Matt Saunders
28 March 2012

What is it?

Yet another drive story about the ‘Toyobaru’ sports car. But it’s an important one, so no dozing off at the back.

Last week, Editor-at-large Steve Sutcliffe brought you a report from behind the wheel of a practically finished Toyota GT-86 after a session on track in Spain. This week, it’s Subaru’s turn: we’ve had a day in a final production version of the BRZ – this time, on the road.

European roads, mind you, and in a left-hand drive car. All the same, we’re now in a position to tell you exactly how livable, practical, comfortable and generally usable this tempting new rear-drive sports coupe is, as well as how exciting it is away from the painted kerbing.

There seems little point repeating some already widely know vitals about this car. For now, we’ll settle for reminding you of three things. Firstly: that, although the ‘Toyobaru’ project was majority funded by Toyota, and the car was designed and styled mainly by the relative automotive giant of the partnership, the BRZ (just like its sister car) is built by, and has been engineered by, Subaru. Secondly: that at its heart is one of Subaru’s utterly distinctive boxer engines, which contributes decisively to its character and performance, as we’ll go on to explain. And thirdly: that, although it’s only got 197 normally aspirated horses, the BRZ weighs just 1239kg – even in this range-topping trim. That’s less than a Porsche Cayman R; and damn near 300kg less than the lightest Nissan 370Z.

Both the Lotus Elise and VW Golf GTi have poorer power-to-weight ratios than this. Which is something performance car devotees would do well to remember before dismissing this car for the want of a headline-grabbing power output.

What’s it like?

It may be early for these kind of pronouncements, but in this tester’s opinion, this is just about the best driver’s car to come out of Japan since the heady days of Supra and NSX. That statement includes the Nissan GT-R – a performance heavyweight that could crush the BRZ on half-throttle, but that also doesn’t have half the multi-faceted subtlety or vivacity.

All of those preliminary track impressions of the car are to be believed; this really is a sports car with a rare capacity to excite, that handles with the sort of poise and involvement that you could lose weeks exploring.

The even better news is that, on the road, its less spectacular charms are just as distinguishing. On the road, the BRZ’s superbly informative and responsive steering drags you into its driving experience by your fingertips. The car’s finely-honed brake pedal feel and perfectly balanced chassis let you attack corners with ultimate confidence. Back on the power, its blissfully slack-free driveline serves up instant traction and an absorbingly manageable cornering attitude from apex to exit.

And away from the bend, that unencumbered flat four engine spins up beyond 7000rpm with just enough urgency to make the BRZ feel thrilling.

But – and this bit’s quite key – not so much sheer poke to feel at all over-specified or antisocial for the road. The BRZ isn’t as fast as some cars at its price: it’s a more modern, mature performance car than that, appreciation of which requires a more refined palette than your typical forum brag artiste or traffic light grand prix champ might possess. It could use more low- and mid-range torque, particularly. But, like a middle-order hot hatchback, you can get a sense of bang-for-your-buck reward from the car simply because you can deploy 100 per cent of its power through 2nd and 3rd gears with regularity – and, in the right circumstances, without too much fear for your licence. And when you do, you’ll just adore how quickly and precisely the engine responds to the accelerator, and the gruff boxer bark it makes at full load.

Key to the BRZ’s superb handling is its low centre of gravity. At 460mm above the concrete, the BRZ’s centre of gravity is lower than that of a Mazda MX5, even.

And because it doesn’t roll hard, the car doesn’t need massive wheels and tyres, or particularly stiff suspension, to deliver its dynamic composure. Which is why it also rides pleasingly quietly and comfortably – for a sports coupe, at least. The BRZ, which has the firmer chassis setup of the ‘Toyobaru’ twins, jostles its occupants a little over choppy surfaces, but otherwise has quite generous compliance and entirely unobtrusive long-distance manners.

The BRZ’s practicality and material quality is to be praised, too. You’ll find more usable space in the back seats here that you will in an Audi TT or Peugeot RCZ. That may not amount to a lot, but it’s fair enough in a car with a longways engine, rear-wheel drive and the same wheelbase as a Mini Clubman. You’ll also find a proper soft-touch dashboard, some hardy, tactile and modern-looking switchgear and, in our range-topping car, a red-stitched part-leather interior. Elsewhere the ‘Toyobaru’ has shinier and cheaper materials, sure: it wears them like something of a ‘less-is-more’ badge of honour. But overall, the interior looks and feels up to scratch, and its ethos is entirely as it should be.

Should I buy one?

Which one, you mean? On this evidence, that should be entirely down to availability and personal taste. The BRZ’s chassis may be the more focused of these two new Japanese sports car twins, but it’s still absorbent and fully appropriate for everyday use.

Meanwhile, reviewers of the GT-86 haven’t exactly lamented its wallowing suspension tune during earlier track tests. Which may lead you to conclude that these two cars are sufficiently similar to be considered identical in most meaningful ways.

Both cars should make fantastically involving weekend drivers, whether you spend them on track days, at hillclimbs or just blasting across the countryside; both cars will, on this evidence, be comfortable and practical enough to double up as weekday transport.

