Content Archives - Main Street Auto Care https://mainstreetautocare.com/category/content/ When you want to find the latest automotive news, reviews on cars and racing then check out our blog. We provide honest opinions about different aspects of this industry that other blogs don't cover with refreshing honesty! Sun, 19 Nov 2023 23:31:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 214712164 The Fastest Corvette In Japan https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/12/16/the-fastest-corvette-in-japan/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 09:01:02 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/the-fastest-corvette-in-japan The Fastest Corvette In Japan – Speedhunters SHARE The Fastest Corvette In Japan Growing up, I remember seeing a Corvette Stingray in

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The Fastest Corvette In Japan – Speedhunters






















The Fastest Corvette In Japan

Growing up, I remember seeing a Corvette Stingray in a magazine and thinking it was the craziest car design ever. I was probably around seven or eight years old at the time, and to this day I still think of the Corvette as one of the most beautiful cars ever made.

At Central Circuit’s recent Drag Festival series round, I spent some time looking over a very cool example run by Rod Motors. The ‘Dragvette’ currently holds a Japan Drag Race Driver Association (JDDA) Pro Stock title.

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I was told that the chassis and body are all original, although I’m pretty sure the front end uses a tube frame and of course the rear end has been tubbed so it can accomodate those massive 33x15x15-inch Hoosier drag slicks. Then there’s the hood and iconic rear split-window roof, which are fiberglass.

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As I found out on the day, there’s a brilliant history behind the car and its owner, Mr. Makoto Katsuragi.

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Back in the mid-1970s, Katsuragi-san emigrated to and opened a garage in San Francisco, where he developed a taste for drag racing. Soon after, and during the same year his son Ryo was born, Katsuragi-san started racing a red 1963 Corvette Stingray – the very same car you see today.

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It’s been raced for nearly five decades, and today competes in Japan in a completely evolved state with Ryo behind the wheel. Up front, a 440ci SBC V8 with nitrous oxide provides the power, while a Powerglide transmission helps get it to the ground.

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It’s amazing to see this 60-year-old car go down the quarter mile in 8.50-seconds at 246km/h – a Japanese drag racing class record.

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The journey that drag cars and their drivers take to gain split seconds of speed is really something special. It shows that perseverance, dedication, hard work and a fair amount of blood, sweat and tears will allow a few select people to achieve greatness.

Drag racers like Makoto and Ryo Katsuragi are my new heroes.

Toby Thyer
Instagram _tobinsta_
tobythyer.co.uk

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Winding Back The Rally Clock At The Killarney Historic https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/12/11/winding-back-the-rally-clock-at-the-killarney-historic/ Sun, 11 Dec 2022 11:35:15 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/winding-back-the-rally-clock-at-the-killarney-historic SHARE Winding Back The Rally Clock At The Killarney Historic When the Killarney Historic Rally’s first special stage kicked off in

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Winding Back The Rally Clock At The Killarney Historic

When the Killarney Historic Rally’s first special stage kicked off in Ireland’s southwest last Saturday, talk centred on one man and a very special car.

I was sat perched on a stony outcrop, shutter finger twitching, eyes on stalks looking for the first glimpse of headlights. The final shades of the previous night’s darkness begin to ebb away as a grey-tinged morning broke through. The chime of a turbo, the harsh squeal of competition pads on ever-warming brake rotors and the unmistakable, animal-like whooshing only a Ford Sierra RS Cosworth seems to be able to make came into earshot – WRC star Craig Breen was just seconds away.

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Chatter stopped once the yellow halogen lights of the Ford pierced the darkness below, and rounding a tight left-hander a beam cast across the landscape signalled that Craig was very close. Silent, the handful of nearby spectators stopped and stood. Louder, more visceral, the noise grew.

And then, resplendent in blue, white and orange, the unmistakable shape of the three-door Cosworth blitzed by.

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As flash guns erupted and the Sierra’s tyres momentarily broke contact with tarmac, even with my index finger jammed firmly to camera and eye pressed firmly to the viewfinder, I became giddy. This was an emotion I knew of purely from years of admiration and watching videos. For others, the moment was more real.

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To try and explain the context is difficult, as here at 8:00am on a dreary early winter’s morning were groups of rally fans out to watch Craig Breen pushing a Cossie up Moll’s Gap. But it was so much more. This was the late Frank Meagher’s Sierra.

Frank was a legend, perhaps the ultimate underdog star of Irish rallying in the ’80s and ’90s. After 30 years, his car was back.

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The Killarney Historic Rally has grown to be such an important event on Ireland’s motorsports calendar. This is thanks in part to the emotions instilled in a generation of fans who grew up following the local rallying icons, many of whom, like Frank, are now sadly no longer with us.

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Following Craig and navigator Paul Nagle up the road was another Ford Sierra, specifically the 4×4 Sapphire Cosworth of Johnny Greer and Niall Burns. The Historic class also included an ex-works Subaru Legacy RS and Mitsubishi Galant VR-4, as well as numerous Group A-spec BMW E30s.

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Historic rally competition is slowly adapting to four-wheel drive, turbocharged machinery becoming eligible for entry, as to be expected given there have only been three WRC events won by a 2WD car in the last 35 years.

As time has marched on – and as seen on last year’s RAC Rally – the dominance of the Mk2 Ford Escort in historic rallying has started to erode in the past few years, but that doesn’t stop them dominating the field in numbers.

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Stood on the side of ‘The Gap’ in the early morning, the haunting bark of a BDA engine at full chat is guaranteed to stand neck hairs up on end.

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As the daylight began to take hold, the reminiscing began to fade away as the final cars in the Historic class passed by on their way up this iconic stretch of tarmac. A a quick pause in proceedings signalled that Modified class cars were up next. I hunched behind a rock for some semblance of safety.

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For all the nostalgia of a straight-cut box and a sweet BDA, time has marched on, and here in Ireland we’ve embraced all the change – once its fitted in an Escort, Starlet or Corolla. It’s no secret by now, but these machines are spectacular, with the majority of front-runners utilising 2.5L Millington Diamond engines mated to sequential gearboxes, WRC-spec suspension dampers and 15-inch semi-slicks.

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The speed differential is obvious from the jump height achieved over what looked like a pretty inauspicious crest in the road, and the stage times didn’t lie either. By the end of the seven special stages – including three runs up the legendary Moll’s Gap – Kevin Eves and Chris Melly arrived back in Killarney as winners in their Toyota Corolla AE86 – nearly two minutes quicker than the leading Historic class car.

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The battle for the Historic victory was an incredibly tense one, with both Breen/Nagle in the 2WD Sierra sitting dead even with Green/Burns heading into the final stage of the rally. But all hopes of a shootout for the ages was scuppered when the Q8 Oils-sponsored Sapphire appeared into sight first. Unfortunately, the two-door Cossie suffered a driveshaft breakage on the way to the start line.

