THESE ARE THE 12 BEST HOT HATCHES OF ALL TIME

Peugeot 205 GTi (1984-1994)

Not the original hot hatch, but the car that reframed the template. The GTI maxed out Gérard Welter’s crisp 3dr design by the simple expedient of adding side mouldings and red go-faster inserts, while a 900kg kerbweight ensured that even 1984’s 105bhp 1.6-litre suffered little inertia.

Then came the 115bhp version, and the 130bhp 1.9 in 1986, whose longer-stroke engine made the perma-thrilling 205 GTi experience less zingy and more torquey, and added disc brakes all-round and lower-profile rubber. The crummy cabin plastics gradually improved, and although early, unmolested 205s are now the most sought-after, post-1990 GTis had desirable black exterior and interior trim.

While it has a reputation for being a bit flakey, the GTi is actually pretty robust, although using it to do what it was designed to do invariably leads to serious wear and tear. We love the Sorrento Green and Miami Blue ’89 special editions which also featured leather trim and power steering. As always, originality is highly prized, especially with the 205 GTi because it was such a totem of the Nineties modified car subculture (and even starred on the cover of the first issue of Max Power magazine). Watch out for worn seats, worn-out gearboxes, and creaking suspension. And as lift-off oversteer was the car’s Achilles’ heel, check for crash damage…

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Ford Fiesta MkVII ST (2013–2017)

This was the little car that felt largely unimprovable. The 1.6-litre Ecoboost engine was tweaked up to 180bhp (197 on overboost), had 214lb ft, and fired it all onto the road via hard-working front wheels. Not as hard-working as you’d think, thanks to traction control-based torque-vectoring software that sent power to the tyre with the most grip, effectively mimicking a limited-slip diff. This ST also gained a stiffer rear torsion bar, disc brakes all round, and sat 15mm lower. But we love it mostly because its sheer pace, body control, and overall balance mean you barely have to lift. Anywhere. Ever.

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Renault Clio Williams (1993–1996)

The original Clio 16V may have had the right number of valves, but it took this homologation special to refashion it into a true successor to the 5 GT Turbo. Sure, part of this car’s appeal is marketing flim-flam– at the time, Williams was the dominant force in F1 – but this was still very much the real deal. The front sub-frame came from the early Nineties Clio Cup racecar, and the suspension was uprated. The engine grew from 1.8 to 2.0 litres, and produced 148bhp at 6,100rpm. Yet again the holy trinity of light weight (981kg), nat-asp engine, and manual ’box shows the new generation how it should be done.

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Honda Civic Type R EP3 (2001–2005)

Honda had assailed the Nineties with the Integra Type-R, and the EP3 brought that brief into its elongated 3dr hatch. The Civic majored on powertrain over chassis, and its nat-asp 1998cc 4cyl was the poster-child for Honda’s screaming VTEC. Its power output was a healthy 197bhp at 7,400rpm, but 142lb ft was puny in 2003, emaciated by today’s standards. Still, 62mph in 6.6secs is handy. The gearshift is a thing of joy; the ride and handling less so, given that the Civic could be tricky if you throttled-off suddenly mid-corner, especially in the wet.

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Lancia Delta Integrale Evo 2

The metamorphosis of the Delta from square-cut Italian Golf rival to WRC giant-slayer is a significant part of the mythology. In an era when rallying was a bigger draw than F1, Lancia was box-office gold. The Delta was a decade old when the Integrale 16V debuted at the ’89 Geneva motor show, then won its first competitive outing in the San Remo Rally. Homologation required a run of road versions.

Although under-endowed by today’s standards, 212bhp was plenty to hustle this head-butt on wheels along a B-road, aided by a Torsen diff. The Momo wheel and Alcantara-trimmed Recaros helped enliven an interior that was a Seventies time-warp even by 1993. As you’d expect, everything that can wear – suspension bushes, brake pads and discs, cam-belt – will need attention.

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Renault 5 Turbo 2 (1983–1986)

Less well-remembered as a rally weapon than the subsequent Group B Peugeot 205 T16, the mid-engined R5 Turbo nevertheless became a staple in European rallying, much like the previous decade’s ubiquitous Ford Escort. But because it was French and turbocharged back when you used a sun dial to measure the lag, it was just… cooler.

