NAIAS 2019: Subaru Deems Americans Worthy of Limited-edition S209

Chris Tonn
by Chris Tonn

Subaru has a history of keeping the good stuff in Japan. Eastward-looking rally enthusiasts clamored in the early ’90s for the turbocharged Impreza WRX. Subaru sent us the naturally-aspirated Impreza 2.5RS in 1998. Once the WRX hit our shores in 2000, we saw the more-powerful WRX STi as the forbidden fruit, not to grace our shores until 2004. Countless limited editions, starting with the widebody 22B (a killer on Gran Turismo) and proceeding through several iterations of the S-series, have too been withheld.

No longer.

Subaru finally heeded the call of World Rally Blue-blooded boxer geeks in North America when it revealed the limited-edition STI S209 on Monday. Tweaks, both subtle and not, refine the familiar formula into a more focused performance vehicle.

Yes, it has more power! 341 hp, versus 310 on the standard WRX STI. It’s still a 2.5-liter turbocharged four-cylinder (EJ25 for the code geeks), with a larger turbocharger allowing for increased boost — 18.0 psi. A water-spray system, activated by paddles behind the steering wheel, help cool the intercooler to keep the boost up on hot days. The engine has a S209 serial number plate atop the intake plenum, seen here as 000/000 for what is likely a pre-production model destined for thrashing at the hands of a few lucky journalists.

Sharp-eyed readers will realize that those steering-wheel paddles are often used on automatic transmissions. That’s right, and this means the S209 is manual-only. The six-speed close-ratio manual is paired with front and rear limited-slip differentials, and Subaru’s Driver Controlled Center Differential.

The body of the S209 is 1.7 inches wider than the standard WRX STI; flared fenders are fitted to cover 19×9 BBS alloy wheels wrapped with exclusively-developed 265/35-19 Dunlop SP Sport Maxx GT600A summer-only tires.

The suspension has been tweaked via Bilstein dampers, firmer-rate springs, and a larger rear sway bar. Crossmember and subframe reinforcements further add rigidity to the structure, though a flexible front strut bar adds lateral stiffness for transitions while allowing movement fore-to-aft — which makes the suspension less harsh during daily driving. Additional spoilers front and rear, paired with a carbon-fiber rear wing, help reduce lift at speed. A carbon-fiber roof panel drops a few pounds up high.

Those 19-inch BBS wheels? They’ll be Subaru’s traditional gold when fitted to a S209 painted in this Crystal White Pearl. The other available color, World Rally Blue Pearl, is fitted with gray BBS wheels.

Only “around” 200 Subaru STI S209s will be produced, all exclusively for the United States. Pricing wasn’t available at press time — it’s expected closer to the model’s release date in late 2019.

[Images: © 2019 Chris Tonn/TTAC]

Chris Tonn
Chris Tonn

Some enthusiasts say they were born with gasoline in their veins. Chris Tonn, on the other hand, had rust flakes in his eyes nearly since birth. Living in salty Ohio and being hopelessly addicted to vintage British and Japanese steel will do that to you. His work has appeared in eBay Motors, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars, Reader's Digest, AutoGuide, Family Handyman, and Jalopnik. He is a member of the Midwest Automotive Media Association, and he's currently looking for the safety glasses he just set down somewhere.

More by Chris Tonn

Comments
Join the conversation
5 of 10 comments
  • Jh26036 Jh26036 on Jan 15, 2019

    Subaru STI, follows the road of Mustang special editions...what's next?

    • See 1 previous
    • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Jan 15, 2019

      @scott25 I'm ok with that, probably the first good thing to happen as a result of gen I-live-in-mom's-basement.

  • Scott25 Scott25 on Jan 15, 2019

    Rumoured to surpass the $60k barrier. It’ll define “showroom queen” at that price Still admire the WRX/STI though. It and the Lexus RC are about the only classically and quintessentially Japanese performance cars left today.

    • Jatz Jatz on Jan 15, 2019

      I've got a couple high-income Millennials in the family who'd drop 60K+ on the right set of MtG cards. The money is out there if the Millennial psyche is triggered.

  • Lou_BC Was he at GM for 47 years or an engineer for 47 years?
  • Ajla The VW vote that was held today heavily favored unionization (75/25). That's a very large victory for the UAW considering such a vote has failed two other times this decade at that plant.
  • The Oracle Just advertise ICE vehicles by range instead of MPG and let the market decide.
  • Lou_BC Collective bargaining provides workers with the ability to counter a rather one-sided relationship. Let them exercise their democratic right to vote. I found it interesting that Conservative leaders were against unionization. The fear there stems from unions preferring left leaning political parties. Wouldn't a "populist" party favour unionization?
  • Jrhurren I enjoyed this
Next