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The Killarney Historic Rally has grown year-on-year at a rate unlike anything in Irish rallying, and it seems set to get even bigger. If you like rallying of the tarmac variety, and have a love of all things ’70s through to the ’90s, a trip to Moll’s Gap in December might well be something you should consider adding to your bucket list. In the meantime, I’ll leave you with an extensive image gallery from this year’s event below.

Cian Donnellan
Instagram: Ciandon

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Meet The Balsbergs, Part 1: Sture’s 1965 Volvo Amazon Estate https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/12/09/meet-the-balsbergs-part-1-stures-1965-volvo-amazon-estate/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 01:02:20 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/meet-the-balsbergs-part-1-stures-1965-volvo-amazon-estate Meet The Balsbergs, Part 1: Sture’s 1965 Volvo Amazon Estate – Speedhunters SHARE Meet The Balsbergs, Part 1: Sture’s 1965

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Meet The Balsbergs, Part 1: Sture’s 1965 Volvo Amazon Estate – Speedhunters

























Meet The Balsbergs, Part 1: Sture’s 1965 Volvo Amazon Estate

These days, it’s rare to be truly surprised at a custom car show. Thanks to social media, so many builds are chronicled as they come together, that a real-world sighting after completion can be a bit of a non-event. Of course, this doesn’t apply to all cars that are shared over Instagram prior to being finished, and it’s not always a bad thing either.

I like to keep a close eye on happenings in Sweden’s modified car community via social media, so while attending the 2021 Oslo Motor Show, I was surprised – in a good way – to see two new amazing builds I’d never heard about before. A quick chat with Sture Balsberg, the owner of this Amazon Estate, and Johan, his son who has a special Volvo of his own followed, and plans were made for a shoot.

Let’s start with Sture’s build, which leans more to the restoration side of a restomod.

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As the 2021 Oslo Motor Show was held in October, I had to wait a good while before I could make the drive down to South Sweden and meet the Balsberg family again. Fast forward to this past summer, and I found myself in Kristianstad, roughly 550km from Stockholm.

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Sture knows a thing or two when it comes to customizing cars. It was his first car, a 1973 Volvo 140, that got him into the modifying scene, and he exhibited that car at the Vallåkra car show (which just turned 40 this year) way back in 1984. The 140 had everything you’d expect in a modified car of the era in Sweden – matte black details, rear window shutters, Gabriel HiJackers air shocks and slot-style mag wheels.

In the years – decades – since the 140, many cars have passed through Sture’s hands, each one receiving his custom touch. But in 2020, Sture finally got his hands on something he’d pined over for a very long time – a 1965 Volvo Amazon Estate.

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The Amazon was an abandoned project that had been left to gather dust since 1998. Some work had been done, but it was obvious to Sture that a lot of it would need to be redone. Despite that, it was everything he wanted in a base for his ultimate Volvo build.

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Looking at the car today, it’s not something that screams ‘modified’ to me, but that’s part of its beauty. Sture has brought the Amazon up-to-date in some areas, while restoring others to a better-than-new standard. ‘Elegant’ is a more fitting description.

I’d hate to think how many hours were invested into the bodywork alone, but the result is stunning. The entire body was taken back to bare metal, tin-filled, epoxy primed and painted inside, outside and underneath. Every single chrome detail was painstakingly refurbished, and all of the glass is new, as are the rubbers. The headlights received a complete overhaul, while blue-tinted reflectors were fitted for a more modern look.

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Something we’re seeing a lot more of these days is OEM wheels being converted to 3-piece splits. It’s a great way to keep a factory appearance, but with a more contemporary look, and opens up scope to run modern performance tyres and bigger brakes.

In this case, the Amazon’s original wheels have been stepped up to 17-inch and stretched out to 7.5-inches wide in the front and 9.25-inches wide at the rear.

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Volvo Amazon Estates were never designed to be driven flat-out, and Sture is fine with that. “Of course, it is an old car with old construction, so you have to drive accordingly and keep your distance from other drivers,” he says. “When you drive this, you are not in such a hurry, but you enjoy nature and sitting in a fantastic car that everyone turns towards and gives a thumbs up.”

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So while performance wasn’t really a concern, the comfort was. If you’ve ever sat in an old Amazon, you’ll know just how soft their seats are, so Sture was keen to retain that fact.

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The Amazon’s interior was in such a bad state though, that Sture had to rework it from the floorpan up. All the wiring was tucked away, sound deadening was brought up to a modern standard, and the floor was neatly dressed in blue suede.

Pairing all the custom re-trim work (in a color that matches the car’s exterior) with a Luisi Italy Mugello Classico wood-rimmed steering wheel results in a combination that’s hard to beat.

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Taking a closer look reveals details some might miss, like the wooden (and customized) Nardi shift knob, re-trimmed door cards and Pyrene fire extinguisher.

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The clean style continues in the rear of the car. Normally, a spare wheel would be found in the recessed area beneath the trunk floor, but here there’s an Air Lift Performance 3P air suspension system with dual Viair 444C compressors. The custom enclosure features a plexiglass window, so it’s on show but no cargo space is lost.

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I’ve saved the thing that initially drew me towards this car at the Oslo Motor Show till last – the engine bay. As previously stated, performance was not on Sture’s mind when he rebuilt the Amazon, but the work he’s done under-hood dropped my jaw to the floor.

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I don’t think a Volvo Sport B18 engine has ever looked as good as this one, which Sture says is outputting around 130hp.

Keeping things original, many of the parts were sandblasted and powder-coated, while all the nuts, bolts and fittings (amongst other things) have been galvanized or painted.

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My favorite details are the brake booster on the right side and the twin SU HS6 air filters on the left. The copper brake lines are a nice touch in the highly-detailed bay.

With 123Ignition electronic ignition and a progressive electric steering servo, the Volvo “drives like a dream,” as Sture likes to put it. It sounds great too, thanks to a free-flowing Ferrita exhaust system.

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The multi-award-winning Volvo seems like the perfect car, but Sture is not quite done with the custom work yet. He says a new sound system (not that the car needs it) will be installed sometime in the future.

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Speaking of awards, at the beginning of this post I also mentioned meeting Sture’s son Johan and his Volvo at the 2021 Oslo Motor Show. The two have really inspired each other with their respective builds. “We have slightly different views on solutions. I’m a bit ‘old school’ and my son has a bit of new-thinking about solutions. This combination means that we arrive at really good results in the end,” says Sture.

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Johan’s Volvo Amazon Sedan has become a bit of a benchmark build in the Swedish modified car scene. Stay tuned for that feature, coming soon to Speedhunters.

