Background
With the humdrum shopping Impreza as its base, Subaru’s engineers went full-on banzai to develop the Impreza Turbo into a street fighting machine that was at much at home on the track as it was a forestry rally stage.
The WRX (World Rally eXperimental) flat-four engine is turbocharged and develops around 235bhp in initial trim. Modest by today’s standards but anything but at the time, the Scooby feeds its power to the tarmac via a manual gearbox and a sophisticated four-wheel-drive system. A relatively lightweight car, it goes like stink and took the motoring world by storm. Rally win followed rally win - and the Brits wanted a piece of the action, grey-importing saloon and hatchback variants by the container load.
The second-generation cars like this were first available from 2000. Nicknamed the Bugeye, the 2003-facelift saw an evolution in design that led to a change of name to the Blobeye.
The STi (Subaru Tecnica International) version took the basic recipe to Heston Blumenthal-type levels of sorcery via hand-assembled and tuned engines, upgraded suspension, and stylistic tweaks. Much-prized by collectors and enthusiasts alike, they are the ultimate evolution of the Impreza Turbo range.
Not least because rallying legends such as Colin McRae and Richard Burns turned the already potent Impreza STi into an icon, the likes of which we will probably never see again. On a performance-per-pound basis they were extraordinarily cheap when they were new, and a series of upgrades and model changes that encouraged owners to change their cars more frequently than they might otherwise have done meant they depreciated even more quickly than your usual performance car.
Until now.








