Currently reading: When manufacturers experiment: 10 cars that bucked the trend

Down the years, many cars have been notably incongruous inside their makers’ showrooms. We pick out the best second-hand selections

To truly understand the appeal of cars like the Nissan Nismo GT-R, Toyota GR Yaris and Alpine A110, as we've just done in our three-way track visit seen elsewhere on this site, you have to consider their standing in their respective showrooms.

The GT-R, for example, can be found nestled between Nissan Micras and Nissan Qashqais; the GR Yaris jostles for forecourt space with the RAV4 and Prius; and to test-drive the A110, you might well have to shunt the odd Renault Mégane or Captur out of the way. 

In short, all three cars share little more than a badge with their respective range-mates (or, in the case of the Alpine, not even that), and you have to imagine there were some accountants none too pleased that they ever got signed off.

Here are a few other automotive sore thumbs that we’re glad made it past the sensible sorts.

Ford RS200

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Motorsport homologation is responsible for some of the most fearsome and wildly styled road cars of all time, and the Ford RS200 is a prime example. It performed not too well in its sole WRC season and its Cosworth powerplant was heavily downtuned for the 200 road cars, but 246bhp feels plenty in a non-electronically assisted, sub-1200kg, mid-engined two-seater, while its dustbin-size turbo makes turn-to-turn sprints a heck of a lot quicker.

One we found: Chassis #15 is headed for auction in Paris, tipped to fetch £220,000-plus. It was piloted by Stig Blomqvist on the 1986 Circuit of Ireland Rally.

Vauxhall VXR8 GTS

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There was a time, not so long ago, when Vauxhall had a V8-propelled, tyre-shredding family-hauler on its books. A rebadged version of Australian GM sibling Holden’s Commodore HSV, this saloonatic was at launch the most potent car on sale here for less than £60,000. With the Chevrolet Corvette’s supercharged 6.2-litre V8 shunting 577bhp and 546lb ft rearwards, it ran 0-62mph in less than 5.0sec and made a biblical noise doing so. Prices aren’t as relatively low as they once were, and you will need to overcome your badge snobbery before choosing it over a Mercedes-AMG E63, but it will be worth it to show up the local Corsa boy-racers.

One we found: You want a bright colour, surely? A Fantail Orange car from 2014 is quite the eye-catcher, and its sub-£40k price is more attractive still.

Lamborghini LM002

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Oh, to have been at the meeting in which this V12-powered super-truck was approved for production. Regarded as the pioneer for luxurious performance SUVs in the vein of the Porsche Cayenne and its Lamborghini Urus descendant, the LM002 took its thunderous 5.2-litre engine from the equally mad Countach and injected a healthy dose of leather, electrickery and off-road capability into the bargain. Tipping the scales at nearly three tonnes, the Rambo Lambo’s near-8.0sec 0-62mph time won’t set your heart racing today, but its unquenchable thirst for premium unleaded just might. Oddly, it wasn’t a big seller, with a little over 300 cars built over seven years, so don’t expect much change from £250,000.

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One we found: Head to Miami (where else?) for the cheapest: a 1990 car with 15,500 miles at £202,000.

MG xPower SV

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Forget how bizarre it seemed at launch in 2003: can you imagine if this snarling thug were added to MG’s current line-up of low-cost run-arounds? Freed from the shackles of their BMW overlords at the turn of the millennium, MG’s executives decided to recapture some of the brand’s sorely missed sporting cachet, and although the nippy ZR, ZS, ZT and TF sold strongly, it was the rare SV that came closest to bedroom-poster material. Based on the Italian Qvale Mangusta, this carbonfibre-clad coupé took 320bhp from a 4.6-litre Ford V8 and was styled in part by Peter Stevens of McLaren F1 fame. A protracted production process and slow sales meant it never even got it into triple figures.

One we found: Of the two up for sale, our pick is the one-owner, Garnet Red car. You will need £49,000.

Peugeot RCZ-R

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What’s this, a sporty French coupé with a little over 250bhp and squat, rotund styling? Alas, that’s as far as the similarities between the Alpine A110 and the RCZ-R go. Nonetheless, this was for a while Peugeot’s fastest production car, sending 267bhp from its 2.0-litre turbo four to the front axle by way of a manual gearbox and Torsen diff. It was quicker than most hot hatches but, more important, its vastly improved dynamics over the standard RCZ didn’t come at the cost of comfort or refinement.

