What does WRX stand for?

Well, the WRX is supposed to be a road-going version of Sabaru's WRC car. WRC = World Rally Championship, so I assume that WRX means World Rally Xperimental, or Xtreme, or Xciting....yeah.
 
Yeah, the WR is definitely for "World Rally", but the X is kinda ambiguous... people are just naturally allured to X for whatever reasons.
 
Originally posted by audiracing
Is it possible that the x doesn't stand for anything. They wanted a copy of the WRC so they just changed the c to an x ???

Now you're just being silly. Of course it stands for something.
 
I think it stands for the roman numeral of 10... being a model number ... just as in 3 years they will probally call the EVO an EVO X and not an EVO 10...
 
It originally was standing for World Rally eXperimental, at a time when Rally specials were dime a dozen (Delta Integrale, Escort Cosworth, Lancer EVO, etc etc etc...) Whether it still means the same thing today, i don't know. Even Subaru doesn't say where it originated.
 
Originally posted by risingson77
Well, the WRX is supposed to be a road-going version of Sabaru's WRC car. WRC = World Rally Championship, so I assume that WRX means World Rally Xperimental, or Xtreme, or Xciting....yeah.

Actually, it's effectively a "trim" level.

In the UK we originally got:
Subaru Impreza (1.6 litre)
Subaru Impreza Sport (2.0 litre, 150hp)
Subaru Impreza Turbo (2.0 litre, 200hp)

Then they started putting more esoteric tags on the turbo:
Subaru Impreza Turbo Catalunya
Subaru Impreza Turbo Colin McRae Edition

Then they dropped the "Turbo", but added yet more ridiculous names:
Subaru Impreza RB5
Subaru Impreza 22B Type UK
Subaru Impreza Prodrive P1

And recently, with the dawn of the Impreza III, they've added the WRX tag - so now we have:
Subaru Impreza Sport (2.0, 150hp)
Subaru Impreza WRX (2.0, 220hp)


However, I believe in Japan, the Impreza Turbo was rebadged as just "WRX", so anyone you see driving the mean streets of the UK in a Subaru WRX is too cheap to buy a real one... :D
 
Originally posted by risingson77
Now you're just being silly. Of course it stands for something.

Like ADIDAS, meaning "All Day I Dream About Sex." Or, 867-5309, with the zero removed, scrambling to "TOP JEW".

Everything means something!
 
Originally posted by Famine
Actually, it's effectively a "trim" level.

In the UK we originally got:
Subaru Impreza (1.6 litre)
Subaru Impreza Sport (2.0 litre, 150hp)
Subaru Impreza Turbo (2.0 litre, 200hp)

Then they started putting more esoteric tags on the turbo:
Subaru Impreza Turbo Catalunya
Subaru Impreza Turbo Colin McRae Edition

Then they dropped the "Turbo", but added yet more ridiculous names:
Subaru Impreza RB5
Subaru Impreza 22B Type UK
Subaru Impreza Prodrive P1

And recently, with the dawn of the Impreza III, they've added the WRX tag - so now we have:
Subaru Impreza Sport (2.0, 150hp)
Subaru Impreza WRX (2.0, 220hp)


However, I believe in Japan, the Impreza Turbo was rebadged as just "WRX", so anyone you see driving the mean streets of the UK in a Subaru WRX is too cheap to buy a real one... :D

You're missing UK300.

You know nothing.

:P
 
Originally posted by M5Power
You're missing UK300.

You know nothing.

:P

:D I don't count bugeyes... :D

There was another oddly named Scooby... Had a double "Z" in it's name.. Can't remember it for the life of me...
 
It's a car name. Car names usually don't mean anything. "Impreza" is even a made up word. What about CRX, NSX, CR-V, Integra, Camry, FTO, Supra, and Corolla to name a few.
 
"No va" is (as in Chevy Nova, Vauxhall/Opel Nova). It means "doesn't go".
 
Originally posted by cm108kph
It's a car name. Car names usually don't mean anything. "Impreza" is even a made up word. What about CRX, NSX, CR-V, Integra, Camry, FTO, Supra, and Corolla to name a few.

crx stands for Civic Renaissance model X and camry, when the letters are switched around, stands for my car... i remember knowing what nsx stood for but its been so long since i've come across this question that i forgot... i'll find it out and post it some time soon :confused:
 
Originally posted by chris100575
Urban myth there mate. Snopes article

Hmm. That just confirms what I said.

The letters "Nova", in that order (albeit with a space), mean "doesn't go" in Spanish - the KEY reason Vauxhall/Opel sold the Nova in the UK and the Corsa in Europe, until the Nova name was done away with totally in 1993/4.

An "English" speaker would say a car "doesn't run" rather than "doesn't go"? An American English speaker maybe. But I remind you of the wooden car joke - the punchline being "it wooden go".

Since the article focuses on the Chevy Nova, fair do's. But the Vauxhall/Opel Nova was never sold in Spain - it was the Opel Corsa - and so the translation couldn't be a factor in poor sales. Indeed the Corsa is one of the top 3 selling cars across Europe.


Interestingly, I'm told "Sega", or more literally "Se ga", is a Spanish reflexive verb meaning "To wank (oneself)".
 
Oops! Really must stop posting when I'm sleepy. I thought it translated as "no go".

Continuing the masturbation theme, the Mitsubishi Pajero is called the Montero in Spanish speaking countries, because Pajero means wanker.

CRV stands for Comfortable Runabout Vehicle, and Rav-4 is Recreational Active Vehicle with 4WD. (Guess who drives a 4x4!)
 
Originally posted by chris100575
Oops! Really must stop posting when I'm sleepy. I thought it translated as "no go".

Continuing the masturbation theme, the Mitsubishi Pajero is called the Montero in Spanish speaking countries, because Pajero means wanker.

CRV stands for Comfortable Runabout Vehicle, and Rav-4 is Recreational Active Vehicle with 4WD. (Guess who drives a 4x4!)
IDK where you learned Spanish, but Pajero means 'bird.' By the way, it's called a Montero here in the US.
 
Back