Vehicle History American War
"Jeep" or "jeep" in Indonesian, is a term to describe one type of vehicle for the purposes of war. However, the origin of the naming of "jeep", until this very day are not known with certainty.
Some have said that, the name comes from the Ford car factory, to name one of its products as "GP" (read: ji-pi). Uniquely, the abbreviation of "GP" was still being debated, there is a theory that believes that the GP letter was an abbreviation of the general purpose (multi purpose). But verily it is the letter G stands for government, and P is the class code to indicate that the vehicle has a wheelbase of its 80 inches (2meter), having a 4-wheel, and weighs 250 kilograms.
I do not know which theory is right, certainly the history of United States combat vehicles began in 1939, when the Army (Army) United States opened a tender for 135 companies in the domestic car to make special vehicles for military purposes.
To speed up time and ease of design, the U.S. Army liberating forms of war vehicles, but still meet several technical requirements are:
* Has a carrying capacity 600 lbs (273.15 kg).
* Distance of front-rear wheel (wheelbase) does not exceed 75 inches (1.9 meters).
* The windshield can be folded (laid down in the future).
* Gross Weight 1200 lbs (544.31 kg).
* Must be having a 4-wheel.
Of the 135 companies that were invited, only three of which meet the requirements namely: Bantam, Willys Overland, and Ford. To 3 companies, the U.S. Army gave a deadline until 23 September 1940, to design the combat vehicles to the specifications requested.
Bantam was the first company to come up with a prototype vehicle called war Blitz Buggy. Then on November 11, 1940, following the Willys that comes with a design that is named Quad. On November 23, 1940, Ford's turn that hand over the vehicle design called the Pygmy. The third form of prototypes that resemble one another. It happened because the Willys and Ford did get full access to the prototype Bantam.
At the time of testing, the third prototype proved unable to meet the requirements requested, for example:
* Blitz Buggy is considered too high from ground level and less powerful engine.
* Quad too heavy, but the big engine power.
* Pygmy easily be steered, but the engine power is too weak.
Due to the increasingly urgent needs, the United States Army finally chose a prototype Quad because it was considered to have the greatest power compared to other models.
Quad, using a machine called a "Go Devil", which can generate power (strength) 60 PK and maximum torque of 14.5 kilogram-meter (kg-m) or 145 Newton-meters (Nm), above the standard of the United States Army ( 12 kg-m). For comparison, the maximum torque on the Blitz Buggy and Pigmy only 11 kg-m.
Another consideration for choosing the Quad is a cheaper price than its competitors, which is 739 U.S. dollars. Heavy weight of the Quad, which is 1089 pounds, was reduced to 981 pounds, although still heavier than the Blitz Buggy is only 922 pounds.
Willys Quad that has been perfected to begin production in 1941. However, production capacity can not meet U.S. Army needs very much. And the Bantam and Ford was asked to create a vehicle of war in accordance with the specifications of the Willys.
Vehicle war made by Willys, given the production code "MA" and "MB", Ford named it as "GP" and "GPW". While Bantam products referred to as "BRC-40".
In subsequent developments, jeeps had made a watertight (waterproof). In fact, Ford in 1942 to make an amphibious jeep called SEEP. Shape the bottom of the SEEP much like ships, including the addition in the rear propeller. In the water, all four wheels can be folded and propeller enabled. In 1950, Half Safe, which is a sophisticated modification of the SEEP, successfully crossed the Atlantic.
Since manufactured in 1941, the United States Army War vehicles shipped to Allied countries. Even 1,000 units Bantam BRC-40 was made for the Russian Army.
