A few times a year some crazy German drag racers gather at Airport Neuhardenberg for some half-mile top speed challenge racing, and the high level of stuff that shows up to this event is truly spectacular. Just like runway racing here in the States, there’s plenty of exotic and high-end sports car metal with big turbos and even bigger speed, but also like runway racing here in the States, the most impressive stuff is the small cars with big turbos.
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Anyone can buy a Porsche 992 Turbo and have a tuning shop crank up the boost to run a fast time. Not everyone can build a 1500-horsepower 4G63T Mitsubishi engine, stuff it in a Nissan Sunny hatch, and keep it running in a straight line for a half mile. Not only is this car incredibly fast, but it looks extremly difficult to keep pointed in one direction. All the way down the 2640, this car is wobbling and shooting off in one direction or another. It’s sketchy as hell in the best way.
There isn’t much about this build out there on the internet that I can find. Even the LCE High Performance shop website doesn’t so much as mention the thing shaped like a Pulsar GTI-R. According to the channel which took the video, it’s running a 2-liter 4G63 with a 76 mm turbocharger from Garrett, pushing 1500 horseponies to the ground on methanol. I might be able to run this fast on meth, too. In any case, as you can see from the video below, the car ran an absolutely mind-blowing 308.21 kilometers per hour in the half, which translates to 191.5 in units our American brains might understand.
Everywhere I’ve seen mention of the event calls it a half-mile, but with the name of the event being Race 1000, I wonder if maybe the actual course is 1000 meters? That would be just over 0.6 miles, so maybe close enough? Either way, 191.5 miles per hour is staggeringly impressive from a car which was originally offered with a 54-horsepower optional engine. This is a bit quicker than a stock one.
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Cars like the Toyota 86 rarely happen once, and they sure as hell don’t happen twice. The fact it’s lived to another generation is the single most surprising thing about its successor, the GR 86. And I can prove it’s real — as I type this I’m wearing the same dumb grin I had when I drove it. Actually, my face may be permanently stuck this way.
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That’s beside the point. The GR 86 is unsurprising because it’s the same rear-wheel drive sports coupe you know, love and begged for a decade ago, with the same happy-go-lucky spirit and democratic philosophy on oversteer. Except now, it’s more eager to wake up and more prepared to keep up. And wasn’t that all the original 86 was ever missing, anyway?
Full disclosure: Toyota corralled myself and a bunch of other sweaty journalists at Monticello Motor Club in New York for a day of track driving, street driving and helmet fitting. Apparently my head size is “large.” They also put us up in a swanky hotel.
Testing conditions: Driven on one of the hottest days of the summer in the Northeast so far, in humid but otherwise clear circumstances.
What Is It?
Gif: Adam Ismail
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If the last Toyota 86 — a.k.a. the BRZ in Subaru speak, or the Scion FR-S for the youths — was the second coming of Car Jesus as Stef Schrader put it in her review of the old car, I suppose that makes the GR 86 the third. Except third Jesus doesn’t sound as important; and besides, this car shares its platform with the last one and even looks pretty similar, if you really unfocus your eyes. So it’s still kind of the second Car Jesus — but better. Car Jesus II+.
The “better,” in this case, is mostly owed to the new engine — a 2.4-liter, naturally aspirated flat-four replacing the 2.0-liter motor in the old car. It makes 228 horsepower and 184 lb-ft of torque, an improvement of 23 HP and 28 lb-ft over the first generation. Also, all that torque hits at 3,700 RPM now. Remember that for later! We’ll come back to it.
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Photo: José Rodriguez Jr.
That’s not to say the engine is all that’s new about the GR 86. The chassis has been stiffened up from front to back, with new diagonal cross members connecting the front suspension to the frame and a ring of steel behind the cabin that ties the upper and lower bones together. The net result is a 50-percent improvement to lateral rigidity.
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Photo: Adam Ismail
An aluminum roof contributes to a lower center of gravity and helps keep the curb weight in check, which hovers around 2,850 pounds depending on transmission and trim. As with the previous car, the new one can be had with a 6-speed manual or an automatic with paddle shifters.