Alen Haseta
Instagram: hazetaa

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The ’80s, Enhanced: A Wektor Mk3 Supra With 700+hp https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/29/the-80s-enhanced-a-wektor-mk3-supra-with-700hp/ Tue, 29 Nov 2022 06:41:27 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/the-80s-enhanced-a-wektor-mk3-supra-with-700hp SHARE The ’80s, Enhanced: A Wektor Mk3 Supra With 700+hp This 1989 Toyota Supra A70 by Wektor is one of the most

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The ’80s, Enhanced: A Wektor Mk3 Supra With 700+hp

This 1989 Toyota Supra A70 by Wektor is one of the most unusual cars I’ve photographed this year. In fact, during the shoot I constantly needed to remind myself that we are in 2022, not in the 1980s capturing images for a bedroom poster.

Wektor is a long-forgotten German tuning house, but back in the day European car magazines were creaming over their cars and comparing them to those from Koenig Specials.

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The company was founded by Johann Bergmeier in 1988, and at that time Wektor were taking brand new top-of-the-line Mk3 Supras and transforming their looks with a fibreglass wide-body conversion that added 400mm (15.7 inches) of width. This wild styling was backed up with performance tuning that saw the Supra’s 3.0L 7M-GTE engine generate 420hp.

Bergmeier called it the Wektor Competition, and it’s reputed that just 68 cars were built until they were discontinued in ’91.

In ’96, Wektor returned and started building the W48 model, but this was basically a replica Ferrari 348 TS based on the Toyota MR2. That same year, the company wound up.

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I have no idea how many Wektor Competitions are still around, but as a bonus, the one we’re looking at today has been treated to a number of modern upgrades including a twin-turbo setup, custom leather interior and a proper sound system. Importantly though, it hasn’t lost any of its ’80s charm in the process.

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It’s easy to see where Wektor took some of its inspiration from for this car, and while browsing through some old articles, I noticed that it was nicknamed the ‘SupraRossa’ for this very reason. On top of the Ferrari Testarossa design cues, the car features some of the biggest side ducts I’ve ever seen.

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The kit definitely has its quirks; being a 30-year-old creation, some of the panel gaps aren’t the sharpest and there are some cracks in the paint here and there, but none of this lessens the impact. It’s really hard to comprehend that there’s a humble Toyota somewhere behind the outrageous fiberglass body enhancements! And check out that oh-so-’80s stance with no shortage of tire meat and plenty of fender gap.

The Wektor’s owner, Jose Ruiz, purchased the car in Germany back in 2001 while he was working in Spain. At the time, his other option was a Strosek-kitted Porsche 928 GTS, but the Toyota-based creation ultimately won out. In 2002, Jose drove it back to his home in Finland, where it still lives today.

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I shot the car at the right time, as it’d just come back from a fully-forged engine rebuild and twin-turbo conversion. I have to admit, I was a bit surprised to hear that there are two turbos strapped to the 7M-GTE when – regardless of the engine – most people are sticking with singles these days. But the company behind the engine work – MW Steel – has a proven drag racing background, so I’ve no reason to not trust their vision, especially since Jose is planning to take the car standing-mile racing next year.

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On top of the twin Garrett GTX30s, the turbo system also features a custom intercooler and piping, exhaust manifold, down-pipe and 3.5-inch stainless steel exhaust all from MW Steel. The Finnish tuning shop also fabricated the dual-plane intake manifold and oil cooler system. Fueling comes via a KMS flex-fuel system, Bosch EV14 2,000cc injectors and three Bosch Motorsport 044 pumps.

The last time the car hit the dyno, it made 732hp and 781Nm, running 1.72bar (25.3psi) boost pressure on E85 fuel. With this in mind, the 5-speed R154 transmission was also upgraded with billet gears.

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BC Racing coilovers improve the handling, while a big brake kit from Wilwood provides the stopping power. I photographed the car wearing its period-correct, 3-piece 17-inch Tramont wheels, but Jose has 19-inch Weds Kranze Borphe wheels on the way to Finland, so he’ll soon be able to change up the look.

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As mentioned, the interior has recently been given refresh with custom red and black leather trim, personalized pitbull logos, and a banging sound system. The most unexpected feature is the JEGS lever alongside the center console, which will deploy the soon-to-be-fitted parachute. Jose will need that once he starts racing the car.

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As a long-time career man at Nokia, Jose is now in the position to be able to afford a modern supercar, but the fact he’s shunned that in favor of driving this awesome ’80s relic is something pretty cool.

Vladimir Ljadov
Instagram: wheelsbywovka
because@wheelsbywovka.com
www.wheelsbywovka.com

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Bringing Back 2000s Style With An S15 Silvia https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/24/bringing-back-2000s-style-with-an-s15-silvia/ Thu, 24 Nov 2022 09:37:34 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/bringing-back-2000s-style-with-an-s15-silvia Bringing Back 2000s Style With An S15 Silvia – Speedhunters SHARE Bringing Back 2000s Style With An S15 Silvia There was

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Bringing Back 2000s Style With An S15 Silvia – Speedhunters





























Bringing Back 2000s Style With An S15 Silvia

There was a period around the year 2000 which, for many of us here in Ireland, defined what car culture would look like for the next 20 years.

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I can’t speak for what it might have been like wherever you were back then, but the influx of Japanese performance and sports cars into Ireland in the early 2000s was a defining time. I’ve written about this subject previously, but it essentially comes down to the fact that our tax system was kinder towards low-capacity cars and, like Japan, we drive on the left side of the road in right-hand drive vehicles.

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It’s worth remembering that the early ’00s was pre-social media, and the internet was still developing in Ireland. I think that most of us here would have been introduced to Japanese car culture through bootleg Video Option DVDs or tuner-type magazines.

Max Power’s seminal Beasts from the East video was one that stands out, and in particular, that tunnel run with Smoky Nagata.

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In Ireland, drifting arrived not long after, and along with it a tidal wave of Japanese cars, most of which we had never seen before. It was one thing for the likes of stock Type Rs to land here, but it was a whole new experience to see already-modified examples rolling off ships and onto our streets.

These tuned JDM cars provided a blueprint for how to authentically style Japanese performance vehicles.

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Irish JDM car culture has absolutely latched onto this particular era of Japanese car culture ever since. You will get the rare person who might try to adopt the more contemporary styles coming out of Japan, but the vast majority still prefer this arguably simpler period.

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Josh Greene‘s Nissan Silvia S15 is a prime example of something that looks like it has just been driven off a RORO (roll-on, roll-off) cargo ship in 2003.

While it might appear as a time traveller, it wasn’t all that long ago that this was a lightly-modified Spec R in factory Nissan Pewter.

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Now, it’s a car that strikes the balance between form and function pretty well, another attribute of the early-2000s imports which we seem to have adopted here.

The exterior is a mix of Msports (front bumper, +25mm front fenders) and Vertex Lang (skirts and rear bumper), painted in a custom colour by Flipsideauto, which shifts from orange to red to gold depending on the light. As a neat detail, the insides of the headlight housings have been painted with leftover (engine bay) paint from Neil Sheehan’s Juicebox AE86 restoration.

