TOYOTA SUPRA OLD


Eight reasons why the old Toyota Supra was so cool

(01)That spoiler

The A80 arrived at a time when the Japanese sports-car had transformed itself from a bit of a joke to something that could take on the world. The exotic NSX and delightful MX-5 led the wave, but there was the tech-heavy Mitsubishi 3000GTO, the brutal Nissan 300ZX, the gorgeous and fast twin-turbo third-gen RX-7… and then the new Supra. Anything less than total awesomeness would have brought dishonour to the house of Toyota.

Awesomeness was delivered.

Time to get it out of the way then. In 1993 a wing like that was properly raunchy. The fact that it harmonised so well with the whole car’s curvy nature just made it even better. Together with a motorised active front air dam, it actually produced downforce. And heck, the Supra’s engine walked it like the wing talked it.



(02)It broke the gentlemen's agreement

For many years the Japanese industry agreed among itself to limit output to 280bhp. In the home market the Supra went along with this, from its 3.0-litre twin-turbo 24-valve straight-six – a configuration the new car adopts too.

But for export markets it was retuned and had different turbos, for 326bhp. This was monster – more than the M3 of the day, nearly as much as the newly-launched 911 Turbo 3.6. 

It was a clever engine too, with sequential turbos, one of them operating at low revs, then the second was spun-up but didn’t actually charge the cylinders. Finally the dam to second was opened, and propelled by the both of them you flew. The 0-60 is 4.9 seconds. Trust us, a quarter-century ago that was properly something.

Remember, today’s Supra is barely more powerful. Oh and the mighty 2JZ-GTE wasn’t overstressed. Tuners can take the power into four figures.


(03)It was light with it

This was no sledgehammer hot-rod. Toyota made diligent efforts to cut weight, and ended up with a better power-to-weight ratio than the Ferrari 348.

They chose aluminium for the bonnet, suspension upper arms, bumper supports and more. It had a single exhaust because a twin one gave no more power. The steering column didn’t telescope-adjust. Some of the details seem hilariously obsessive: a magnesium steering-wheel armature, and hollow carpet fibres. Those savings helped offset the weight of twin airbags, electric seats and other lavish kit.

The turbo version (we didn’t get the JDM nat-asp version here) was about 1,585kg


(04)It was sophisticated, but crazy too

It had traction control, in an era when a BMW E36 M3 didn’t. It also had mighty effective ABS brakes and a limited-slip diff. Those electronics had their limits, mind. I remember being on the elevated section of the Westway coming out of London one wet night (this was before the 40mph limit, and way before the average-speed cams that now enforce it). I floored it in third, the turbos caught on and suddenly the rear wheels were spinning frantically. But it kept going straight.

The Supra’s top speed was limited to 155mph, but they say it would otherwise nudge 180.








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