One we found: Just 300 or so came here, so values are strong. Pay £15,495 for a 48,000-mile 63-plater.

Morgan Aeromax

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Irrespective of their dynamic prowess or punchy performance, Morgans tend to be ruled out of contention for sports car supremacy on the basis of their olde-worlde styling and wooden frames, but that’s not to say Malvern hasn’t dabbled in modernity. The Aeromax built on the formula of the already shockingly up-to-date Aero 8 with a 362bhp reworking of BMW’s revered 4.8-litre V8, a sweeping boat-tail and, for better or worse, brake lights from the Lancia Thesis. It’s a brutally loud and stunningly fast tribute to British-European relations at their best and one of Morgan’s finest all-rounders. Just 100 were made and they rarely appear in the classifieds, so patience is a virtue.

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One we found: Chassis #16 is awaiting its third owner with a dealer who wants £135,750 for the privilege.

Lexus LFA

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You can wax lyrical for hours about the shriek of the LFA’s atmo V10, its sky-high 9400rpm redline or its ability to corner at up to 2g with no loss of lubrication, but that would be to gloss over the less commonly celebrated details that make this one of the finest cars of its generation. For instance, the door mirrors were painstakingly shaped to funnel air down special channels (themselves serving as hand grips for the doors) to the gaping rear intakes, the engine is signed by the engineer who hand-built it and the key is made of carbonfibre. Sure, it wasn’t as quick as the Ferrari 458, but as a technological tour de force, its legacy will endure more potently

One we found: The first right-hand-drive LFA has sadly done just 6000 miles in 10 years. If you can afford £539,995, it’s on you to add a few more...

Jaguar XE SV Project 8

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Like the Toyota GR Yaris, the XE SV Project 8 shares little beyond certain elements of its bodyshell with the mainstream car upon which it’s based. Unlike the Yaris, however, it retains its rear doors (even on the two-seat Track Pack car) and is rather more geared towards full-bore circuit use than spicing up your commute. Power – all 592bhp of it – comes from a supercharged 5.0-litre V8, the outlandish aero package can generate up to 122kg of downforce at 186mph and the suspension springs are 4.5 times stiffer than those of the standard XE. If all of that sounds a bit too hardcore, track down a run-out Touring model to lose the enormous rear wing and keep the back bench.

One we found: Just one is in the classifieds: a 70-plater with just 1000 miles for £114,000 – a 24% drop from new.

Renault Sport Spider

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Had the Sport Spider been sold in greater numbers (or with any sort of protection from the elements), it might have achieved cult status like the similarly conceived Mazda MX-5 and Lotus Elise. After all, it’s not as if it would be embarrassed by either on a twisty B-road. Its mid-mounted 2.0-litre atmo motor makes just 148bhp, but it has only 930kg of aluminium frame and plastic body to propel so, with help from its snappy five-speed gearbox and unflappable chassis, this quirky canyon-carver set the nascent Renault Sport brand on a path to greatness. Just 96 were built in right-hand drive, so it’s a collector’s item; but for the keen driver after something different, little else would provide such joy.

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One we found: The cheapest is a 1997 Mars Red car with 27,000 miles and service history for £29,995.

Bentley Continental GT Supersports

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“Cars can be green without being small, slow or boring”, said Bentley in 2009 as it unveiled this amazingly large, quick and exciting creation. The application of Lotus ideas to a big luxury GT may sound ill-advised (think lightweight chassis and no rear seats), but this was unexpected proof that such a formula can offer an unparalleled blend of dynamic capability and refinement. And because its 621bhp 6.0-litre W12 can run on 85% ethanol, it can emit 70% less CO2 than a pure-petrol model.

One we found: For £38,150 (or a plush new Passat), you could get an early Supersports with 70,000 miles.

READ MORE

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Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

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4rephill 20 March 2021
If only the Peugeot RCZ-R had been a mid engine, 3.0 twin turbo V6 - It could have been something seriously special!
manicm 6 March 2021
The only credible car of all these mongrels is the LFA. Well done Lexus.

The rest of you - back to your kennels.

BlahBlah43 6 March 2021
Whole the LFA was cool, the Carrera GT before it is better in everyway and sounds just as good if not better. RCZ didn't change anything as the Audi TT makes more sense if you are going fwd style over substance vehicles. Project 8 was done decades earlier with cars like the M3 CSL but I know Autocar needs to get its quota of British brands in every article
manicm 6 March 2021

The Carrera GT wasn't that great dynamically.