Permis Motors

The year is 1982. The popularity of cocaine is on the decline, Niki Lauda returned to F1, NASCARs were still eclipsing 200 miles an hour, and the FIA introduced Group B rally. The rules for this new class of race car seemed incredibly lax when compared to older rally classes. No limit on power, no limit on boost, and only 200 homologation cars needed to be built to compete. These easy rules lead to the creation of Permis Motors, by a team of East Coast investors. This is the result of hundreds of thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours spent on R&D.

Built in Canada to avoid taxes, the Permis SR450 is the car built to compete against the likes of Audi and Lancia. Generating a mahoosive 450 horsepower from a 2 litre inline 4 using a turbo running an equally ridiculous 44 PSI, it set the bar for power. In a move to save even more money, the investors decided against designing a lower power motor for the 200 road-going cars that needed to be built.
1983
After doing better than expected in the first year for the SR450, and selling all 200 road cars before they were completed, Permis turned to manufacturing more road cars. The RS series cars were the first. Built to be reliable while remaining fun to drive, the lineup featured a sedan and a small hatchback.

This is the RS140 Sedan. Weighing 2081 pounds, and generating a decent 140 horsepower from a turbocharged, 1.5L 4 cylinder, the RS140 Sedan had a 0-60 time of 9.5 seconds on its way to 120 MPH.

This is the hatchback variant of the RS140. Weighing a positively paltry 1600 pounds, it is a full 2 seconds quicker to 60 than its sedan brother. Along with the lighter weight came slightly better gas mileage, at 29.5 MPG average. It had a worse top speed however, barely topping 110 MPH.

Built in Canada to avoid taxes, the Permis SR450 is the car built to compete against the likes of Audi and Lancia. Generating a mahoosive 450 horsepower from a 2 litre inline 4 using a turbo running an equally ridiculous 44 PSI, it set the bar for power. In a move to save even more money, the investors decided against designing a lower power motor for the 200 road-going cars that needed to be built.
1983
After doing better than expected in the first year for the SR450, and selling all 200 road cars before they were completed, Permis turned to manufacturing more road cars. The RS series cars were the first. Built to be reliable while remaining fun to drive, the lineup featured a sedan and a small hatchback.

This is the RS140 Sedan. Weighing 2081 pounds, and generating a decent 140 horsepower from a turbocharged, 1.5L 4 cylinder, the RS140 Sedan had a 0-60 time of 9.5 seconds on its way to 120 MPH.

This is the hatchback variant of the RS140. Weighing a positively paltry 1600 pounds, it is a full 2 seconds quicker to 60 than its sedan brother. Along with the lighter weight came slightly better gas mileage, at 29.5 MPG average. It had a worse top speed however, barely topping 110 MPH.