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For all this, Toyota tells us the GR 86 will start “comfortably” under $30,000, including destination. The old 86 started at a shade above $28,000 with destination included by the end of its run. That’s a good sign!
Top Takeaways
The Interior
Photo: José Rodriguez Jr.
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We’ll get to the theatrics you came for in a moment, I promise. I won’t waste time explaining how the GR 86 looks with words, because you can see it in pictures yourself. I think it’s quite sharp, for the record.
But I do want to take a moment to talk about the interior, because aside from moaning about the lack of a turbo, interior quality is the main complaint I’ve seen lobbed at the Toyobaru kids over the years. I suspect my threshold for tacky plastics and the tactile feedback of switchgear is lower than most, because my only car is a Fiesta ST. I’ll admit that I didn’t have a wealth of time to focus on these things while there was an open track in front of me. That said, absolutely nothing about the interior jumped out at me as excessively cheap, flimsy, or indicative of the car’s stature as the entry point of Toyota’s performance family. I’d be perfectly happy spending every day in this interior.
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Photo: Adam Ismail
Of course, the requisite enhancements to the infotainment system and instrument panel make the GR 86 feel more modern. The 8-inch touchscreen is noticeably larger than whatever Nintendo Switch-sized panel was affixed to the dash of the outgoing car, and I genuinely like the new digital speedometer and tach. (Which is saying something, because I feel digital instrument cluster design is almost universally terrible these days, but that’s a soapbox for another time.) Also, I’ll applaud Toyota and Subaru for strangely keeping the auxiliary audio port around, even though the company that makes your phone ditched it five years ago.
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Photo: Adam Ismail
One quirk of the instrument cluster is the torque and horsepower graph to the left of the main dial. A line trailing the Y axis of the graph will move across it as you apply throttle, to inform you of the engine’s current place on the torque curve. I found this useful as I acclimated myself to the car. I doubt I’d care much for it a year into ownership, but that side of the panel can cycle through other groups of information, so it’s not like you have to stare at it if you’d prefer not to.
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On The Track
Photo: Adam Ismail
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Toyota thoughtfully provided both the new GR 86 as well as the old 86 for our little track day, as well as automatic and manual versions of each car and both standard and Premium examples of the new one. Trim happens to be really important when discussing the way this car behaves on track, because it comes with different rubber depending on which package you opt for.
The base GR 86 gets the same 215/45/R17 Michelin Primacy HP tires the old car had, while the Premium benefits from a set of much grippier Pilot Sport 4s wrapped around 18-inch wheels. Yes, you can have more dumb fun with the shittier tires; that said, it’s not impossible to break loose with the stickier rubber, you just have to push a little harder to do it. Personally, I prefer point and squirt traction, but then I’m not especially skilled in the dark arts of oversteer.
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Image: Toyota
No matter what it’s riding on, the GR 86 is a joy. Handling-wise, I struggled to suss out differences between the new and old cars; I’m splitting hairs, maybe the GR 86 felt a little more sure-footed thanks to those aforementioned lateral rigidity enhancements. For the most part, they behave about the same when changing direction: snappily and gladly, with poise. Steering is relatively light in the new car like in the old one, with a slight degree of on-center play that leaves a little room for improvement, but certainly isn’t pronounced enough to be off-putting.
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Perhaps longtime 86 or BRZ owners will notice differences I won’t in corners. But one difference everyone’s sure to notice is the additional torque, and particularly when it strikes. The new 2.4 builds power far more rapidly, and you don’t have to keep it at the absolute top of every gear to get the most out of it. The GR 86 is just a friendlier car to push in that way. And when you do push it, it certainly feels like it has more to give.
Image: Toyota
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Toyota had us lap Monticello’s short course to begin the day, a ribbon of asphalt full of mid-speed bends and few straights. In the GR 86, I could pretty much get around the entire track in third gear if I wasn’t overtly concerned with getting the fastest exit out of every corner. But you’d never want to do that in the original 86, because you’d suffer putting the hammer down out of slower turns, or quickly run out of steam on straights as a consequence of having less overall power. The GR 86’s more accommodating torque curve especially benefits the automatic.
