proved to be remarkably effective, though not as aerodynamically efficient as the Cosworth-engined cars which would follow.

    MERKUR XR4TIMERKUR XR4TI

    Group A homologation was gained on 1 April 1985, with Andy Rouse picking up his first BTCC outright victory five days later, at Oulton Park.

    By this time the engines produced about 320bhp. Rouse went on to win nine BTCC races in 1985, and (this time with two cars in his team) added five more victories in the 1986 season.

    Eggenberger of Switzerland appeared with XR4Tis in 1986, and claimed one outright victory, at Jarama in Spain. Then came 1987, and the RS500 – which is another story altogether…

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