The first STi ever made was a BC5 Legacy. Thats cause the impreza was realeased 4 years after the intorduction of the Legacy in 1989. There were 2 factory types, type R and Type RA. Type R had some suspension tuning and stiffeneing. Whereas the RS has Engine mods, tranny changes, and even stiffer suspension then the type R. Noodles, living in Australia, you should have seen an Sti BC Legacy, There are a few owners on the Liberty RS forum.
Mark,
1991 Turbo Sedan, Aspen White 5MT, Sold RIP
1994 Turbo Sedan, Crimson Pearl 5MT, from British Columbia-no rust!
So what you are saying is that STi produced the BC5, while the rest of the legacies came in the Type R (suspension modded) and the Type RS (which is the USDM Turbo?)
Basically saying that STi was the influence for the RS, but had no actual hand in tuning it.
Sort of how SVT kind of gave the idea for the Taurus SHO, but never actually had any hand in it at all.
the bc5 is the non-usdm legacy i believe the 5 means 2.0liter usdm legacies should be bc6 6 meaning 2.2 liter The RS is what the legacy is called in aus, liberty rs. There is also a legacy RS in japan and i believe europe. Then there are modified versions of the legacy RS. Those being the RS-R and RS-RA. The R only having minor suspention mods as legacyt said, and the RA having more mods and 3 other revisions a b c and d. The RA stands for record attempt and is based on the legacy that set the speed record back in 89 or whatever. Read more about it here: http://www.decal-co.com/out-flat/variation-e.html
the A, B, C, D were designations for model year (and revision). A being 1989, D being 1992-1993, B and C the years in between. STi didn't make the Legacy RS, those were normal cars like any legacy made by Subaru, but STi had versions of the Legacy RS, just like the STi version of the impreza wrx you can now buy in north america.
Mark,
1991 Turbo Sedan, Aspen White 5MT, Sold RIP
1994 Turbo Sedan, Crimson Pearl 5MT, from British Columbia-no rust!
I think it's also called the Liberty in New Zealand, but I'm not sure.
The name change had to do with the fact that there's a big association in Australia called Legacy which supports families of members of the military who died in service.
Personally, I think the name "Liberty" is cooler. Too bad now Jeep took the name in North America.
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