That engine is the real game-changer with the GR 86. It makes the car feel more responsive overall, and I suspect the once-deafening clamor for forced induction will die down a bit with this generation.
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On The Road
Easy way to tell a base GR 86 apart from a Premium one: wheel color. The silver 17-inch rims indicate a standard model.Photo: Adam Ismail
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I took to the undulating, forested roads of Monticello in one of the standard examples Toyota had on hand, with its inferior tires and cloth seats. Out on the road, two things stuck out at me.
First, the ride is harsh. “Of course it is, Captain Obvious” I’m sure you’re thinking. But, the judder from each imperfection in the asphalt was likely a bit dampened compared to the jolt my Fiesta would’ve shot up my spine. If you’re especially concerned with comfort, you’re not finding that here. The base seats were surprisingly pleasant, though.
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Image: Toyota
Second, I much prefer the clutch pedal in the newer coupe. The old 86’s bite point was really far back, and right behind it was an audible “clonk” with every complete depression. The GR 86 doesn’t emit this discomforting noise, and I found the clutch more intuitive, particularly with takeoffs. The gearbox is perfect for those who prefer notchy, short throws. If I had one gripe, diagonal movements, like shifting from third to fourth, were met with more resistance than I’m used to on my car, where it’s typically one swift stroke. Not a deal-breaker, but something to get used to.
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Those minor observations aside, I thoroughly enjoyed my time with the GR 86 on the street. The beauty of a car like this is that its lightness and immediacy make it captivating at any speed. As it happens, I’ll be driving the new BRZ in a few weeks, and I’m especially curious if some of the changes that Toyota’s engineers made to the suspension components and electric power steering will leave the Subaru feeling a bit lifeless by comparison. One representative told me the stories of CEO Akio Toyoda being underwhelmed by the steering feel of the new car were in fact true, and those tweaks were made at the last minute in response to the boss’ criticism.
Safety and Everything Else
Every GR 86 comes standard with this sad excuse for back seats. Seriously, I’m not even that tall at 5’10”, and you’re never getting me into the backseat of this car with my kneecaps intact, unless the driver or front-seat passenger I’m sitting behind also lacks kneecaps.
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Photo: Adam Ismail
If you’re sitting in the front seats, though, you’ll have a swell time and you’ll be safe, with a seven-airbag system that now includes a driver’s knee airbag, something missing from the previous generation. The automatic-transmission models get the brunt of Subaru’s EyeSight active safety features, including pre-collision braking, adaptive cruise control, land departure warning and lead vehicle start assist, which will let you know if you’re caught nodding at a stop light and the car in front of you has taken off. You’ll probably be woken up by the blaring horn behind you, but a little extra nudge doesn’t hurt.
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This thing kicks.Photo: Adam Ismail
Toyota is very excited about the GR 86’s range of new Gazoo Racing-branded accessories, including bronze 17-inch wheels, performance exhaust and air intake kits and strut braces and stabilizer bars. But the coolest add-on isn’t any of those — it’s the Kicker subwoofer you can get in the trunk. I know this because the particular car given to me on my street drive had one, and it does a whole lot of bumpin’ for a tiny car. If I were buying a GR 86, I’d strongly consider it. The speakers in my Fiesta are doing a whole lot of rattling these days.
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Jalopnik Recommended Options
The Alcantara seats in the Premium trim are really grippy and look great, but not necessary.Image: Toyota
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It’s difficult to recommend a particular configuration because Toyota hasn’t issued a definite base price or how much the Premium package adds to the total. With that trim level, you get heated, leather-trimmed bucket seats with Alcantara inserts, blind spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic alerts, a bit more aluminum in the interior along with contrast stitching, 18-inch rims and a handsome duckbill rear spoiler. Those are all nice to have and I’m a sucker for Alcantara, but in the current 86 a similar package will tack on $3,000 to the price tag. This car isn’t about luxuries, and either trim level can be had in either transmission — for the GR 86, that’s really the only option that truly matters.
