Weekend Herald

LAST OF ITS KIND?

The market is shifting, and the new Subaru WRX will be the last of its type; time to enjoy it while we can

- Dean EVANS

In 1994, when Subaru launched the WRX locally, it fuelled a new era. Instead of V8 Commodores and Falcons as the only recognised fast cars, here was a legitimate, compact, fuel injected, turbocharg­ed, all-wheel drive pocket rocket that helped promote and push the new generation of 1980s and 1990s Japanese performanc­e cars that didn’t have to live in the shadows of their bigger brothers, and picked up where Nissan’s Skyline GT-R arguably broke ground.

Fast forward almost 30 years and the longer, wider and lower 2022 Subaru WRX is still with us: with its iconic bonnet scoop, in largely similar form to the launch model, but on the verge of extinction, at least as we know it. This isn’t the death of the WRX, far from it, but this internal combustion engine model looks very likely like being the last iteration, before some form of electrific­ation/hybrid power arrives.

There’s plenty of evolution of WRX, of course, and this fifthgener­ation is in equal parts totally different to the first. In 1994, a manual five-speed gearbox was the only way to fly, in sedan (or a slightly ungainly wagon).

Now, Subaru NZ MD Wal Dumper says, 99 per cent of all WRX sales are automatic, or “Lineartron­ic” in Subaru CVT speak. That is an incredible number, but there is hope within, as sales manager Wayne McClennan reports of the first 1000 online registrati­ons of interest, and from the 50 WRXs pre-sold sight unseen, 5-6 of them are manuals: 10 per cent! Hopefully (maybe even), a touch of wishful influencin­g ordering . . .

And as the years have grown, WRX’s needs and abilities have also evolved with the times.

There will be no STI with this model, we’re assured.

Instead the top WRX models are badged tS, for tuned by STI. What this actually means, is the performanc­e brand has waved its engineerin­g magic over some engineerin­g aspects, but the visibility is little more than an STI speedo and badge on the steering wheel. #sad.

However, Subaru NZ has stated it will likely offer a specialise­d local model with STI parts such as interior, body kit and strut brace offerings . . . no performanc­e upgrades, sorry.

And that’s how the next model electrifie­d factory STI might also be. #alsosad.

But as WRX has narrowed the gap to STI over the years, it’s stepped up its game.

Not long ago, an STi offered 206kW; now this regular WRX serves up 202kW from its 2.4-litres, horizontal­ly opposed fourcylind­er boxer turbo, and 350Nm, at a relaxed 0.6 bar/9psi boost.

There’s a neat division in pairs for the WRX range: two body styles (2.4T sedan and GT wagon), two variants of each: (sedan in Premium and tS; GT wagon in Premium and tS) and a mix of bespoke offerings in specific models (manual in Premium sedan only, there’s a track mode, and only automatics get auto reverse braking, to avoid silly carpark damage).

A revised 11.6in touchscree­n infotainme­nt system is also a huge step up, with smartphone integratio­n for CarPlay/Android.

Prices start from $59,990. Most popular will be the wagon, auto tS, says Subaru.

Personally, I like the sedan, Premium auto which does a great job of masking its CVTness, but others on our launch drive program — from Antarctica (Christchur­ch) to Mt Cook, to Arrowtown, over two days — preferred the manual, despite it missing out on some tech like radar cruise and EyeSight safety tech and its higher fuel use. Few chose the wagon, due to its softer suspension tune, and slightly narrower, less assured Yokohama tyres . . . there was however universal love for the Dunlop tyres on the sedan that help sharpen the package.

There are also other ways to sharpen it, with the auto models

offering a Mode button on the wheel for four presets, or a personalis­ed custom setting, for things like steering feel, throttle response and suspension damping. And torque bias, to the rear, to also help steering response.

Either way, get in quick, because the prices are due to rise on January 1 2023, 2024, and 2025, for various government penalties against cars like this. And, admits Dumper, getting stock will be a problem: “We’ve got hundreds on the waiting list, lots pre-sold, and a real challenge ahead of us.”

On our drive programme, we sampled all models of WRX, from Christchur­ch to Arrowtown, and into the (auto only) wagon GT and tS models first, it’s a great, practical tourer. The engine and gearbox work really well together, and the ride quality is on the comfort side. There are options to firm up steering and suspension (in tS), but it prefers the softer approach, showcasing WRX’s 2022 abilities as an allrounder. Sporty, but comfortabl­e, it can wallow a little and lack some precision, but this is the softest of the WRX bunch.

On day two, we slipped into the sedan, and with the option of manual, a short-ratio box from the previous WRX (not STI) with some mild upgrades, here’s where it all comes together: with split decisions between manual or auto, the WRX sedan is a remarkably sharper, better driver’s car, and with the auto slicing through the eight gears, rev-matching downshifts (or the manual offering the short-ratio engagement — 2nd gear tops out at a low 82km/h), it’s still a superbly involving drive, with the safety and luxury of now technology; at 2600rpm it’s at full boost, swings to 6000rpm, and retains that turbocharg­ed nothing-then-all nature.

Sadly, its iconic flat-four bark is even more distant.

There are some WRX elements whose days are numbered: manual gearbox is on the chopping block, the pure petrol engine is next, and the sedan variant could even be third in line.

For now, appreciate and love what we’ve got while we’ve got it: a pure, rally-bred Subaru WRX with a turbocharg­ed flat-four cylinder, all-wheel drive and a manual gearbox. Just like it was 30 years ago. #hooray.

The engine and gearbox work really well together, and the ride quality is on the comfort side.

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 ?? ?? Appreciate and love what we’ve got while we’ve got it: a pure, rally-bred Subaru WRX with a turbocharg­ed flat-four cylinder, all-wheel drive and a manual gearbox.
Appreciate and love what we’ve got while we’ve got it: a pure, rally-bred Subaru WRX with a turbocharg­ed flat-four cylinder, all-wheel drive and a manual gearbox.

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