RETRO CAR, TEST DRIVE, MAZDA, NISAN, TOYOTA, HONDA, DATSUN, SSS, TIPS, HISTORY CAR, SUZUKI, JAPAN CAR, EUROPR CAR, TRIKS, MODIFICATION, NEWS, REFERENCE, HOT MODEL, PART,
1973 Mazda 808 wagon
1973 Mazda 808 wagon
OWNER Chris Murphy
HOMETOWN Down Under, the New Zealand way
POWER 245 WHP, 220 lb/ft
UNDER THE HOOD S4 13B housing with S5 rotors, stainless steel seals and bolts throughout; Custom T04 turbo; Turbosmart wastegate & type 2 blow-off valve; front-mount intercooler; custom inlet manifold; four 12A turbo injectors; SX fuel pump and filter; Custom stainless steel turbo manifold, 3-inch stainless steel exhaust system with rear muffler
DRIVETRAIN Toyota Supra five-speed transmission; five-puck clutch; 9-inch billet pressure plate; 14 lb flywheel; shortened Toyota Hilux differential
BRAINS Microtec LTX8 EMS
STIFF STUFF KYB coilover setup, rear leafs strengthened/flattened
ROLLERS Simmons FR17 17x7 (front), 17x9 (rear); Toyo Proxes T1S 205/40R17 (front), 225/40R17 (rear)
STOPPERS Brake hardware removed from engine bay, S5 RX-7 rotors/calipers (front), Pontiac GTO (rear), Wilwood pedal box and master cylinder, bias adjustment
OUTSIDE Orion silver paint
INSIDE MOMO wheel, Autosport seats, interior retrimmed, aluminum dash, stainless steel RX-3 center console, Auto Meter gauges, custom rollcage
HOMETOWN Down Under, the New Zealand way
POWER 245 WHP, 220 lb/ft
UNDER THE HOOD S4 13B housing with S5 rotors, stainless steel seals and bolts throughout; Custom T04 turbo; Turbosmart wastegate & type 2 blow-off valve; front-mount intercooler; custom inlet manifold; four 12A turbo injectors; SX fuel pump and filter; Custom stainless steel turbo manifold, 3-inch stainless steel exhaust system with rear muffler
DRIVETRAIN Toyota Supra five-speed transmission; five-puck clutch; 9-inch billet pressure plate; 14 lb flywheel; shortened Toyota Hilux differential
BRAINS Microtec LTX8 EMS
STIFF STUFF KYB coilover setup, rear leafs strengthened/flattened
ROLLERS Simmons FR17 17x7 (front), 17x9 (rear); Toyo Proxes T1S 205/40R17 (front), 225/40R17 (rear)
STOPPERS Brake hardware removed from engine bay, S5 RX-7 rotors/calipers (front), Pontiac GTO (rear), Wilwood pedal box and master cylinder, bias adjustment
OUTSIDE Orion silver paint
INSIDE MOMO wheel, Autosport seats, interior retrimmed, aluminum dash, stainless steel RX-3 center console, Auto Meter gauges, custom rollcage
1973 Mazda Rx-3 Savanna
1973 Mazda Rx-3 Savanna - Living Deviously
Architect of the under-bonnet anarchy is well-known Kiwi engine builder Stu Lawton, who campaigns a Pro Import Mazda SP20 (323) with a 26B four-rotor, twin-turbo engine under the name Lawton Rotorsport. Bridgeported Series 4 (FC3S RX-7) housings were used, with a 3mm SCR Apex seal and a full stud kit. Slotted and balanced rotors came from a Series 6 (FD3S RX-7), which also donated a cross-drilled eccentric shaft with 20B stationary gears.
Feeding the super-tough engine is a Turbonetics Super T-76 hair dryer, with a TiAL 46mm wastegate bleeding off unnecessary boost, and a custom intercooler chilling the intake charge.
But the big turbocharger and four-inch thick-like-a-can-of-Pepsi exhaust system are nothing without the ECU, fuel and spark-and Johnny hasn't skimped in this all-important area. A Microtech LT10 with an X4 16-volt ignition upgrade means no spark fade at high revs, and a hard-pumping Bosch 044 fuel pump and Malpassi regulator feed a pair of 850cc and two more colossal 1650cc injectors. A Gilmer drive system avoids undue risk of a belt slippage-a relatively small investment to protect the other big dollars put into the engine bay.
The drivetrain borrows a W57 gearbox from a Toyota Supra, using an NPC twin-plate clutch and lightened flywheel with a shortened limited-slip diff from a Toyota HiLux pickup, which also donated the car's shortened and re-splined axles. Suspension tweaking in this sort of ride can be a bit of a mission, but aiming the setup toward the strip with a ladder bar arrangement has helped keep the rear end stable. Reset leaves and tramp rods are used at the rear, with coilovers and adjustable camber plates allowing better setup options at the pointy end. Standard sway bars have been used, and the full Nolathane bushing treatment has helped keep DVS stable, even under solid acceleration.
