October 26, 2004 
	For Immediate Release 
	The Rally Car: Basically, It's a Car
	
	
	
	
The first thing that you will notice about a rally car is that it's a car. Specifically, it's a compact  
sedan or a small sports car, modified for safety and performance. The smaller products from  
Dodge, Ford, Mazda, Mitsubishi and Subaru all have their following among rallyists.
 
A rally car is NOT a specially-built track racer such as NASCAR and Indy car racing teams have.  
Nor is it a dune buggy, such as they use in desert races in Baja California.
 
Safety is important to rallyists, so all cars are fitted with a steel "roll cage" in the cockpit area to  
protect the occupants in a crash, safety belts and fire extinguishers. Occupants must wear  
helmets and fire-resistant suits.
 
To cope with the bumps, dips and twists on country roads, rally cars get heavy-duty springs and  
shock absorbers. A metal "skid plate" under the car keeps bumps and rocks from harming the  
engine or transmission.
 
Rally cars are traditionally divided into classes, separating the small-engine models from those  
with large engines or turbochargers, two-wheel-drive from four-wheel-drive, and stock from  
modified. This keeps the slowest production cars from having to compete directly against  
modified 4wd turbo-cars for an award.
 
But to fully understand a rally car, you must drive one down a narrow, bumpy section of country  
road, at speeds that most people reserve for the highway. At that moment a rally car is truly  
something special.
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