Post-austerity, badly paid UK farm managers Si! We never got them with the Brat name here, marketing considered it too interesting for a market that had only just adapted to the notion that there could be a farmers' vehicle available that wasn't built out of Dural on a strengthened copy of a Jeep chassis, in Solihull by old men in brown store coats, and the first few hundred carried the International brand so as not to confuse the early adopters with the Subaru name on something bigger than their only other car to have been sold here before then, the 360. Even by the time I was working for them, many people were still suspicious of anything Japanese in origin (their loss really) and especially if that anything was powered by an engine that looked exactly like a ripoff of the one found in the Bradford-built Jowett Javelin and Jupiter range. That some surviving Jowetts now have Subaru engines and that the bellhousing patterns are compatible say all that need be said about that, IMHO.Northerner said:Who wouldn't want a pickup with a Starsky stripe down the side and called a Brat?!![]()


Never quoted myself before...why not huh.k2j said:My dad had a Brat when I was in high school. It had a cracked exhaust manifold (the y pipe) and man it was loud, he'd try to wrap it etc but it always had a loud leak. I seem to remember the dealer telling him it was a flaw. He couldn't or wouldn't afford the I think 500 bones to properly fix it. It was a monster in the snow though!!

That's funny, I was just looking on line and you can find them from $250 - $1000. Might be fun to play with!JVC Floyd said:i want one , small and cheap to run , plus you can beat on it and haul crap . i mean i would not show up at the emmy awards in one but for every day use it would be sweet. i would just erase the name off of it because BRAT just don't cut the mustard . maybe call it the BASTARD hell that suits it better.
Only the front wheel drive version came without a low ratio crawler gear. The final drive ratio gave a relaxing 27mph/1000rpm in fourth (or optional fifth which was direct so no real advantage). Second was normally used for pulling away, that first gear - marked simply as "L" on the gear knob - was much lower on the 4x4 version and allowed for pulling horse boxes out of muddy fields with surprising ease. Because there was no rear or centre diff on these, they would grip brilliantly with 4wd selected though there was always a good laugh to be had with customers who'd left the transaxle in 4wd and driven onto tarmac like that, the rear prop would wind right up. We'd simply drive about 20 yards backwards and then the switch worked and the thing would be back in FWD only. Problem solved, but we'd tell them that they'd wrecked the TA and that the repair would cost them thousands. Oh how they (mostly,Lasonic TRC-920 said:I personally never owned one, but I had a friend in high school that had one and we used to ride around in the back. Those seats were so uncomfortable AND dangerous, your head is above the roof, if it flips your head is flat!
Too bad they don't have a low gear, but could be a fun little machine!
) laughed when we 'fessed up and explained how easily they could release the tension theirselves the next time they made the mistake of driving on the road in 4x4.SEE, I just learned something....Cool, so they did come with a low....that's really cool.Beosystem10 said:Only the front wheel drive version came without a low ratio crawler gear. The final drive ratio gave a relaxing 27mph/1000rpm in fourth (or optional fifth which was direct so no real advantage). Second was normally used for pulling away, that first gear - marked simply as "L" on the gear knob - was much lower on the 4x4 version and allowed for pulling horse boxes out of muddy fields with surprising ease. Because there was no rear or centre diff on these, they would grip brilliantly with 4wd selected though there was always a good laugh to be had with customers who'd left the transaxle in 4wd and driven onto tarmac like that, the rear prop would wind right up. We'd simply drive about 20 yards backwards and then the switch worked and the thing would be back in FWD only. Problem solved, but we'd tell them that they'd wrecked the TA and that the repair would cost them thousands. Oh how they (mostly,) laughed when we 'fessed up and explained how easily they could release the tension theirselves the next time they made the mistake of driving on the road in 4x4.
The only Subaru I ever owned was a 1978 wagon front wheel drive. Baby sh@t brown. Bought it for $300, drove it one winter, sold it for $500.bantytfv said:Not a Brat, I have had a 1974 sport coupe, and a 1992 SVX though. Have worked on many Subaru's, tough litle cars, at least the early ones (70's-80's) were.