The addition of a Varis Hyper narrow carbon wing, Voltex rear Kevlar canards paired with carbon front bumper winglets, along with DMAX headlight lenses and Sonar tail lights pretty much complete the period-correct look.

SSR Type C RS wheels in 18×9.5-inches +22 are fitted in a square setup.

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Suspension-wise, the S15 uses HSD coilovers and Driftworks GeoMaster 2 hubs along with adjustable LCAs and tension rods. Brakes, front and rear, are from an R33 Skyline, while chassis strengthening comes in the form of Cusco front and c-pillar braces.

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Before we get to the business end of things, we’re going to take a quick run through of the cabin. A full-interior street car feels like something of a rarity these days, but again is in keeping with the style of the time. A Juran bucket seat with an R.Y.O 4-point harness for the driver is paired with a Recaro SR recliner sourced from a DC2 Integra Type R for the passenger.

A red suede Nardi Personal wheel and Nismo shifter are Josh’s primary points of contact with the vehicle, while an APEXi AVC-R and Innovate AFR gauge allow boost control and air/fuel ratio monitoring respectively.

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The party piece of the equation lies beneath the vented bonnet. Those who know will always appreciate a good SR20DET, and this one’s an absolute peach.

Making an honest 360hp, the 2.0-litre engine has been outfitted with Wossner forged pistons, Manley forged connecting rods, and Tomei Poncams with adjustable cam gears.

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The turbocharger is a mash up of parts; a Garrett GT2871R core has been mated with a GT3071R compressor housing and TiAL .64A/R exhaust housing as Josh wanted a 4-inch inlet with a v-band clamp on the exhaust housing, an option which Garrett doesn’t currently provide.

A TiAL 38mm wastegate has also been used, along with a Speedtek high-mount, GReddy-style exhaust manifold.

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A Tomei oil take-off plate, GReddy oil filter relocation kit and GReddy oil cooler are all part of the engine’s oil management, while cooling is cared for with a Mishimoto 80mm radiator and 100mm intercooler with GReddy intercooler piping. The engine has been converted to take VAG coil packs, while management comes via an ECUMaster Classic.

You might also notice that the front wheel tubs have been moved 30mm forward in order to accommodate the larger wheel and tyre combination.

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Transferring the engine’s power to the ground is an OS Giken STR twin-plate clutch, a factory Nissan 6-speed gearbox and Nismo 1.5-way LSD.

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It might be missing the wide-body excess and overtly aggressive aero that has dominated Japanese car styling in recent years, but this is a respectable throwback to a time responsible for creating so many Japanese car enthusiasts the world over.

It’s also an approach which, in my opinion, works with the S15’s best features, rather than against them.

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That the car is box-fresh and is already being driven in a manner that might make some wince, is the icing on the proverbial vending-machine-supplied cake.

So while you might not get it, you might now have an appreciation why so many will.

Paddy McGrath
Instagram: pmcgphotos
Twitter: pmcgphotos
paddy@speedhunters.com

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Team Speedhunters

Editorial Director:
Brad Lord
Commercial Director: Ben Chandler
Creative Director: Mark Riccioni
Contributing Editor:
Dino Dalle Carbonare
Technical Editor: Ryan Stewart
Contributors: Will Beaumont, Keiron Berndt, Ron Celestine, Mario Christou, Cian Donnellan, Matthew Everingham, Michał Fidowicz, Chaydon Ford, Alen Haseta, Blake Jones, Stefan Kotze, Vladimir Ljadov, Paddy McGrath, Brandon Miller, Rick Muda, Sara Ryan, Trevor Ryan, Dave Thomas, Toby Thyer, Simon Woolley, Naveed Yousufzai


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Meet Your Heroes: The BMW M1 Procar https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/19/meet-your-heroes-the-bmw-m1-procar/ Sat, 19 Nov 2022 11:46:14 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/meet-your-heroes-the-bmw-m1-procar Meet Your Heroes: The BMW M1 Procar – Speedhunters SHARE Meet Your Heroes: The BMW M1 Procar A Throwback To 2010

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Meet Your Heroes: The BMW M1 Procar – Speedhunters























Meet Your Heroes: The BMW M1 Procar

A Throwback To 2010

If there is one car that’s really struck a chord with me over my years as a Speedhunter, it’s the BMW M1 Procar.

My first sighting of an M1 Procar is a little bit fuzzy in my mind to tell you the truth, but I distinctly remember the first time I ever heard one. It’s not a memory I’ll soon forget.

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It was 2010, and I was on my first press trip to the Nürburgring 24 Hour with KW Suspensions. KW had arranged a small group of US auto journalists to attend the race, which I somehow became a part of. I’ve learned that in these instances, it’s better to stay quiet, keep your head down and just hope nobody realises that you probably shouldn’t be there…

It was a typical press trip with tours, presentations, introductions and particularly nice food. While some of the assembled media were happy to absorb as much hospitality as possible, I was itching to get trackside and shoot anything on the Nordschleife. I wasn’t alone. Another photographer who had travelled from California was pretty keen as well. We had only previously spoken before via the Dieselstation forums, but it didn’t take long for Mr. Klingelhoefer and I to hatch a plan.

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While we had been allowed some time to shoot trackside on the first couple of corners of the GP circuit, you don’t come to the Nürburgring 24 Hour to shoot within the safety and confines of the GP-Strecke. Especially when you know what awaits you just over the hill.

So, when the very kind KW public relations person was looking the other way (sorry), Sean and I jumped into a media shuttle and basically begged the driver to take us anywhere on the Northern Loop. I don’t think I even had roaming enabled on my phone in 2010, so once we left the paddock, we were essentially MIA. Again, sorry KW.

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We lucked it with our driver, who went out of his way and drove us through the camps, along muddy pathways and brought us as close to the track as humanly possible. So much so, that this was the sight right in front of us when we stepped out of the van. What a way to be introduced to the Nordschleife for the first time.

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We immediately started walking up the hill from Steilstrecke to the world renowned Caracciola-Karussell. What you might not be aware of is how remote the Karussell is. It’s not really near anything of note.

It was while walking up this hill that I heard an M1 Procar at full noise for the first time. Despite there being a full grid of N24 Classic cars on track, all of which were making their own brilliant noises, there was this distinct sound louder than anything else coming towards us.

In retrospect, and based on how long it took for the car to appear every lap, I reckon we could hear it leaving the village of Adenau on its way to the Karussell.

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While not particularly fast when compared to the GT3 cars running in the main N24 race, there was nothing competing that weekend which came close to sound this M1 Procar made. In fact, short of V8-era Formula One cars, I don’t think there have been any cars I have photographed since which match the M1 Procar for its aural qualities. I’ve never heard a video or audio clip that can do them justice.

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For the next few years covering the event, I always made a point of ensuring I was trackside for the N24 Classic practice and race sessions to take in whatever Procars might have been competing.

