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© Haymarket Automotive
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© Haymarket Automotive
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© Renault
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© Chrysler
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© GM
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© Ford
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© Ford
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© Jaguar Land Rover
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© Daimler
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© Ford
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© Mazda
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Three is the magic number
It’s one of the classic world’s most controversial trends – yep, even more controversial than Porsche’s psychedelic Pasha upholstery or TVR’s chameleon paint schemes. We’re talking about three-spoke wheels.
Love ’em or hate ’em, three-spoke wheels are a thing – or at least they were in the 1980s and 1990s, when you could find them on everything from a Renault 5 to a Range Rover, and every Max Power’d hot hatch near your local McDonald’s.
Read on as we count down 10 modern classics that rocked three-spoke wheels.
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1. Saab 900 Turbo
Arguably the most recognisable three-spoke advocate, Saab’s do-it-differently mentality made tri-arm wheels a great match.
Saab started fitting three-spoke wheels to the 900 in the 1980s, and it was still putting them on cars well into the next millennium.
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2. Renault 5 Gordini
This early French hot hatch beat the first Volkswagen Golf GTI to market by a couple of months, and some examples were fitted with wheels that looked like they’d been modelled on a reel-to-reel tape deck.
Badged Alpine in mainland Europe and Gordini in the UK (Chrysler had the rights to the Alpine name), it was powered by a 92bhp twin-carb naturally aspirated 1.4, though a 110bhp Turbo version superseded it in 1982.
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3. Dodge Viper
The SR1 Viper is surely the toughest car ever to wear a set of three-spokes. The original Dodge Viper’s wheels required gigantic 275mm tyres on the nose, and humungous 335mm boots at the back.
But with a 400bhp V10 and no traction control to save you from it, even tyres that wide couldn’t save a few clumsy, inexperienced drivers from disappearing into the scenery.
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4. Vauxhall Nova SR
GM’s warm Nova/Corsa SR supermini (and its hotter GTE/GSi sister) were fitted with a distinctive set of 14in three-spokes – or were they nine spokes?
Either way they were actually optional: standard SR and GTE models came on boring old steels with plastic wheeltrims.
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5. Ford Mustang
The fourth-generation ’Stang blended new and old styling cues to keep the pony car fresh in its third decade.
The scalloped flanks were definitely a nod to Mustangs past, but the three-spoke wheels were bang on trend.
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6. Ford Probe
Meanwhile, the awkwardly named front-wheel drive coupe Ford had once imagined might replace the Mustang was stepping out on some three-spoke wheels of its own.
But only the boring basic versions, mind. The much tastier V6 model came on five-spoke rims (and looked much the better for it).
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7. Range Rover
Like that triangular conservatory on the front of the Louvre, then-trendy three-spoke wheels on a big, bluff and posh Range Rover somehow worked.
And it still works 30 years later – even if the rest of the car doesn’t…
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8. Smart Roadster
Smart’s radical rear-engined Roadster and Roadster Coupé were offered with various wheel options, including two – yes, two – sets of three-spokes: basic steel rims or a flashy alloy alternative.
Both looked great, as did the car. But that’s where the fun ended. Sadly, the Smart twins were no fun to drive.
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9. Fiesta RS Turbo
The big brother to the Fiesta XR2i, this rapid and unruly 133bhp supermini was short on finesse but as quick as a Cossie when it came to overtaking punch.
Bonnet vents, a fine set of Recaro chairs, a green bumper insert that looked like you’d got tangled in a load of garden twine, and, of course, those classic three-spoke wheels, were all key visual ingredients.
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10. Mazda RX-7
For the other cars on our list, going for three-spoke wheels was purely a style statement.
But in the case of late model first-generation RX-7s it was a way to brag about what was going on under the bonnet – the wheel centres were shaped like one of the rotors from the RX-7’s twin-rotor Mazda Wankel engine.