And both will be available for less than £25k before the end of the year. If the arrival of Subaru’s stripped-out BRZ late in 2012 doesn’t deliver that, the improving value of Sterling against the Yen certainly should.

Other £25k coupes may be faster accelerating, better to own or easier to live with. But simply put, even in cars as enthralling to drive as the Mazda MX5 and as focussed as a RenaultSport Clio Cup, it’ll be hard to have more fun for less.

Subaru BRZ Premium

Price: £26,500 (tbc); 0-62mph: 7.6sec; Top speed: 140mph; Economy: 36.2mpg; CO2: 181g/km; Kerbweight: 1239kg; Engine type, cc: 4cyls horizontally opposed, 1998cc, atmospheric; Power: 197bhp at 7000rpm; Torque: 151lb ft at 6400-6600rpm; Gearbox: 6-spd manual

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Comments
51

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

Mondeal wrote:

It sounds like a fantastic car. It is a sports car not a performance car.

Remember that a 205 GTi was faster across country that a Lambo at the time so really headline figures are only suitable for pub bragging.

In the same way that instead of my Mondeo 140hp I could have got a 160hp Insignia with better headline performance figures, but which one would you want to drive on your favourite A & B roads?

Yes, this sounds to be a great car, no doubt. My concern was more about the correctness of the 0-62, not its absolute value. I think that it's certainly closer to 7 than to 8. Maybe something like 6.8-6.9. The 205 GTI is 30 year old and fast as this in straight line? There's something that doesn't add about these figures.

Anyway in general I agree, fast car doesn't mean sport car, and this apply to some cars that should be more than just fast. Take the Golf R, I drove a DSG 5 door one, fast but not good at all. It felt even heavier than it is, hard and not communicative and the 4wd doesn't help to make it engaging.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

The more I read the more I wonder. Both these manufacturers have stood aside from WRC for quite a while now. Both have been at one time or another winners of the manufacturers title and have had their drivers at the top of the table come end of season. So... if this car is as good as they say..I wonder..will they make it 4wd and rally again? That would be the best news I have heard in years. Much better than 'polo" or "mini" playing around. OK ok so the Polo might be a flyer - we will see. Hopefully Loeb will stay 1 more season just to kill the Polo off as being the great new car.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago


michael knight wrote:

Same old issue though - it's $25K in the US, how does that translate to £25K in the UK?

Because shafting the British motorist is a national passtime, and anyway someone has to pay for the Olympics. Can be had for just under 16k here in the US (the Toyota badged a Scion). I have already registered to buy one, just waiting for the call.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

Boris911 wrote:

I have already registered to buy one, just waiting for the call.

There'll be quite a few forum members here keen to hear how you get on! When do US deliveries start?

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago


Espresso1 wrote:

When do US deliveries start?

No 'official' date yet. Specs and prices have been released, but dealership says no word yet on delivery. US model year change is usually summer time and the Toyota/Scion will be sold as a 2013, so given that and the 'late spring' on sale date, I guess late April early May for delivery. Aside from whether this car is great or brilliant, I think because it raises the bar, other manufacturers will be forced to raise their game, and that should be good for all of us whether you like this car or not.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

Boris911 wrote:

I think because it raises the bar, other manufacturers will be forced to raise their game, and that should be good for all of us whether you like this car or not.

I agree, they'll certainly be looking on to see if Toyota & Subaru have judged the "enthusiast" market correctly. To ensure that this encourages a few other manufacturers to make cars for people who enjoy driving their cars and not just bragging about them, then it's up to enthusiasts to prove they're right!

What encouraged you to choose the Scooby over the Toyota btw?

PHB

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

Was lucky enough to test drive the top grade BRZ recently. Overall very nice (and very nice soundtrack too) but didn't meet my expectations, I was just expecting more. It just didnt have the instant fun factor of my mx5 and didnt feel as sharp. The Toyota suspension setup supposedly has a stronger RWD feel to it. And it was very tight in the back, my son barely fitted (headroom not an issue, nowhere to put your feet though). Looking forward to driving the Toyota to see if it changes my views.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

I love the idea of these cars, but am going to " bleat" about the performance. 151lb/ft at 6400rpm is awful. For B-road fun, you're going to need to overtake a few people making less progress than you... these cars sound prohibitively wheezy with such a narrow band of accessible power. I'd wait for Subaru to bring out an STi version were I looking to replace my car.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

I don't really agree with that, if it's happy to rev then the lack of torque won't be an issue for overtaking. If anything it'll be more fun keeping the car on the boil ready to move.

Re: Subaru BRZ Premium

1 year 7 weeks ago

Performance may not be startling, and I'll be suprised if a more powerful version doesn't eventually appear, but for a sports-car it seems to have nearly all the bases covered, especially when it comes to raw driving pleasure. As good as some of its rivals might be, I can't help but think the 370Z, Z4, SLK, TT and Boxster/Cayman for example have all been wrong-footed and now appear cumbersome and over-engineered for very little gain and benefit. The BRZ and GT-86 appears genuinely fresh and focussed-thinking.

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Our Verdict

The Subaru BRZ 2+2 coupé is the marque's own product from its collaboration with Toyota, which also resulted in the GT86

Driven this week