The Soliad Ventera wasn't born of tradition, but rather of necessity, experimentation, and a rare spark of audacity characteristic of a company averse to risk.
By the mid-2000s, Soliad's model lineup was outdated. Their sedans and coupes were heavy, front-engine, front-wheel-drive vehicles, built more for comfort than for connection with the outside world. So when Soliad's small, ambitious design team unveiled a lightweight, rear-engine concept—more of a European or Japanese sports car than a Detroit bully—it raised eyebrows.
The project was nearly shelved before it even began. Soliad didn't have a suitable platform. The transmission was too big, the chassis too cumbersome. But the idea refused to die. A solution emerged from without: a compact, rear-engine powertrain, originally developed for the nimble Hirochi SBR4. Lightweight, time-tested, and compact enough to adapt to the Soliad concept.

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