But it’s not just the volume of the cars; it’s the quality of the sound. There’s just something about the distinct tone of this naturally aspirated straight-six screaming to 9,000rpm that I just cannot put into words.

10 Years Later…

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It would take quite a few years before I would have the pleasure to see these cars in action when five of them turned up to the 77th Goodwood Members’ Meeting in 2019.

It was at this event where the wheels were finally put in motion to arrange an in-depth shoot of one of the cars pictured above, which happens to live around 30 minutes from where I call home.

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Unfortunately, scheduling and Covid put a big delay onto this shoot, but earlier this year it actually happened. I finally got to meet one of my heroes.

Just to break the fourth wall here a little bit, despite how often I have been around this particular car, it’s quite something to be left completely alone with. It’s a special moment which I will forever treasure.

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This isn’t just any M1 Procar either, if there can even be such a thing. It belongs to the Martin Birrane Collection at Mondello Park, and is the car which Mr. Birrane won the Group B class in 1982 at the Le Mans 24 Hours alongside Edgar Dören and Jean-Paul Libert. They completed 307 laps and managed to split first and second place in the C2 class in the overall standings, while finishing ahead of numerous C1 category cars.

When Mr. Birrane re-acquired the car some years later, he chose to have it repainted in its original BMW Motorsport colours as opposed to the Le Mans-winning #151 MSW livery.

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The origins of the M1 Procar Championship have been well documented. Conceived by Jochen Neerpasch, BMW’s then head of motorsport, and Max Moseley over a few gin and tonics, the one-make championship became a support race on the Saturday afternoon of eight F1 weekends in 1979, pitching the top five F1 qualifiers against some of the biggest names in sports and touring car racing.

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It was a simple idea which proved to be enormously successful. I suppose the lure of big prize money didn’t do the championship any harm in attracting names like Lauda, Stuck, Regazzoni, Piquet, Winkelhock, Bürger, Fittipaldi, Mass, Reutemann and many more.

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That the top five F1 qualifiers would occupy the first five grid spots with the rest of the M1 Procar grid breathing down their necks from the off only added to the spectacle.

While we know of the legend of the M1 Procar now, and its well deserved icon status, it wasn’t actually meant to be this way. It was originally conceived to compete as Group 5 race car, but a complicated development and production process meant that by the time it was finished, the Group 5 homologation rules had evolved and the M1 was ineligible. So, it went racing in the Procar series as a Group 4 car instead.

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Eventually, and perhaps a couple of years too late, several Group 4 cars were converted to Group 5 specification, while Sauber built two of the only ground-up Group 5 M1s, which you can read about in detail on Petrolicious.

They weren’t particularly successful in Group 5, although they did enjoy limited success, which is perhaps why the Group 4 specification Procar is the more renowned of the two.

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There are a lot of fascinating things about the M1 and its Procar derivative. There were multiple points during the car’s development where had things gone just a little bit differently, it might never have existed, or could have been a completely different car to the one we have come to know.

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As BMW’s first mid-engined car, the aforementioned Jochen Neerpasch commissioned Lamborghini to design and assemble the chassis, which was handled by their own Gianpaolo Dallara. While Dallara created what is widely regarded as a great chassis, Lamborghini’s then financial troubles meant that they wouldn’t be able to produce anywhere near the 400 cars required for homologation, which forced BMW to pull the plug on their involvement.

Instead, the same chassis design was produced by then new Italian company called Marchesi, based not far from Sant’Agata, which evidently consisted of ex-Lamborghini staff who were familiar with the M1 project.

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It was Giorgetto Giugiaro, considered by many as one of the greatest car designers of all time, who was responsible for the body work which was bonded to the chassis by his company, Italdesign. By the time the cars eventually arrived back at BMW Motorsport, they still required significant work as the previous stages of manufacturer did not meet BMW’s own strict standards.

Hence the delays, and how we ended up with the Procar. An accidentally brilliant outcome, truth be told.

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Despite the car’s complicated history, both the resulting road car and race car were a high point in BMW’s history. Hans-Joachim Stuck recently told Automobilsport that driving the M1 Procar was incredibly easy. “The car wasn’t tricky at all. It was a good handling, very neutrally balanced mid-engine racer with manual transmission, no ABS or anything like it, just the basics. It was a fantastic car to get in and have great fun.”

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Coming back to the day of the shoot, I found this a fascinating car to explore and pore over. Even with my limited grasp of race car engineering, it’s pretty easy to look at things and figure out how they work or why they were done a certain way.

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With the exceptions of a modern seat, harness and fire suppression system, the car is pretty much as period correct as can be, so you get a proper appreciation for what it would have been like to race one in 1979. There’s so little of anything, anywhere in the car. It’s all so remarkably (and brilliantly) simple. There’s not the abundance and complexity of wiring, control units, sensors, screens and switches as you might find in a contemporary car.

There’s also not as much attention paid to safety either, so there is that to consider.

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Behind the gold meshed 16×11-inch front BBS wheels is an ATE brake system with ventilated discs front and rear. The braking system features dual master cylinders with an adjustable brake bias valve.

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Underneath the rear, you can see an oil cooler for the differential and 5-speed gearbox. The rear wheels are 16×12.5-inches and Mondello choose to run the car on a semi-slick Avon tyre for all-weather use.

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The suspension is double-wishbone, front and rear, with Magnesium uprights, Bilstein coilovers and fully adjustable front and rear anti-roll bars.

As the cars were all as identical as could be, any performance advantages were generally exploited with corner weighting, geometry changes and wing settings.

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Its party piece, however, is what sits behind the driver. The dry-sumped, 3.5-litre, naturally aspirated inline-six. Or, the M88/1 in BMW parlance.

Although the original plan for the M1 was to receive BMW’s first V10 Formula 1 engine (which ultimately didn’t happen until 2000), they then pivoted to a new inline-six based on the BMW M49 engine from the 3.0 CSi race car. As the M1 was planned to be a road and race car, BMW’s priority was to finish the 400 production cars for homologation first. As the M49 wasn’t suitable for mass production, it had to be adapted with regards to ease of production and emissions standards. A new DOHC cylinder head was the primary change to achieve this.

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Paul Rosche, whom had already had success designing BMW’s F2 engines in the 1970s and who would go onto create their turbocharged F1 engines, the E30 BMW M3’s S14 and the McLaren F1 S70 V12, was responsible for the engine. He described the M88/1 (Procar) and M88 (road car) engines as being “close brothers”.

Both were dry-sumped, both featured ITBs and both ran a Kugelfischer mechanical fuel injection setup. The latter of these was a challenge as they wanted to use this fuel injection setup on the race car, so it had to be homologated on the road car, which had strict emissions requirements. They obviously made it work, but not without great difficulty.