When we asked Johnny why he chose the brake setup he did, the reply was, "they're big and apparently the 3 needed to be able to stop." DBA cross-drilled and slotted rotors, four-pot calipers designed for a FD, and rear disc brakes from a FC seem to do the trick-they are big and they certainly pull up the rampant rotary in a hurry.
But it's the show value that has been noticed this year-the car has already picked up the Best RX Engine Bay trophy at New Zealand's Four and Rotary Nationals at the end of January, thanks to some significant chrome and polishing work. Under show lights, its deep black paint and polished Simmons FR17 rims definitely caught the attention of a very appreciative rotorhead crowd. But with a serious tune-up about to take place and some more boost to be screwed out of the 13B, wheel numbers in the high 500s aren't out of the question. And by then it'll probably be deviant on-strip behavior that this RX will be getting noticed for.
1973 Mazda 808 wagon
1973 Mazda 808 wagon
Old school is almost always cool-at least it is when you're not the one who has to pay the petrol jockey. These days the bowsers (uh, this might be NZ-speak for gas pumps - JN) are normally frequented by the super-rich. This makes it that much more satisfying to see a guy on a budget, like New Zealander Chris Murphy, put his hand in the face of economic reason. You see, Chris exerted an insane amount of effort into making perhaps the most uneconomical of engines drink a whole lot more.
Logic dictates that if you're worried about gas mileage then you don't buy a rotary-powered vehicle, especially one with a turbocharger that could easily double as a trash masher for the many piston engines that it can obliterate. But 20 year-old Chris is not one to let a petty thing like logic jam him up. This brings us to another illogical bit about Chris' car-this stunning custom silver '73 wagon is one hundred percent street legal.
In New Zealand the modification rules are a little bit more relaxed than in almost every other developed country in the world. This relaxed attitude suits this Mazda 808 just perfectly. Bear in mind that this Mazda is an 808 if you're looking at the rear end and an RX-3 if you're facing the front. Chris grafted an RX-3 front-end conversion onto his 808 because he likes the meaner look of the 3's visage.
There's a very different approach to take when doing up an old car (as anyone who's been left sitting delirious and cross legged on a garage floor at 3 am begging the spider gears to please come back and form an orderly queue at the differential, could tell you). Finding parts can be a real challenge, especially at short notice, but fabricating custom components usually works out better than fitting factory parts around modification plans.
The detail of the craftsmanship on this wagon would lead to you to believe that this job took months of work, but in reality the build-up only took ten very frantic weeks to complete, and all on a budget that required Chris to get his hands dirty-a lot. His own commitment, a few good mates, and some tamed parts suppliers helped get the RX808 ready for its debut at Wellington's Four and Rotary Jamboree, where it began a successful show season, being awarded Best RX Conversion, Best Wagon and People's Choice at various import events.
This car may look destined for a life of trailer transports and carpeted show floors until you recognize its innate ability to vanish, leaving nothing but a stinking pile of smoldering rubber in its wake. This 13B dual rotor turbo-powered wagon is never too difficult to find-just listen for a sound like a pack of snarling wild dogs armed with 12-gauge shotguns chasing a pack of terrified cats, all filtered through a PA system.
Getting an old school ride to get up and scream like a new import is a challenge too, but there are a couple of things worth remembering: vehicles like this wagon weigh about as much as Christina Aguilera would if you hosed off all of the skank, and anything can be beaten if you've got a big enough stick.
The big stick in this case is a force-fed 13B turbo, courtesy of a Series 4 Mazda RX-7 (think FC3S - JN), or at least the housing from one. This is joined by a couple of rotors from an S5, stainless steel seals, bolts and a dirty custom T04 (don't ask for the specs as he probably won't tell you). Chris set out to build a unique and effective all-rounder, and when you note the 45mm Turbosmart wastegate and the chiller mounted up front, it becomes plainly obvious that it's not just designed to look pretty on the show floor. This 13B gets its substantial fuel appetite sated by a 900-horse-friendly SX pump-and-filter combo in the boot, which looks like a scaled down version of a Kuwaiti oil field. The dual-rotor beastie is run by a Microtec LTX8 EMS.