Class And Competition
These days there aren’t many GR 86 alternatives out there on this side of the pond, at least in spirit.
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The BRZ’s grille is more of a grin than the GR 86’s frown, and I much prefer Toyota’s front-end treatment.Image: Subaru
The closest (if you exclude the BRZ, of course) is the Miata, which already starts cheaper than the existing 86 but is also lighter and less powerful. Then you’ve got the under $30K hot hatch set that includes the Veloster N and Volkswagen GTI; front-wheel drive, though obviously more practical to live with. The WRX is an option within that price bracket too if an all-wheel drive sedan is more your flavor, though that car is about to be replaced. Besides, at that point you’re starting to stray pretty far from the GR 86’s nimble, light, tail-wagging ethos. Toyota’s own GR Supra 2.0, which has all of 27 more horsepower than the GR 86 but will probably start around $15K more when all is said and done, is a non-starter.
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One question mark is the upcoming Nissan Z. Like the GR 86 and BRZ, the new Z is a rear-wheel drive coupe, and it appears Nissan will offer a manual option with it. It could also be considerably more powerful out of the gate if those rumors of 300 horsepower are true. But cost is still up in the air. If the Z does manage to hit $35K as some have hinted it may, it’ll definitely make choosing one of the Toyobaru twins considerably tougher.
Verdict
Photo: Adam Ismail
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There is nothing pretentious about the GR 86, and that’s why it feels so special among modern performance cars. It’s like an excitable puppy that’s been hit with a car ray. It knows exactly what it is; you know exactly what it is. You’ll have lots of fun together, whether you’re a seasoned driver or a novice, whether you feel strongly about doing all the shifting yourself or not. It’s like its predecessor in that sense, except even better, because now it has a powertrain a bit more equipped to keep the fun rolling. If you don’t mind the lack of space, or you’re looking for a reasonably-priced back road toy, you shouldn’t second guess it. It’ll never second guess you.
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The old Maserati GranTurismo was the kind of constant that you could set your watch to, or at least refuse to believe it would ever die. The new one is different proposition altogether.
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Because the new one will be all-electric — Maserati’s first all-electric — with an electric powertrain that Maserati has been testing for a while. It’s part of an electrification plan for Maserati that includes several EVs, and maybe still a gas engine or two somewhere.
Photo: Maserati
These photos show the GranTurismo in Modena, Italy, where Maserati is based, and were published by Maserati itself, in what feels like a more and more common thing for automakers to do these days. Rather than let spy photographers shoot and sell photos of cars in development, automakers now simply do it themselves.
Maserati offered no other new information about the GranTurismo, other than to say that it is currently in testing.
Ahead of the launch of the new model, the prototype cars are currently undergoing a period of intensive road and circuit testing, in various conditions of use, to acquire vital data for the preparation of the final setup.
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We do, however, maybe know what it might sound like, thanks to a previously released Maserati video.
And while the new GranTurismo will be all-electric, this prototype for testing may not be. You can see what looks like an exhaust tailpipe in the following photo, suggesting that, for now, Maserati is testing with a gas engine.
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Photo: Maserati
Also in development at Maserati is the MC20, which is powered by a gasoline engine and is a bit of a throwback to the days when 630-horsepower supercars were more common. That is just to say that Maserati apparently wants to compete in a couple of very different places right now. One of them is a space occupied by cars like the Porsche Taycan and the other by cars like the Ferrari SF90 Stradale. What’s new is old in Modena.
Nice Price Or No DiceIs this used car a good deal? You decide!
The Lotus Seven was perhaps the world’s best-loved kit car. Today’s Nice Price or No Dice Seven is an homage to that original. Let’s see if its price makes it honorable in its own right.
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Man, I have to say, you readers seem to be feeling pretty tight with the cash this week. Everything I’ve thrown at you so far has been batted down in a No Dice loss. That includes yesterday’s aesthetically compromised 2003 Honda Civic Si hatch.
