

Lada 2105 VFTS was born in Lithuanian factories in 1979 – and 3 years after, it got homologated to the most fucked up rallying format ever devised by mankind. Motorsport Lada examples were viewed as simple and solid. Easy to maintain and repair – offering good power for low price.



First rally models had 1.6-litre motors, and those powertrains were used as a base for the new cars. Double the power while maintaining its small size, helped it dominate smaller rankings for B/10, which was a Group B class for between 1.3 and 1.6 litres. And the car was still supported with rear suspension upgrades, and transmission a year after. The new gearbox had its 1st on the top right – right above reverse – and the rest look like in normal 4-speed… which did look moronic at first glance, but in fact you don’t really use first gear when rallying, and the rest was right opposite to each other with this layout – you didn’t have to go across to upshift, so it made perfect sense. The engineers also used aluminum and other lightweight materials to finish the car.



It was not a common participant in the WRC main events, but such as Rally Finland in Group B/10 ended up with 6 Ladas on first 6 positions – 18th place overall. In the age of Audi quattro, Lancia 037, Fords, Toyotas… Most successes were achieved behind the iron curtain, where it had no match, time and time again.



The last 2105 VFTS left the factory in 1990 and the total of 30 rally examples ever existed. They didn’t really suffer the worst of the Group B cancellation, because they rivalled within its lower divisions. That’s why they could end their careers late in 1991, when they stopped being competitive and the homologation papers expired. Eastern racers went mental about that model, so much so you can still see its replicas on various events to this day. Some are still fighting for… idk… Hungarian Championship for example. True story. Lada engineers tried their luck with a Group S project, but it was cancelled when they had around 30 examples of their car built and ready to rally.



Krzysztof Wilk
All sources: favcars.com | wheelsage.org | groupbrally.com | rallygroupbshrine.org



