Reigning in the kind of power that this wagon packs requires some serious goodies as well-and a close ratio Toyota Supra five-speed gearbox does the business here. A billet 9-inch pressure plate and five-puck clutch are used with a 14 lb billet flywheel, and the 4.5 final drive-toting diff has been donated (along with driveshaft and shortened axles) from a Toyota Tacoma.
Braided lines are used throughout, with Earl's fittings, cleaning up the engine bay beautifully. This old school special was even stripped of its under-bonnet (uh, the hood - JN), brake hardware and then fitted with a Wilwood pedal box and master cylinder, complemented by brake bias adjustment right under the dash. Series 5 RX-7 rotors and calipers are fitted at the pointy end with Pontiac GTO discs at the back.
The deep and lustrous paint turned a few heads at Jamboree-Orion Silver applied by Chris's mate Daniel Barlow. It's a top job, which wouldn't give away the fact that Daniel did it on Saturday at midnight after a few more libations than most painters tend to neck before they spray an aspiring show car.
The wagon's silver-on-silver look is finished off with a set of Simmons FR 17-inch rims wrapped in super-sticky Toyo T1S rubber, and firmly affixed to terra firma with a KYB coilover set at the front and a strengthened and flattened leaf set at the rear.
The other biggest look-creator has to be the major lack of a factory interior and the dirty great I-mean-business rollcage. For a bit more custom fun, the dash has been made from scratch in aluminum, and the RX-3 centre console in stainless steel, which sits between a pair of Autosport Kevlar race seats. The door trims are yet another unique feature of the 808-black over grey with stainless steel tribal-inspired rotor-design inserts. Auto Meter competition gauges monitor oil pressure, water temp, boost, fuel, RPM and speed.
Chris is already onto the next project-a full show and go RX-2 sedan, with plans to sink the wagon into the low 11-second range at the strip. And if he and his hugely enthusiastic and talented mates can pull something like this stunning wagon together on a tight budget in a mere ten weeks, then chances are this won't be the only lesson that Mr Murphy will be teaching us this year.
1971 Nissan Datsun Bluebird
1971 Nissan Datsun Bluebird
Few will argue the point that the 510 was the car that made Datsun in the States. With an OHC engine, fully independent suspension and a rock-bottom pricing structure (under $2000 new-cheap even by late '60s standards), the solid little sedan quickly gained a life-and a fan base-of its own. John Morton won the SCCA Trans Am 2.5L title in '71 and '72, before SCCA disbanded the class. It also became Nissan's rally car of choice, replacing the heavier Cedric. Four hundred thousand buyers made the 510 Datsun's face on the roads of America.
But not all Datsun 510s were created equal. While they were making a name for the fledgling Datsun marque in the States, Japan got a whole different version all to itself. A fastback roofline and a single-piece taillight were the largest styling differences, but the sporting SSS model received a 1.8L version of the SOHC L-series four while we made do with the 1.6. There was also more luxurious trim inside and out, and it wore a now-traditional Japanese name: Bluebird.
It was a hit at home, immediately outselling Toyota's new top-selling Corona right after its launch, but why the Bluebird never officially came to the States is a bit of a mystery. Perhaps the company felt that the notion of an upscale Datsun in an age where they were trying to make a name for themselves selling cheap, honest, but fun transportation, would have been too much for the American market to bear.
Whatever the case, Bluebirds get plenty of respect from the 510 crowd. A few of these rare right-hand-drivers have landed on these shores: best estimates from www.datsunbluebird.com, the source that you'd visit to find information on such things, claim that a couple of dozen now reside in the States. Quite a few of these were converted to full-race status, so street-driven rides are more rare still. And of the street cars, most have been tweaked in some manner or other, somewhere between hubcap-wearing mild and full-on neon-freakout wild.
