The local farmers round us loved these. We had a really good local Subaru dealer, as well, so it all added up to a popular vehicle. I had to go and look at some land a few years ago. The Land agent had a brand new Range Rover which cost a fortune. You can guess ? We got stuck half on and off a farm road. The wet very muddy grass behind us saw the RR bury it’s rear end . I dare not laugh as he was a bit pompous and going puce in the face. Anyway, the local farmer came along in his old Subaru identical to this one and pulled us out. He did laugh …a lot !
I remember these and always wanted one. "Forgotten" is right. I asked a young Subaru salesman recently if he had ever seen a brat and not only had he not, but no one in the entire dealership had ever heard of it. They probably thought I was crazy.
My dad had one when I was a kid , built like a tank , I remember we crashed into a carpark ticket booth in the rain , the booth was mangled, we had a scratch of green paint from the booth on the bull bar and that was it... God I miss that thing, had such a cool look to it.. especially with the ifor Williams back.
I grew up in the 80s I always thought the Brat was cute!, I like to have one now to restore it would be a nice little snow buggy ,I had a 82 station wagon had the similar 4x4 system but it didn't have low range
Loved the Sedan/Estate/Hatchback of the 1800 - they sold a lot of these in Austria, but sadly not the Brat.... ... only the Tamiya which I still have and drive every here and there...
Here in Oz this great example would set you back £10K GBP easy. IF you can find one that is. I've seen these punch well above their weight offroad. Great lil thing.
Agree. I was lucky enough to ride in one west of Alice Springs (Central Australia) at night. I was amazed where the little thing was able to go, especially down then across then up steep, dry creek crossings. Respect 🍻
It’s even more popular in Australia, where every town has at least 2, the rear seats never came down here and if you see one there are definitely more around. Personally I have 2 brumbies and a touring wagon. All to keep the good one running The actual load limit for the tub around here is 1000kg. Mine is actually the second best I’ve seen around, second only to the one in the next town over that had lived in permanent storage until this year. My only gripe is the lack of aftermarket support especially in the off-road department. Because if you aren’t ej swapping it, what’s the point
The Brumby never had the rear seat fitment in Australia because It was classed as a rural farm utility vehicle (or 'ute', as we like to call them, economically!) and, as such, were wholly tax exempt and extremely popular in the rural sector. They were an inexpensive and reliable alternative to the big Toyotas and Nissans of the day. It was sad times back in the mid-nineties when Subaru discontinued this spirited little Ute.
Unfortunately a death trap if you hit something and don't roll it because she has the weakest crush protection on top of B pillar, here in Australia they fell to bits on our rough country roads at speed, Like your channel though keep it up !!
They were only a death trap if they were the t top. Yes they had a penchant for flipping due to a rally based front suspension and a few too many cold ones. But the b pillars are actually quite stable when they aren’t rusted out. I still went and bought the beefiest rollbar I could find though
Forgotten by who ? Only people who didn't know of existence in the first place ! That MK was never known as a "Shifter" . In Britain (and some other markets) it was known as an MV (Multi purpose) in The US 🇺🇸 a BRAT and in Australia (and possibly NZ ?) A Brumby. There was a "BRAT" pack that was an added extra in the UK but the vehicle was never marketed as a BRAT in the UK. They are a great little truck and if you find a decent one.. its well worth saving 👌
This channel is a bit like the BRAT... a proper hidden gem. Great job keep it up!!!!
Thanks Carl, that means a lot 😁
The local farmers round us loved these. We had a really good local Subaru dealer, as well, so it all added up to a popular vehicle. I had to go and look at some land a few years ago. The Land agent had a brand new Range Rover which cost a fortune. You can guess ? We got stuck half on and off a farm road. The wet very muddy grass behind us saw the RR bury it’s rear end . I dare not laugh as he was a bit pompous and going puce in the face. Anyway, the local farmer came along in his old Subaru identical to this one and pulled us out. He did laugh …a lot !
I wish a manufacturer would make a car like this again
I remember these and always wanted one. "Forgotten" is right. I asked a young Subaru salesman recently if he had ever seen a brat and not only had he not, but no one in the entire dealership had ever heard of it. They probably thought I was crazy.
My dad had one when I was a kid , built like a tank , I remember we crashed into a carpark ticket booth in the rain , the booth was mangled, we had a scratch of green paint from the booth on the bull bar and that was it...
God I miss that thing, had such a cool look to it.. especially with the ifor Williams back.