The seller deserves a shout-out for honestly detailing all of the car’s flaws and witchiepoo warts in the ad. But for many who contributed in the comments, those injuries, accompanied by the car’s $8,800 asking price, were seen as an insult. As a result, it fell in a decisive 88 percent No Dice loss. That makes this, so far, a whole week of losers.
Let’s see if a little Lotus blossom can reverse the tide and bring home a win. We’re ending this week with a replica of a Lotus Seven component car, a model that has had notable success in the many forms of its afterlife — better fortunes than the company that birthed it did with the original version over the years. Seriously, I bet that if you tallied up all the Caterhams, Westfields and dozens of other kit, component and turn-key carmakers popping out Seven homages since Lotus killed off the model in 1973, the total would outnumber Lotus’s output over the same period. Of course, that’s every parent’s dream — that their kids reach greater heights than they did.
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The Seven reached perhaps the greatest height of any car in that it is now not only a staple of boutique carmakers but has become a cherished dream project of DIY builder as well. Those efforts have been so popular that the “Locost Seven” name has found its way into the lexicon of the automotive world.
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Today’s car is claimed to be a Lotus Super Seven replica, and almost all of the proportions and pieces look right for such a car. It does sport tire-hugging cycle fenders in the front rather than the flowing wings you may have been expecting. Either would be accurate, as would the somewhat cobbled together appearance. The Seven was always about minimalism and making-do with what you have. What the builder of this Seven apparently had, was a 1974 Triumph Spitfire. According to the ad, that’s what served as the donor car, offering up the 1300cc engine, four-speed gearbox and from the looks of it, the steering column and entire front suspension as well.
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The seller doesn’t mention whether the rear is sprung via the Spitfire’s swing axles or if there’s something a little more buttoned-down doing that job. What we are told is that the little Triumph four is seemingly good for 60 horsepower at the back wheels, and that it suffers from a misfire when under load. The seller blames that on the car’s having spent a couple of years in storage. The cause could be anything from a tired fuel pump to the ignition points floating at high rpm. It might make for a fun project to suss out the problem and come up with the fix.
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The engine sits under a polished aluminum hood and behind the now-iconic Seven nose cone, which has been painted a traditional yellow. That’s accented with swaths of British Racing Green on the fenders and more bare metal everywhere else. Period-correct tulip-style alloy wheels and real leather straps on the bonnet complete the picture.
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The seller says that the car is too small for anyone over six feet tall, and honestly, it really looks more like something you’d strap on your foot to go skating than something you sit in and drive. If you do fit, you’ll be faced by a wooden dashboard fitted with a full set of gauges and quite remarkably, a locking glove box. Porsche floor mats make for a posh touch. Also, as is obvious from the pictures, this is a right-hand drive car.
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The seller recommends the car for autocross, but notes it is registered for the road and even holds a clear title. It’s being sold in California, and its age makes it emissions-exempt in that state. It comes with a claimed 3,300 miles on the odometer and a price tag of $4,750.
What’s your take on this replica and that very authentic asking price? Does that make this a Seven you might roll? Or, is that too much for something this small and sort of rough?
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You decide!
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Monterey, California, Craigslist, or go here if the ad disappears.
Help me out with NPOND. Hit me up at [email protected] and send me a fixed-price tip. Remember to include your Kinja handle.
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The Audi RS6 Avant is the longroof of dreams, and being a hot new car in high demand opportunists are already circling to make a quick buck. Dig into the sales history of some of the low-mile examples now available, though, and you’ll learn something surprising: It’s not just lone-wolf predators playing the market. Canadian dealers are in on the flipping game, too.
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No wonder the flippers are on the case. The RS6 Avant, an autobahn stormer and occasional track toy, packs a 591-horsepower V8, quattro all-wheel drive and Audi tech into a package that raises your heart rate just looking at it.