Count this one in the latter category. Ted Lo of Arcadia, CA, bought his Bluebird in March 2005, from a friend who had imported it privately. "It had been restored in Japan before my buddy bought it-new factory-color paint, new rubber, seals and all that," he says. While keeping this piece of old school history bone-stock would have been easy enough, particularly when it was already done and begging to be driven, that was never Ted's intention.
"I love the sound of the carburetors, but [that engine] just didn't move," Ted laments. "I thought it would be adequate, especially with those 40mm Mikunis, but when you're getting passed by minivans, you know it's time to step up." Start with the engine: the iron-block 1800 was yanked and sold back to the guy he bought the car from in favor of an all-aluminum S15-generation SR20DET, which, thanks in part to Nissan's variable-valve-timing head, is good for a solid 250 horsepower-before tweaks. A GReddy intake, TiAL blow-off valve and a high-flow, ceramic-coated tubular stainless steel exhaust manifold are all he's added to the basic factory package; he's left the stock ECU alone for the moment, though Ted's threatened that tweaks are coming. An HKS turbo timer is also part of the package to keep oil from cooking in the turbo housing.
Dropping an SR20 into a 510 is a common-enough swap these days, but that doesn't mean it's simple. "A lot of the 510 guys have a hard time with the exhaust manifold on SR20 swaps cause it bumps the steering column," Ted reports. "On right-hand-drive cars like the Bluebird, it's not such an issue." Along with the DET, Ted carried over and fitted the factory six-speed gearbox as well-though not before enlarging the Bluebird's tranny tunnel to fit it. The stock Silvia driveshaft was shortened and re-splined to work with the rear. Eschewing conventional wisdom and the Subaru limited-slip diff that often backs up a high-powered 510 swap, Ted used an R200 unit from the Z31-generation (1984-89) 300ZX Turbo. "It's beefier, it can handle the power and it's got that cool finned cover," Ted explained. The exhaust is catalyst-free and runs a single Rrated three-inch pipe all the way back to an HKS muffler.
1971 Datsun 510 - Back in the Day - That 70's Car
Are flares coming back as a retro-nouveau styling trend? This old school Datsun 510 makes a convincing argument
At the risk of sounding like an old fart, it's amazing how far tire technology has come in the past 20 years. Two decades ago, a 16-inch wheel was a big deal, reserved only for high-end sports cars and the aftermarket. Nowadays, rental-fleet Camrys come with 17-inchers. Go back further to the Mesozoic era of the 1960s and tires were bias-ply construction: thin treads, wiggly sidewalls and rock-hard rubber compounds, forcing you to hack away at the wheel drunkenly just to maintain a straight line. No wonder so many kids with muscle cars ended up wrapped around a tree back then; the tires were just miserable.
Around the same time, professional racers had it no better. Rubber compounds were softer, but they were still traction-limited; the rubber simply couldn't handle the power that the engines were putting out. Bigger, wider tires seemed to be the answer-more meat on the ground, more control and grip-and it worked for open-wheel racers like Indy 500 machines. But there are only so many ways to cram big tires under a car with fenders. Fiddle-farting around with backspacing will only get you so far, and the physical room in the wheel well further limits size. Unlike more modern cars, which are purpose-built to accept 18-inch wheels from the factory, old school wheel wells seem thoroughly filled by 15-inchers. Hacking away at the chassis subframes and completely rebuilding the suspension brings with it a-whole-nother host of issues. One recent solution is the donk trend, which is cool if you like old Chevys hopped up to look like monster trucks. But there's another solution: Widen the fenders!
It's true. Just like in '70s pantaloon fashion, flares are where it's at. We're not talking gentle little lips around the wheel openings; we're talking full-on fenders and quarters that are wide enough to rest your Big Gulp on. These so-called IMSA flares, informally named for the racecar sanctioning body, were born of the need to get more rubber on the ground-more rubber, more traction, more cornering power, more likely you won't end upside down in a ditch. Extending the fenders and wheel openings was a style trend readily seen in mid-70s issues of Hot Rod that your scary neighbor with the mullet and the Camaro had stashed in his attic alongside his AutoBuff collection.
Most trends come and go with the seasons, but flared fenders have enjoyed varying degrees of success. Some companies have restricted the idea to a raised lip around the wheel arch, while others have actually purpose-built extra space into their fenders and quarters (the Subaru WRX sedan comes to mind, as does the '80s E30-generation BMW M3). Widebody kits in Japan have been at the height of wild style for some time.