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The resulting 470hp at 9,000rpm might be some of the most impressive figures ever created, although again, these number weren’t created without issues. One problem they faced as the 1979 season approached was the torsional vibrations caused by the long crankshaft at high revs would force the crank’s vibration damper to come loose. The short-term fix was to double the amount of bolts securing the damper to the crank from six to 12, while long-term a lighter flywheel and other lighter pieces of rotating mass inside the engine solved the issue.

An anecdote I learned while researching this feature was that at the very first Procar race in Zolder, the drivers were instructed not to exceed 9,000rpm. Of course, one driver couldn’t help himself, edged past 9,000 and was immediately overtaken by his own crank damper before retiring from the race. Racecar drivers, eh?

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The M1 Procar, and other cars of its ilk, are just so special. They’re from an era which will likely never be repeated; a sweet spot in motorsport and automotive history where things were just the right balance of old and new. That modern cars are so much faster is irrelevant.

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This is one of a few cars which I will always be able to appreciate from the outside as just to be in its presence is a gift in and of itself.

While this car is technically a museum piece, it’s wonderful to see and hear it in action so regularly. Just as it should be.

Paddy McGrath
Instagram: pmcgphotos
Twitter: pmcgphotos
paddy@speedhunters.com

The Cutting Room Floor

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Contributors: Will Beaumont, Keiron Berndt, Ron Celestine, Mario Christou, Cian Donnellan, Matthew Everingham, Michał Fidowicz, Chaydon Ford, Alen Haseta, Blake Jones, Stefan Kotze, Vladimir Ljadov, Paddy McGrath, Brandon Miller, Rick Muda, Sara Ryan, Trevor Ryan, Dave Thomas, Toby Thyer, Simon Woolley, Naveed Yousufzai


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Rallye Prescott: Hill Climbing Meets WRC Heritage https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/14/rallye-prescott-hill-climbing-meets-wrc-heritage/ Mon, 14 Nov 2022 13:50:04 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/rallye-prescott-hill-climbing-meets-wrc-heritage SHARE Rallye Prescott: Hill Climbing Meets WRC Heritage The British Hill Climb Imagine a traditional British hill climb event and images of

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Rallye Prescott: Hill Climbing Meets WRC Heritage

The British Hill Climb

Imagine a traditional British hill climb event and images of tweed flat caps, red trousers, damp weather and tea, with cars ranging from pre-war to 1960s Minis and Spitfires running skinny cross-ply tyres and SU carburettors will likely come to mind.

While to this day that’s still a pretty accurate account, hill climbing has also continued to evolve up to single-seat race cars running turbocharged bike engines and everything in between. With certain class rules in place to keep budgets low, hill climbs can be one of the most affordable types of motorsport to enter. But for other classes, anything goes.

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Prescott Hill Climb events have formally existed in the Gloucestershire countryside since 1938. Back in the ’30s, the Bugatti Owners’ Club had sought out a permanent location for their hill climb events, and when this one fell into their hands, what was the driveway from the nearby road to Prescott House was resurfaced. A slightly longer loop was added in 1960, but the course design has remained unchanged ever since.

The Bugatti Owners’ Club run a variety of events here under the Prescott Speed Hill Climb umbrella, and on the first Saturday of November, I headed along for Rallye Prescott.

Now that it’s autumn in the UK, when the tree leaves are changing from bright green to shades of yellow, orange and red, it was incredibly picturesque. It also meant that rain was in the forecast and the track was damp and slippery, making it even more challenging. But on this occasion though, the cars that came out to play were designed and engineered for gruelling conditions.

Rally Legends In The Paddock

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Among the rally legends from various decades were not one, but two ex-works Subaru WRC car. The first, W23 SRT (S6 generation), a car we’ve previously covered in a full feature, contested the World Rally Championship in 2000. The second, P12 WRC (S5 generation) competed between 1997 and 1999.

Parked alongside one another, the two Prodrive-built machines appeared fairly similar, but they are drastically different under the skin. W23 SRT was a complete redesign, referred to as a ‘Low Centre of Gravity’ car, featuring active differentials and, for the first time in WRC, a sequential gearbox.

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We’re used to seeing classic Porsche 911s on historic rally stages, but not so much their modern counterparts. That’s a shame, because all the attributes that make 911s capable on track – competent chassis and plenty of traction out of corners – carry over to rally.

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BMW E30 M3s proved their worth in period on both the circuit and rally special stages, but I had to do a double take when the bonnet was removed from this particular car. In place of the BMW S14 motor sat a Millington Diamond mill, a bespoke engine based on the YB Cosworth design. The M3 retains a throaty induction note from individual throttle bodies, but the change of motor was down to practicality as sourcing parts for the S14 has become increasingly difficult.

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Going one step further than gravel spec was this Lancia 037 in full Safari Rally trim. Massive bash bars, additional A-pillar spotlights and a roof-mounted tyre rack adorn the exterior.

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Many people are unaware of Mitsubishi’s World Rally Championship endeavours before the Lancer Evolution models, but the Colt 1000F is where it started in 1967. The Lancer EX Turbo seen here competed against the early Audi Quattro, Ford Escort and Fiat 131, and produced up to 400hp by the end of the car’s competitive life.

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The short-wheelbase Audi Sport Quattro has incredibly awkward proportions, but the groundwork the S1 E2’s all-wheel drive technology laid for rallying at its highest form is undeniable.

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In anticipation of the event running into the evening, most cars had lamp pods and spotlights fitted. More is better, right?

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The great thing about events like this is that along with the manufacturer-backed entries of yesteryear, Rallye Prescott attracted a lot of more attainable machinery, like the Citroën Saxo. Fifteen years ago, the Saxo ruled the council estate; you couldn’t turn up at a McDonald’s after dark without seeing at least one in the carpark. Stigma aside, they continue to be incredibly capable cars, with 120hp and weighing well under a tonne in VTS form as standard.

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No British motorsport event would ever be complete without a classic Mini or two, and for good reason. Light weight and nimble handling still make them a force to be reckoned with.

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I’m unsure what the collective noun for a grouping of classic rally Renaults is (possibly a frustration?) but seeing so many parked together was rather special. The Renault 5 Turbo sat alongside the Maxi Turbo really emphasised just how crazy the Group B car was.

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As you can see, the rest of the Rallye Prescott paddock was hugely varied.

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I can’t say I am a fan of the bubble-esque K11 Nissan Micra/March in stock form, but with the works kit car arches added its look is completely transformed.

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As part of the event, members of the TypeRA Forum were invited to display their cars and have the opportunity for a few runs. Never one to turn down an offer, I brought along my Spec C 16″ and took to the hill. It was as greasy as expected and I quickly developed some real respect for the drivers going ten-tenths.

Rally Legends On The Hill

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While the course may appear easy it’s anything but. From a slight uphill start, you build pace as you enter the sweeping left-hander, ducking under the pedestrian bridge.