As Road & Track found out, Canadian dealerships were among the first to get stock of the RS6 wagon. Some of these dealers decided to flip them in auctions. Those wagons, now technically used cars, were sent across the border to U.S. dealers. The practice seems pretty clever — the Canadian dealers made their profit without any haggling from a customer.
Check Cars.com for used RS6 Avants and you’ll see plenty advertised for more than sticker. Some of these cars have so few miles that you’d think their owners drove them home and immediately put them up for sale. But CarFax checks will reveal that many of these cars were first registered in Canada before ending up at a dealer in the States. Take this beautiful example for sale in Wisconsin:
Photo: Kearns Motor Car
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Its CarFax indicates two previous owners in Ontario despite having only 154 miles on its odometer.
Note that buying a recent vehicle that originated from Canada may bring some headaches. Even though these are the same cars that you can buy here, they sometimes have VINs that won’t come up in a DMV system. Some dealerships won’t even touch cars that come from Canada, Car and Driver reports.
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While Canadian dealerships’ flipping RS6 Avants probably made sense at launch, it doesn’t now. Tick the New box at Cars.com and you’ll find more new cars at around sticker than these used ones. So there’s really no reason to buy a low-mile, but still technically used, RS6 Avant that’s had two or three previous owners.
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Carscoops and the Japanese site Car Watch report that Honda has ceased sales of the 2020 model year NSX. While this may not seem like a big deal because it’s a previous model year, it highlights the low sales the NSX has had even in its home market.
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According to Honda, though sales have stopped, production has not. The NSX is still being made for other markets, including the U.S. where it’s sold as an Acura. Even if you look on Honda’s Japanese site, it says the 2020 model isn’t available — and there isn’t an option to choose the ’21. Weirdly, if a Japanese customer finds a 2020 model left over in dealer stock, they can have it on a subscription basis, Carscoops said.
Could this point to the NSX being entirely discontinued in Japan? Maybe. But it does point to the low sales the hybrid supercar has had since its long-awaited introduction. Sales numbers for the JDM NSX are hard to find, but what I did learn was that Honda sold a grand total of nine NSXs in Japan in January 2020. Honda was shooting for 800 cars a year, with 6,000 in the first three years. Also, keep in mind that the NSX was discontinued completely last fall in Australia after selling none the whole year and three in 2019.
Advanced Sports Car ConceptImage: Acura
The world waited years for the third-generation NSX as it changed from concept to production. It started life as a concept called the ASCC, or Advanced Sports Car Concept, way back in 2007. That concept was powered by a V10. Honda’s CEO at the time told the public that the car would be coming to market by 2010. Development mules started to be seen running around the Nürburgring in 2008.
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However the world’s financial crisis affected Honda, and the company announced that the development of the NSX had been canceled. Then 2010 came, and all of a sudden Honda was racing the NSX. Called the HSV-010 GT it was powered by a specially developed 3.4-liter V8. Not long after that, in late 2011, reports came that the NSX was in development again. When the North American International Auto Show rolled around in early 2012, Acura debuted the NSX concept. Even after all of that, it was another three years before the production NSX made its debut at the 2015 NAIAS.
2021 NSX in Long Beach Blue PearlImage: Acura
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Since its debut, sales have never been that great. Granted it’s a low-volume, six-figure hybrid supercar that’s sold by a brand that hasn’t been taken seriously as a luxury player for years. But still. Here in the U.S., and as is the case with most models’ debut, its best year was its first year, 2016. Acura moved 269 units. In 2017 there was a sales increase of 117 percent to 581 units. Then sales dropped nearly 72 percent in 2018, to 170. A 40 percent rebound came in 2019 with 238 sales. However, 2020 brought a 46 percent drop with only 128 sales. Only a handful are being sold every month.
Could we be seeing the end of the vaunted NSX? It’s hard to say. While Acura seems to be trying to get its performance mojo back with its A-Spec and coming TLX and MDX Type S models, a six-figure sports car that’s selling a few a month might not make financial sense for too much longer. So if you have the means, please go buy an NSX. We might not see anything like it again from Honda.
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