Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

With the UK banning petrol and diesel cars by 2040, we've compiled a shortlist of some of today's key automotive icons that will have to change drastically - or disappear into memory
Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

The knowledge that there is now a finite amount time we can still buy awesome petrol-powered cars in the UK has got us thinking about all the amazing cars that will either be killed off or changed massively by the cut-off date. We know these cars will have gone through model several life cycles anyway by 2040, but the chances are that not all of them would have gone electric by choice.

We’ve picked out five of the most significant ones to begin with; cars that have a greater significance to British petrolheads than the average. These are cars whose very identities are intrinsically linked to the pre-electrification age, and that will be sorely missed. We’ve got 22 years left to enjoy brand new cars like these, so let’s step to it, people.

1. BMW M2

Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

The baby M-car is also the best of the current range. It’s small enough to shine with an agility that the M3 and M4 lack, it’s plenty fast enough for most people and its handling dynamics remind us why BMW’s M Division got so famous in the first place. The M2 is one of the best performance cars on sale today, and it simply wouldn’t be the same as a hybrid.

2. McLaren 720S

Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

The Super Series McLaren is perhaps unique on this shortlist in that it wouldn’t necessarily be the worse if it gained an electric motor. McLaren has proved that it knows exactly what it’s doing on that front courtesy of the P1. But still, it won’t be quite the same and the 720S represents a staggering performance car achievement by a British brand that will have to adapt to the 2040 rules. The big twin-turbo V8’s days are ticking away.

3. Mazda MX-5

At the other end of the scale we stumble, bleary-eyed, into what could possibly be the most significant loss to the petrolhead world; the humble MX-5. It’s so small and light that any attempt to hybridise it or switch it to battery power would surely ruin it. Could they really keep the weight down with batteries and motors on board? Thinking about losing what is one of our favourite B-road cars is catching us right in the feels.

4. Toyota GT86/Subaru BRZ

Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

Another back-road weapon is the normally-aspirated Toyota GT86, and its Subaru BRZ twin. It strikes what its fans know is a perfect balance of exploitable performance, stunningly good handling and affordability, and we can all kiss goodbye to that with any sort of hybrid or electric version, as weight and price increases would take their inevitable toll. The GT86 might not survive the new rules at all. What a shame.

5. Volkswagen Golf GTI

Brace Yourself: Here Are 5 Iconic Driver's Cars We Will Lose In The Next 20 Years

The Golf GTI is arguably the affordable performance icon. The first generation redefined what a practical, reasonably-priced car could do in terms of performance and driver engagement, and aside from a few turbulent eras along the way it’s done a pretty good job ever since. Despite that, it could all-too-soon be driving off into the sunset for the last time. Volkswagen already makes the Golf GTE; a petrol-electric mildly performance-biased hybrid that has won loads of fans already. Could it be the car to kill the legendary GTI? Sadly, yes, it could.

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Comments

Tomislav Celić

Drivers cars will exsist in 20 years

If you don’t trust me go drive an electric Golf Kart.

07/26/2017 - 10:45 |
4 | 4

Never mind

07/26/2017 - 10:46 |
0 | 2

No. I won’t surrender to EV’s.

07/26/2017 - 16:29 |
3 | 0

People refuse to believe that EV’s can be enjoyable to drive. It’s kinda annoying. It’s not about what powers a car, but how it hadles, looks, and feels.

07/26/2017 - 16:41 |
1 | 1
Matt Kimberley

Apologies for any missing feature images. Should be sorted now.

07/26/2017 - 10:45 |
5 | 1

I can see them

07/26/2017 - 10:46 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

This hurts me immensely. I can’t live like this…

WHY MUST THIS HAPPEN TO US!?!? 😢😢😢

07/26/2017 - 10:47 |
1 | 1
k_badam

I think with all the advancements made in batteries in the last 10 years, there is much more cool stuff coming, i imagine weight will be cut considerably and charges will last for longer. This means that the cars will handle not only similar, but probably better.

07/26/2017 - 10:48 |
1 | 1
☆★THEBOOSTEDBRIT★☆

‘Maniacs’

-As quoted by Jeremy Clarkson
07/26/2017 - 10:48 |
0 | 1
CheesyHorse

I will be controversial here. By website treehugger.com the canadian scientist looked how to minimise the co2 print made by humans so if you dint own a car that saves 2.4 tons of co2 but if you dont have a child or baby it saves massive 58.6 tonnes of co2 in atmosphere. Per year. So? No kids equals you can own 24.41 cars and leave same co2 amount as family with 1 kid and no car. No kids more money for cars. Yeah you can burn me just like spanish inquisition

07/26/2017 - 10:53 |
270 | 0

I actually agree wtih you. We need less population.

07/26/2017 - 10:54 |
26 | 2

So actually if we decide to drive cars and have no kids we would be more ecological than a family with kids? Sign me up

07/26/2017 - 11:20 |
36 | 0

I didn’t have any contact with females anyway.
MORE CARS FOR ME!!

07/26/2017 - 11:37 |
121 | 1

Who needs kids when you’ve got cars?

07/26/2017 - 13:13 |
6 | 0

Kids, cars, kids, cars, kids, cars………..why am I even choosing? of course the answer is cars

07/26/2017 - 14:09 |
17 | 0
FLixy Madfox

I know im going to get downvoted for this opinion butttttt

We still drive the drivers cars from the 50s and 60s. In 20 years, we’ll still be driving the, now outdated things we’ve enjoyed today. And heck, we don’t know what the future holds, therr could be a vast array of eletric drivers cars coming…. But there also couldnt. Thats the future for ya, unpredictable

07/26/2017 - 11:01 |
42 | 0
Anonymous

Why doesnt this list have powerful diesels included? We all know they will be gone soon. Think Audi SQ7, BMW 335D, BMW 550D

07/26/2017 - 11:10 |
10 | 0
Rekord 86

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Because everybody is happy that the diesels will be gone

07/26/2017 - 13:44 |
7 | 4
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I think there will be diesel hybrids before diesels are completely wiped out. Torque figures on a diesel hybrid will be very interesting :-)

07/27/2017 - 08:56 |
0 | 0
H5SKB4RU (Returned to CT)

Impreza? Bmw 325? Mercedes? Hello?

07/26/2017 - 11:59 |
6 | 0
Extreme Daniel

There are electric converted Mx-5s out there. If some guys can do it at home alright, the japanese engineers at Mazda can surely do it. Positive thinking, come on.

07/26/2017 - 12:11 |
3 | 1

Sure but it will be heavy

07/26/2017 - 12:27 |
8 | 0