1971 Datsun 510 - Back in the Day - That 70's Car
So it seems only right that Steve Pepka of Beaverton, OR, went the '70s route with that most quintessential of '70s Japanese cars, the Datsun 510. In truth, the wheels and tires-17-inch HRE 540s, 8-inch wide in front and a whopping 10 in back, with 40-series Yokohama AVS tires-are the most modern part of this clean build. Carrera coilovers front and rear, offering a near-3-inch drop, and Quickor sway bars (25mm in front, 23mm out back) ensure that this rad runner has a racecar feel to match its look.
This look goes far beyond the widened wheelhouses, mind you. The side marker lights have been shaved, a spoiler has been molded to match the front fenders and the rear license plate has been relocated into a smooth rear panel. Rock Creek Coach Body Works handled the deft application of '84 Honda Navajo Metallic Red paint, while Daniel Daneki sorted out the subtle striping.
Pop the hood and instead of the transplanted SR20DET that seems to have been universally adopted by the Dime community, the iron L16 engine that came in 510s remains. Of course, the entire reciprocating assembly has been balanced, nitrated and shot-peened; compression was bumped to a lairy 11:1 thanks to the combination of flat-top pistons and a hot home-market SSS cylinder head stuffed with competition Datsun valves and springs. An SSS cam lives inside the block, and a pair of 38mm SU carburetors dangle precipitously off the side of the SSS-spec intake. Also, a shorty four-into-one header with 2.3-inch primaries and a 2.5-inch collector blows through a single two-chamber, 2.5-inch Flowmaster exhaust.
Rather than make do with the factory-equipped transmission, Steve swapped in a dogleg five-speed out of a 1980 200SX (or an S11-generation Silvia, if you prefer the Japan-spec name), and added a Centerforce clutch, aluminum flywheel and custom mounting. The rear has been similarly beefed up, with a Subaru limited-slip diff with 4.11 gears now residing within the axle housing, along with custom axles and CV joints, and a diff cooler.
So will the w-i-d-e look of fender flares come back into vogue? Tough to say. But if the results look, sound and drive as sweet as this 510 does, we say, bring it on!
1971 Datsun 510 - Back in the Day - That 70's Car
DESIGN HISTORY
The 510 and Bluebird's style was a bit of a breakthrough for Japanese cars when it debuted in '68: clean and functional. Though home-market advertising called it a "supersonic" design, Nissan designer Teruo Uchino insists that traveling beyond the speed of sound wasn't his design objective. "I imagined a speedy car on a highway that could be built very soon in Japan ... but SST was not the motif of my original design. The truth is not always so exciting."
The 510 and Bluebird's style was a bit of a breakthrough for Japanese cars when it debuted in '68: clean and functional. Though home-market advertising called it a "supersonic" design, Nissan designer Teruo Uchino insists that traveling beyond the speed of sound wasn't his design objective. "I imagined a speedy car on a highway that could be built very soon in Japan ... but SST was not the motif of my original design. The truth is not always so exciting."
Uchino rose quickly through Nissan's ranks: he joined Nissan in 1963 after graduating from Tokyo National University, and clay work on the 510 started in the summer of '64. A 1965 design team reorganization postponed things, but Uchino's design concept won out in a design studio competition. Uchino's later ideas included the Datsun 610, 710, S11-generation 200SX, the interior of the Nissan Leopard (sold in the US as the Infiniti M30), and finally the 1990 Nissan Primera, sold here as the Infiniti G20.