They're just as cool now!
i'm in kent in england, and i have one of these and i dont think i will ever get rid of it, i love it. It just needs a huge restoration.
Still fondly remember my red Tamiya radio controlled model of this as a kid 😊
Me too. 1983 Christmas day. Great memories
We had one on our farm in Cheshire rugged as you say , rot got it in the end and scraped a very handy pickup
I grew up in the 80s I always thought the Brat was cute!, I like to have one now to restore it would be a nice little snow buggy ,I had a 82 station wagon had the similar 4x4 system but it didn't have low range
Loved the Sedan/Estate/Hatchback of the 1800 - they sold a lot of these in Austria, but sadly not the Brat....
... only the Tamiya which I still have and drive every here and there...
I had one of these. I currently drive an outback and kept the BRAT nameplate and one of the tie-down hooks and they're in the outback.
Here in Oz this great example would set you back £10K GBP easy. IF you can find one that is.
I've seen these punch well above their weight offroad. Great lil thing.
Agree.
I was lucky enough to ride in one west of Alice Springs (Central Australia) at night. I was amazed where the little thing was able to go, especially down then across then up steep, dry creek crossings.
Respect 🍻
I’ve been lucky enough to own 2 brumbies.
And four engines between 3 l series subies, they just multiply.
It’s even more popular in Australia, where every town has at least 2, the rear seats never came down here and if you see one there are definitely more around.
Personally I have 2 brumbies and a touring wagon. All to keep the good one running
The actual load limit for the tub around here is 1000kg.
Mine is actually the second best I’ve seen around, second only to the one in the next town over that had lived in permanent storage until this year.
My only gripe is the lack of aftermarket support especially in the off-road department.
Because if you aren’t ej swapping it, what’s the point
I always wanted one of these. Had the tamyia brat remote control truck as a kid.
Loved the review. Thanks.
A very rare car. Thanks for sharing.
The Brumby never had the rear seat fitment in Australia because It was classed as a rural farm utility vehicle (or 'ute', as we like to call them, economically!) and, as such, were wholly tax exempt and extremely popular in the rural sector. They were an inexpensive and reliable alternative to the big Toyotas and Nissans of the day. It was sad times back in the mid-nineties when Subaru discontinued this spirited little Ute.
The Bi-Drive Recreational All-Terrain Transporter (BDRATT)
Beautiful gearbox/transfer box
Now that is a survivor. I had a 1979 estate n beige. It was long and thin. We christened it "The Coffin"
In Australia they got to be called the “Ugly”
best one i have seen and i keep my eyes out for them
Didn't the turbo models automatically raise 1 or 2 inches when put in 4x4 mode ?
good review
Unfortunately a death trap if you hit something and don't roll it because she has the weakest crush protection on top of B pillar, here in Australia they fell to bits on our rough country roads at speed, Like your channel though keep it up !!
They were only a death trap if they were the t top.
Yes they had a penchant for flipping due to a rally based front suspension and a few too many cold ones.
But the b pillars are actually quite stable when they aren’t rusted out.
I still went and bought the beefiest rollbar I could find though
I watched my name is Earl and I always like this car because they made it look like an El Camino in the show my name is Earl😂😂
Any idea what the auction guide price is?
Forgotten by who ? Only people who didn't know of existence in the first place ! That MK was never known as a "Shifter" . In Britain (and some other markets) it was known as an MV (Multi purpose) in The US 🇺🇸 a BRAT and in Australia (and possibly NZ ?) A Brumby. There was a "BRAT" pack that was an added extra in the UK but the vehicle was never marketed as a BRAT in the UK. They are a great little truck and if you find a decent one.. its well worth saving 👌
Totally true, forgot all about them 😄
Well in the USA people want a ton for a brat I bought mine foe 1000 and it sits in my back yard not as rare as my subaru ff1 though
whats an impraisa?
got one its great
Was never sold as a shifter ...
Great car!
MV...BRUMBY IS WAY KEWL!!!
I miss my BRAT
Kinda Nissan cherry like up front
i want one
yup, it's in the yard, run it when I can.. same camper top. Truth is, want to EV convert then show it off to Subaru as BRAT mk3.
Please dont.
@@3magikarpinamansuit281 oh not serious love the boxers
my ones the best in the Uk
Subaru BRAT! Great name lol 🤣🤣🤣
Would a badly modified example be a Spoiled Brat...? 🤔
@@ClassicsWorldUK yes 🤣🤣🤣🤣
That car screams kawaii
"the most beautiful 4x4"... Maybe you have never seen the Panda 4x4
Skifte registrrreim