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What Performance Variant Is Way Better Than It Should Be?

What Performance Variant Is Way Better Than It Should Be? photo
What Performance Variant Is Way Better Than It Should Be? photo

It’s a fact of nature: Some cars just ain’t great. But occasionally, an automaker’s skunkworks performance team gets their hands on one of those not-great cars and turns it into something special. Think the Volkswagen New Beetle RSI, Chevy Cobalt SS, and Dodge Caliber SRT-4. Heck, even the original Ford Mustang was a spiced-up version of the tepid Falcon sedan. What other performance variants are better than they have any right to be?

This question occurred to me when I spotted a neighbor’s 1991 Dodge Spirit R/T. The garden-variety Dodge Spirit was an unremarkable Chrysler K-product with a boxy design and barely triple-digit horsepower. But for the R/T, Dodge tapped Lotus engineers to develop a 16-valve head for its 2.2-liter turbo inline-four, more than doubling output to 224 horsepower and 217 lb-ft of torque.

Only available with a five-speed manual, the Spirit R/T accelerated from zero to 60 mph in 5.8 seconds and aced the quarter mile in 14.5 according to a period test by Car & Driver. That made it the fastest American sedan at the time, beating out the Taurus SHO by 0.8 of a second to 60 mph and nearly keeping up with a 310-horsepower BMW M5.

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Dodge sold just 1,399 Spirit R/Ts in the U.S. during model years 1991 and 1992, the only years it offered the variant. The R/T had no right to be as potent as it was, and Dodge seemed to realize that.

But I’d rather hear from you—what souped-up version of an awful or awfully normal car is way better than it should be? Let us know in the comments down below.