OWNER Steve Pepka
HOMETOWN Beaverton, OR
DAILY GRIND Mechanic
UNDER THE HOOD 11:1 compression L16 I-4 with SSS intake, head and cam; balanced and nitrated rotating assembly; JDM 38mm SU side-draft carburetors; four-into-one exhaust
DRIVETRAIN '80 Nissan 200SX five-speed transmission with custom mount and Centerforce clutch; stock rear housing with Subaru limited-slip differential, 4.11 gear; custom axles and CV joints
STIFF STUFF Carrera coilovers; Quickor sway bars
STOPPERS cross-drilled front rotors; stock rear drums
ROLLERS 17-inch HRE 540 wheels (8-inch front, 10-inch rear); Yokohama AVS 215/40R17 front, 245/40R17 rear
OUTSIDE boxed wheel flares, smoothed-in front spoiler, reshaped rear panel with license plate recess, shaved side marker lights, '84 Honda Navajo Red paint
INSIDE recovered stock with Howard's Upholstery diamond-pleat button-tuck grey vinyl; MOMO Corse steering wheel
ICE Sony head unit; Pioneer speakers
HOMETOWN Beaverton, OR
DAILY GRIND Mechanic
UNDER THE HOOD 11:1 compression L16 I-4 with SSS intake, head and cam; balanced and nitrated rotating assembly; JDM 38mm SU side-draft carburetors; four-into-one exhaust
DRIVETRAIN '80 Nissan 200SX five-speed transmission with custom mount and Centerforce clutch; stock rear housing with Subaru limited-slip differential, 4.11 gear; custom axles and CV joints
STIFF STUFF Carrera coilovers; Quickor sway bars
STOPPERS cross-drilled front rotors; stock rear drums
ROLLERS 17-inch HRE 540 wheels (8-inch front, 10-inch rear); Yokohama AVS 215/40R17 front, 245/40R17 rear
OUTSIDE boxed wheel flares, smoothed-in front spoiler, reshaped rear panel with license plate recess, shaved side marker lights, '84 Honda Navajo Red paint
INSIDE recovered stock with Howard's Upholstery diamond-pleat button-tuck grey vinyl; MOMO Corse steering wheel
ICE Sony head unit; Pioneer speakers
1973 Mazda Rx-3
1973 Mazda Rx-3 Savanna - Living Deviously
The dictionary defines devious as follows: "showing a skillful use of underhanded tactics to achieve goals." When it comes to ex-pro New Zealand motocross rider Johnny Burkhart's pride and joy RX-3 (with plate DVS3. Get it?), that definition seems to fit about as well as bald Britney would into the cast of American History X-sure she's got the haircut, but realistically, she would only be useful in a fight if you tied a stick to one end and used her as a club.
You see, there's nothing particularly underhanded about Johnny's super-fine rotary-its hoodless front happily displaying its immense manhood to the world doesn't mislead anyone. One look at the whopping turbocharger hanging off the side instantly grabs the interest of anyone who knows anything about cars. It's not so devious, but the definition of deviant is much closer to the money: "departing from usual or accepted standards, esp. in social or sexual behavior." Now, we don't know (or want to know) what Johnny's libidinous proclivities entail, but if you heard his 13B screaming its ring out through the massive four-inch pipe, you'd know that it's not socially acceptable.
During the picturesque photo shoot at Mount Ruapehu in New Zealand's North Island (it's the one that blew its volcanic top a few years back) Johnny demonstrated just how much wick the black RX has got. When he went out to pass the photographer's pickup, a bit too much of the right foot sent the RX-3's back end out, and then back the other way as he shifted up another gear. That's what street-legal rotorvation, Kiwi-style, is all about.
"I've always been into RX-3 coupes and wanted one with big horsepower," says Johnny, who listed his aims for the build-up as "big rims, black, big horsepower, a strong and reliable street car". With 470 horsepower at the wheels running a relatively low 17psi boost setting, it's on the right track. The car laid down a sizzling 11.6-second pass on its first outing while still on low boost. Translate that to the street and it can easily be labeled deviant. But while some folk are happy living boring little lives and driving boring little cars, it just doesn't make sense to the rest of us.
An all-out build like this genuine Savanna is hard work by any standard, but try it while wearing plaster casts and it gets a lot more challenging. After a monster crash at New Zealand's Supercross Nationals, Johnny's dirt racing career was over, so he had some time on his, er, hands. "I built the RX-3 while in a cast," he says. "It was four big operations and seven months all bandaged up after dislocating and breaking both arms and wrists." Now he's got his sights set on some good quarter-mile fun to satisfy the speed bug-courtesy of an angry bridgeported 13B.
Langganan:
Postingan (Atom)