Viewed from a vantage point four decades hence, a 1.4-litre engine ponying up 158bhp sounds rather thin, but because it lived behind the R5’s seats and sent drive to the rear wheels, and featured tumescent bodywork designed by none other than Marcello Gandini at Bertone, this little beast became way greater than the sum of its parts. The Turbo 2 followed the original run of homologation cars, and traded aluminium doors, tailgate and roof for steel to keep costs down.

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Ford Focus RS Mk1 (2002-2003)

The Focus had fancy independent rear suspension, so even a boggo car went down the road with uncanny precision. We waited four years for the RS to arrive, and it instantly summoned the same ‘want one’ impulse as the Sierra or Escort Cosworth. Perfect stance, Quaife diff, OZ alloys, and 2.0-litre, 212bhp blown engine.

Ford made 4,501, and it sneaked in under £20k in base form, so it was very much a brand-building halo car (ie: Ford lost money on every one). It also took no prisoners: sure, its nose tucked in like a racecar’s, but there was a load of torque steer too, and once you’d figured out how to deal that with that you were left with a jiggly ride. A magnificent car.

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VW Golf GTi MkV (2005-2008)

VW suffered its equivalent of the ‘difficult second album’ syndrome when it came to following the original Golf GTI in 1983. In fact, it wasn’t until the fifth incarnation, a decade or more later, that the tunes were anything like as memorable. Core to this transformation was a new chassis, which replaced the previous car’s unlovely beam rear axle with a fully independent set-up, and the surprisingly characterful blown 2.0-litre TFSI engine that made 197bhp.

VW’s dual-shift DSG also arrived in this era, a slickly digital set-up that served notice of where things were headed even if the manual was still more fun. Clearly, the Golf had grown somewhat in size by this stage in its career, and the MkV iteration definitely errs more on the thoughtful side. But it’s also a car that moves with a rigorously engineered harmony, and it proved unexpectedly useful on track. Finely balanced, expertly judged.

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Renault Clio 182 Trophy (2005)

Motorsport, it’s often said (wrongly in some cases), improves the breed. It’s a theory stress-tested by the Clio 182 Trophy, a 500-unit end-of-the line edition. Separate reservoirs manage the oil and gas allowing for a beefier damper rod, while the Trophy’s hydraulic bump stops and shorter springs mean it sits 10mm lower than the Cup car. £15,500 new in 2005 was a chunk of change for a French shopping trolley, with nasty interior plastics and a bus-style driving position, yet the 182 Trophy is small and wieldy, and 180bhp from a nat-asp 2.0-litre is optimal to shove 1,090kg along. In other words, it’s a phenomenal communicator. If you can find one, buy it.

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Renault Megane R26.R (2009-2010)

More proof that Renault Sport’s engineers aren’t just among the world’s best, they also know how to finesse a serious car for everyday use. The 227bhp R26.R might just be the greatest of all: on a dry road, with decent temperature in the tyres, this gets very close to replicating the sensation that you’re surfing a wave of infinite and gorgeous grip. Its front end has astonishing bite, and it just goes where you want it to go. Telepathy, innit. Keener dampers and supple spring rates help, but the key to the R26.R is that it wears (optional) track-spec Toyo tyres. They’re not rubbish in the rain, either.

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Honda Civic Type R (2017-2021)

As you can imagine, putting this list of hot hatches together was tricky. In the end, though, there was consensus, until it came to the FK8 Civic Type R, at which point we all fell out. Not because it’s a car whose wings have wings and looks like something that would be owned by someone who still lives with their parents but because the EP3 Civic is in the list already.

Except that the Civic Type R was a stunning achievement, gave you 315bhp in exchange for £32,995, and had chassis poise, huge performance and immense brakes.

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Toyota GR Yaris (2020-)

A newcomer that has already cemented its position as an all-time great. What Toyota has done is design a rally car from the ground up. OK, it’s still a compromise, but the compromise here isn’t happy shopper meets WRC, it’s hot hatch meets WRC. And when your starting point is hot hatch, you’re already pitching the car at an audience that is willing to accept compromise. It’s a genuinely exciting car this, a hot hatch with a real purpose in life.

After all, when was the last time we had a proper rally homologation special, something we can all aspire to? Not since the Imprezas and Evos of the 90s. This, then, is a once in a generation special. And the best news of all is that Toyota has smashed it out of the park.

Read the full Top Gear review here

2024-01-05T12:02:35Z dg43tfdfdgfd