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Then into Ettore’s, a slightly uphill 180-degree bend which was the aforementioned addition, 52 years ago.

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Heading down into the dip, you’re then confronted by a steep uphill into the Pardon Hairpin. This is almost a first-gear corner, with wheel-spin common as many cars lift a wheel going to level ground.

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There can’t be many people other than the Duke of Richmond who can say their driveway is a hill climb, but competitors then pass one of two houses that can only be accessed via the hill climb course.

Another sweeping right-hander follows as the elevation gradually increases.

Next, the cars weave through the Esses before a steep uphill left-hander.

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The course culminates in a corner known as Semi-Circle. This requires nerves of steel and full commitment as the outside of the bend is a blind slope which extends around 150-feet to brush-land below. You don’t want to go off here.

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If you’ve made it to this point, you cross the finish line. While the quickest cars dipped into the high 47-second range on the day, the outright record held by Wallace Menzies in a Gould GR59 (a single seater with over 650 horsepower) stands at 34.65 seconds.

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A unique feature compared to other hill climbs in the UK is a separate return road, which means cars can continually attack the hill at 30-second intervals.

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Seeing how different types of cars did this made for interesting viewing. While many of the front-wheel drive cars managed throttle and steering inputs to control understeer, the rear-wheel drive cars were doing the same to avoid doing pirouettes.

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Grassroots motorsports events are a truly special thing and while it may be a bold claim, I think Britain does them better than most. Rallye Prescott is definitely a sum of its parts. With a visually-stunning venue steeped in history, a mixture of incredible cars and the UK’s quintessential enthusiasm for motorsport, this is a British hill climb to the T.

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So maybe the traditional elements live on, just with a greater variety of cars? Events like Rallye Prescott can only be a good thing, mixing two different types of motorsport to bring different enthusiasts together. I just won’t hold my breath waiting for pre-war Bugattis on the rally cross tracks yet.

Chaydon Ford
Instagram: chaycore

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Less Is Sometimes More: A Simple BMW 2002 https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/12/less-is-sometimes-more-a-simple-bmw-2002/ Sat, 12 Nov 2022 03:07:58 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/less-is-sometimes-more-a-simple-bmw-2002 Less Is Sometimes More: A Simple BMW 2002 – Speedhunters SHARE Less Is Sometimes More: A Simple BMW 2002 The BMW

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Less Is Sometimes More: A Simple BMW 2002 – Speedhunters





















Less Is Sometimes More: A Simple BMW 2002

The BMW 1600 was an evolution of the Neue Klasse series, receiving revamped styling from Georg Bertram and Manfred Rennen in-house at BMW in the mid-1960s.

The new design was to be shorter and cheaper than the sedans it was based on and would continue being sold through the entire 02 series production run. These simpler, lighter cars received slightly enlarged M10 inline-four engines over time, moving up from the initial 1,573cc to a turbocharged 1,990cc power plant in their most potent specification by 1973.

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This is no 2002 Turbo, though. The car I drove a couple weekends ago – owned by my friend Darius – is equipped with the standard 2.0-liter mill paired with a 4-speed manual gearbox.

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It’s a very slow car by today’s standards, and even in 1974 when this example was sold new 99 horsepower wasn’t really much to write home about.

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No real modifications have been made either; the car still has its factory single Weber carburetor, fairly unsupportive bucket seats, squishy stock springs, tiny 13-inch wheels, and tires with thick sidewalls. The only thing Darius has done beyond routine maintenance is install polyurethane suspension bushings.

Yet, wheeling around in this old machine was so much more fun than I imagined it could be.

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Simply put, BMW chassis are good, even ones designed 50 years ago. Now, in 2022 — amidst the deep sea of insanely modified cars, out of control wait times for quality parts, attention-seeking social media builds, and skyrocketing prices on vintage cars — this is your friendly reminder that sometimes less is more. Classic car ownership doesn’t need to break your wallet, and there’s so much joy to be found in a simple car like a stock BMW 02.

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The suspension is compliant and user friendly, the open differential ensures you can’t make a costly mistake in an unfamiliar car — although a limited-slip unit would be nice — and the engine was surprisingly responsive around 4,000rpm. Sliding around in the cabin with the windows down makes you feel like you’re going much faster than you really are.

Still, the soft car was incredibly comfortable as it briskly made its way over the undulating surfaces on California’s narrow backroads and winding highways.

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It’s a classic car that you can live with, a car that you can get groceries in, a car that you can take on a road trip, and a car you can fire up at night to blow off some steam on your favorite road.

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Darius has done exactly this during his time with the car, but with his first baby on the way it’s time for the 2002 to move on. “I just can’t be that dad with four project cars and a newborn child.”

Not that the 2002 is a project, but you get the point. Darius is a responsible man, and if I was even a hair less responsible than I am, the 2002 would already be mine. Oh well – instead, it’s going up on Bring a Trailer soon.

Godspeed, little 2002.

Trevor Ryan
Instagram: trevornotryan
tyrphoto.com

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How To Solve The 2nd-Gen 4Runner’s Biggest Problem https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/11/07/how-to-solve-the-2nd-gen-4runners-biggest-problem/ Mon, 07 Nov 2022 05:07:06 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/how-to-solve-the-2nd-gen-4runners-biggest-problem SHARE How To Solve The 2nd-Gen 4Runner’s Biggest Problem The second-gen Toyota 4Runner is one of my favorite trucks. Its simple,

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How To Solve The 2nd-Gen 4Runner’s Biggest Problem

The second-gen Toyota 4Runner is one of my favorite trucks. Its simple, utilitarian design is paired with bulletproof reliability and quality materials that last for decades.

This is why I picked up a Hilux pickup — or Toyota Truck as it was creatively called here in the US — for myself a couple years back. They are great vehicles, but one glaring shortcoming is their extreme lack of power. Going up steep grades I will sometimes find myself buried in third gear; they really are that gutless.

Scott Kanemura has a reasonable solution for this problem, which he’s implemented on his ‘5150Lux’ 4Runner: 1,200 horsepower.

In V6 spec this truck would have produced 150hp when new, and the four-banger version even less. Multiplying the power output of a vehicle by a full order of magnitude necessitates far more than just a simple engine swap, of course. Scott says that essentially just the shell of the Toyota remains, with a full chromoly tube frame taking the newfound chassis loads.

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The power plant is an obvious one, and family-correct, too. The 2JZ-GTE has been fully built and stroked to 3.4L and features a beautiful fabricated exhaust that terminates through the passenger-side fender. It even has a muffler, but something tells me it’s still going to be a fair bit louder than the truck’s original engine. I love that someone has gone this far with a chassis like this, which the engineers at Toyota could have never imagined when this body style was originally designed in the late 1980s.

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Then there are the wheels – 3-piece Volk Racing Gr.Cs, which left the RAYS factory in 17×7-inch sizing, most likely in the late-’80s/early-’90s, so period correct for the truck. In Scott’s possession they’ve been stepped up to 18-inch and are now much wider at the rear. How do these fit, you might ask? We’ll get to that in a moment.

