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First Look

This is a 230bhp Tata Nano

Published: 15 Dec 2014

The Tata Nano was meant to be an affordable way to get India off mopeds and mobile. The twenty-first century answer to the VW Beetle, if you will. Fair to say it failed in that grand ambition, the Nano managing a deplorable 10,200 sales during the first half of this year.

However, that hasn't stopped some brave men at JA Motorsport from turning the wick up on the world's cheapest car, to create a harder, faster and proper scary version.

In an extraordinary Liberty Walk-esque widebody, negative camber conversion, this innocent Nano has been stretched and slammed within an inch of its life.

Maybe unsurprisingly, the standard car's 625cc, 35bhp twin-cylinder engine has been binned. Replacing it (and the rear seats) is a 1.3-litre unit producing 230 bhp. The result? This rear-engine, rear-drive setup is apparently capable of 120mph, something you'd have to pay us A LOT of money to verify.

To cope with the increased power, the all-round drum brakes that normally bring the Nano to a halt have been replaced with AP Racing discs. Meanwhile, diddy wheels wrapped in sticky slick tyres with plenty of negative camber give the monster monobox some stance.

A standard Nano only weighs 600kg, but that hasn't stopped the Indian tuners ripping out the cheap plastic interior and throwing in a lightweight carbon fibre cabin complete with Recaro bucket seats and a full roll cage. Amazingly, they've even given it two - yes two - wing mirrors, something even the £2.8 million, 22 carat gold and jewel-encrusted Nano couldn't manage.

How hard will all these changes hit your wallet? A hefty £25,000 hard. That's a £23,300 mark-up on the standard car and puts the little Nano in the same price range as an Audi S1, which just so happens to have the exact same amount of power.

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On the one hand, wouldn't this make the basis of an excellent one-make race series? On the other, don't forget the Nano received a zero-star adult protection rating and failed to meet even the most basic UN safety requirements when crash tested. Would you dare drive it?

Picture Credit: IndianAutosBlog

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