BBC Top Gear Magazine

WE’VE BOUGHT A 306 RALLYE SO YOU DON’T HAVE TO

Report 4: celebratin­g roadlegali­ty the proper way...

- Next month: bodywork, wheels and tyres

For the first time in five years my 306 Rallye is roadlegal. I can remind myself of what I’ve been missing. Or expressed another way, rediscover why I parked the 306 up all that time ago and couldn’t be arsed to take it out again. Was it (whisper it) not that great?

Thankfully, no. What’s it like compared to something modern? Soft and slow. Let me tell you why that’s no bad thing – and it’s only partly that modern cars are simply too fast to be genuinely enjoyable. The 306 Rallye was developed at a time before firms had to start compromisi­ng the mechanical­s and dynamics to appease either their marketing department or legislatio­n. So it rides on cute little 15in rims, has closely stacked gear ratios rather than crazy long intermedia­tes that will run past 100mph in third. Don’t get me wrong – I think what car firms have done to clean up their cars is amazing, and I take no pleasure in telling you this 167bhp hot hatch puts out more CO (224g/km) than a current 572bhp Porsche 911 Turbo S. But when I drive it, it doesn’t feel profligate or damaging.

It feels light and languid. It rolls through corners, takes time to settle after humps, floats a bit over crests, but it’s all done with such dexterity, such feel through the steering and chassis that it’s like a breath of fresh air. You don’t go as fast, not least because it’s old and despite what Matt Jobling at Pug1Off said about it being sound, the underside still looks bloody rusty to me.

Not a car to attack a road with, but one you build a rapport with. It flows along beautifull­y. Yeah, there’s some kickback through the steering and a good bit of wheel wobble as I home in on 70mph (that’s the buckled rim. It’s next on the list of things to get sorted). Peugeots were always renowned for their handling, but I reckon the 306’s engine is the equal of its chassis. I make sure the water and oil needles have started to swing upwards before clogging it. I like that anticipati­on. And I love the induction noise. For a 4cyl, it’s gorgeous. Go and listen to some old BDA Escorts howling through a forest. It’s that noise. Quieter, less angry, but wonderful nonetheles­s. And the way it responds, the mid-range torque, the fact you look down at the rev-counter when you think it’s reached its crescendo and realise you’ve still got another 2,000rpm to go – and that you can legally use them. It’s a richer driving experience than nowadays.

If less comfortabl­e. I always remember thinking Renaults had even worse driving positions than Peugeots, but this, with steering wheel low and knees splayed to either side, isn’t great. I’m using the windy windows a lot to keep cool, but have so far failed to raise any tunes from the JVC stereo. I fear that might be terminal.

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