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Another cool exterior detail is the 3D-printed air inlet that’s integrated into the grille, through which turbocharger is able to suck cool, fresh air. The number of parts made from additive materials seemed to have increased exponentially at this year’s SEMA Show, and I would expect this trend to continue.

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Inside, a set of custom-fabricated fixed-back bucket seats have been installed along with a composite dash and a polished aluminum console that houses a ratcheting shifter. The seats have minimal padding, and I feel like I might be terrified to be parked in one at speed. There is an Alpine stereo in the dash, though, so it appears that Scott can still jam out on his next grocery run.

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If you thought the front of the cabin was barebones, the rear has been completely stripped and tubbed to accommodate the widened wheels and seriously meaty rubber. One of the things I really like about this build, though, is that it still looks nice back here. There are brushed aluminum panels, a bit of carbon fiber trim, and the cage is aesthetic. Often drag cars — and even show cars — will neglect to really finish off details like this, where as Scott’s truck feels intentional throughout.

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You’ll also notice that the truck has a fabric soft top, à la Volkswagen Bus. Best of all, it took me a while to realize that this JZ 4Runner was parked up right next to an ultra-pearlescent McLaren P1. At the SEMA Show, builds like Scott’s take the cake.

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As a builder, Scott has come a long way from his 1972 Hilux that Keith Charvonia featured in a Speedhunters spotlight from 2015.

I’m not sure what comes next after a truck like this one, but hopefully there are plenty of high-speed passes in Scott’s future before he moves on to another project.

Trevor Ryan
Instagram: trevornotryan
tyrphoto.com

Photography by Mark Riccioni
Instagram: mark_scenemedia
Twitter: markriccioni
mark@scene-media.com

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An Unforgettable Weekend At The Spa Summer Classic https://mainstreetautocare.com/2022/08/20/an-unforgettable-weekend-at-the-spa-summer-classic/ Sat, 20 Aug 2022 18:01:07 +0000 https://mainstreetautocare.com/an-unforgettable-weekend-at-the-spa-summer-classic SHARE An Unforgettable Weekend At The Spa Summer Classic Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps is one of my absolute favorite racetracks. In fact,

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An Unforgettable Weekend At The Spa Summer Classic

Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps is one of my absolute favorite racetracks. In fact, I’d even go so far to say that I like it a tiny bit more than the Nürburgring Nordschleife.

While the ‘Ring is great and all, given its sheer size it’s not easy to get around the track on foot as a spectator or a photographer. Spa, being 7 kilometers long, is not by any means short, but you’re still able to comfortably make your way around the track a few times in a day and see all the great viewing spots it has to offer.

Combine that with a bunch of race cars from the 1960s to 2000s going all-out and you’ve got the recipe for a great weekend. And that’s exactly what the 2022 Spa Summer Classic was – an amazing weekend of classic racing on this legendary automotive rollercoaster in Belgium’s Ardennes region.

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Spa-Francorchamps has recently undergone some big changes in order to modernize the track and bring it up to FIA/FIM spec for endurance motorcycle racing. What this boils down to is expanded run-off areas and the installation of gravel traps. There have also been some changes made to the track’s infrastructure, the most obvious being the removal of the original covered grandstand along the old start/finish straight. That’s now been replaced with a more modern grandstand closer to La Source, Spa-Francorchamps’ first corner.

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While I quietly mourn the loss of the old grandstand, which provided incredible, ear-shattering acoustics, there’s an even bigger change that I am very excited about. The newly-built grandstand next to the Raidillon, just above Eau Rouge, is hard to miss. This is a great addition, as it provides a truly spectacular view of the cars on this iconic section of the circuit.

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It’s where I found myself on Saturday morning of the Spa Summer Classic.

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Having made the hour-long drive from home to the racetrack, I trekked by foot towards the new grandstand. One of the best things about Spa is the accessibility you have for photo-taking with plenty of options at every corner, so I grabbed shots wherever I could as I slowly made my way around the track.

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One of my favorite spots is the Bruxelles bend, where you can catch the cars braking into the corner, and then as they navigate the almost-180-degree bend, it feels like they are swinging around you as their anchor point.

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Some of the cars – and especially the E30 M3s – seemed to lift their inner front tire at this corner during braking, which made the wheel lock up in the air for a split-second. It’s a bit surreal when there’s a car blasting past you with a front wheel completely still.

It’s also a spot where you can catch some great braking duels on corner approach. And let me tell you, although these cars are old, their drivers don’t hold back. It almost brought tears of joy to my eyes to see some of my hero cars, including a Nissan Primera Super Tourer and a DTM Mercedes-Benz 2.5-16 Evo 2 battling it out.

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Speaking of the Primera, I had a chance to check it out briefly in the paddock and I was absolutely in awe. It’s such a stunning machine, and it looked even cooler with some battle scars from the race.

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Another moment that nearly made me cry was finally seeing a Ford Capri RS in its ultimate form – the 1974 spec – on track during the Belcar Historic Cup races. The wide arches, the aggressive front spoiler and rear duck bill, along with the screaming sound of its highly-strung V6 – what a treat.

Some incredibly close racing happened when the Roadster Pro Cup took to the track. This is a field made up entirely of Lotus Super 7s and Mazda MX-5s, and some of these cars seemed glued to each other as they zipped through the corners as a pack.

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Saturday culminated in the Spa 3 Hours race – 180-minutes of non-stop racing into the sunset. My favourite entry was this Ferrari 308, not something you see on the track often.

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After the race ended I headed back home, only to do the same thing all over again the next day. It was a good thing I returned to Spa-Francorchamps on Sunday too, otherwise I wouldn’t have seen one of my ultimate hero cars absolutely tearing up the track. As someone who grew up in the ’90s and ’00s, I am of course talking about the Dodge Viper.

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The Viper missed the first two Sunday races of the NRCC & CSCC Sports & Slicks category, but its performance in race three more than made up for it. Although it started in 3rd place, the Dodge had fallen back to 35th by the second lap, so what followed was an unbelievable mad dash to make up positions. With each lap the Viper quickly gained back ground, even achieving the fastest lap of the race with a 2:28.068, four seconds faster than any other car. By the end of the race it was back in second position, sitting just behind a dominating Mosler MT900R.

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During the Historic Monoposto race it started raining, which resulted in quite a few pace car-led laps. The rain didn’t really let up until halfway through the next race, which was the NK GT & TC category.

Seeing a BMW 3.0 CSL in full M livery charging through the water spray is a memory I’ll cherish for a long time.

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I can’t wait for my next chance to hunt some speed at Spa again. I feel right at home there, as I’m sure every Speedhunters reader would too.

Bastien Bochmann
Instagram: bastienbochmann
www.bastienbochmann.de

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