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STi president Ryuichiro Kuze partnered with British firm Prodrive in 1989 to develop a rally car using the Subaru Legacy chassis. [6] The resulting performance model was the Legacy RS, which produced 220 PS (160 kW; 220 hp) mated to a five speed gearbox and weighing just over 2,600 pounds; [citation needed] it was manufactured by Subaru to homologate the type for FIA Group A racing. [7]
The WRX Type RA STi received a radio and air-conditioning in the V-limited form. 1000 WRX STi Version 2 V-limited were produced. 555 (the cigarette brand that was the premier sponsor of the Subaru World Rally Team and became synonymous with the Impreza WRC livery) WRX Type RA STi Version 2 V-limited were produced.
The only tuned-by-STI engines that have been in the standalone WRX STI are the EJ257 (Export) and EJ207 (JDM only) specifications of the Subaru EJ engine. (Although earlier Impreza -based models were also fitted with the EJ22G Boxer Turbo )) The highest output model of EJ25 ever produced, producing up to 341 hp (346 PS; 254 kW) at 6,400 rpm and ...
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2025 Dodge Charger Sixpack Has a 550-HP Inline-Six Dodge. ... Sixpack will come with two versions of the company's Hurricane twin-turbo 3.0-liter inline-six, producing either 420 or 550 horsepower.
Subaru lists the CR at 8.4:1 vs 8.2:1 for the 04–06 STI engine. [ citation needed ] for the USA market, the EJ255 version 2 engine made an appearance in the 2.5GT trim model of the Impreza, borrowing the engine from the 2008 WRX (the 2009 wrx got an increase in power)
Subaru Alcyone VX. Created as a refined luxury engine with improved power over the EA82T, Subaru introduced the ER27 engine in November 1985 for the Subaru ACX-II concept car, shown at the Tokyo Motor Show and billed as the 'concept car of the near future.' [2] The concept went into production as the Subaru Alcyone VX (Subaru XT6 in North America) in August 1987, [3] the exclusive application ...
Banham X99. Banham Conversions was a coachbuilder and manufacturer of kit cars from the late 1970s until 2004. The company, based in Rochester, Kent, [1] was founded by Paul Banham and started off as a coachbuilder, converting vehicles into convertibles.