Hot- — 09b7 Peugeot
There was no throttle cable. Instead, a rheostat was wired to the driver's amygdala via a crude headband of woven copper and surgical tubing. The car didn't respond to your foot. It responded to you .
In the spring of 1985, as the Peugeot 205 GTI was cementing its legend on winding European tarmac, a single, classified engineering sub-project flickered to life deep within the bowels of La Garenne-Colombes. Codenamed , it was a skunkworks effort to answer a question nobody was asking: What if the hot hatch ran on anger instead of petrol?
When you drive a normal hot hatch—say, a Golf GTI—the joy is mechanical. You shift, it rewards you. You brake, it obeys. But the 09b7 learned. If you swore at the traffic, the steering ratio quickened. If you gripped the wheel in fear, the brakes faded to nothing, forcing you to confront your own panic.
They found her at dawn, parked perfectly outside a condemned apartment block in Narvik. The engine was cold. The headband was frayed. On the dashboard, she had scratched a single word into the plastic: . 09b7 Peugeot HOT-
Externally, the 09b7 was indistinguishable from a mundane 205 XS. Same grey bumpers. Same 1.6-liter iron block. But where the fuel injector should have been, the engineers installed a —a device that ran on the temperature differential between the driver’s clenched fist and the dead space inside the glovebox.
I found the last prototype in a barn outside Lille in 2001. The headband was still coiled on the passenger seat like a sleeping serpent. Curious, I strapped it on and turned the key.
That’s just the ghost of , still looking for a driver angry enough to keep it warm. There was no throttle cable
That’s not road rage.
One test driver, a veteran of the Monte Carlo Rally, lasted eleven minutes before he was found weeping in a ditch. “It knows what I hate about my father,” he reportedly told the project lead. “And it agrees with me.”
Some nights, on empty roads, you might feel it: a flicker of irrational rage, a sudden surge of power without cause, the faint smell of overheated clutch and ozone. It responded to you
As I merged onto the A27, a truck cut me off. A flash of annoyance. The tachometer jumped from 2,000 to 6,500 without passing through the numbers in between. The 09b7 lunged forward, its exhaust note shifting from a polite burble to a low, infrasonic hum that made my teeth ache. I wasn’t driving it. I was feeling it, and it was feeling me.
The “HOT-” suffix was a deliberate, cruel misnomer. It did not stand for High Output Tuned . It stood for