Category: Maxxd News

  • INTERIOR MOTIVE: VW GOLF MK3.5 CABRIO

    This Mk3.5 cabrio has been a relentless four-year odyssey for apprentice trimmer Max Hawkes. And with an eye for detail and the passion and tenacity to see it all through, he’s achieved his dreams of a super-intricate show stopper…

    VW Cabrio 3.5 golfVW Cabrio 3.5 golf

    The pursuit of effortlessness is something that really characterises the modern world. A huge amount of effort goes into the act of making life simpler – just look at the radically reworked interior of Max Hawkes Mk3.5 Golf cabrio for proof. He can take his phone out of his pocket and leave it on his custom wireless charger, and it’ll automatically start working with the wireless CarPlay function on his cutting-edge Kenwood headunit. How clever is that? This act of casual simplicity is shored up by an incredible level of complexity and effort, and that serves as a symbol for the car as a whole. Classy, crisp, tastefully finished… what appears at first glance to simply be a nicely looked after 1990s Golf reveals ever-deeper layers of graft and sweat the more you look. What we’re observing here is four years of solid effort, the upshot being one of the most comprehensively modified VWs on the scene today.

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    The story begins, somewhat unusually, with Max being gifted the car by his parents as something to practice his interior trimming skills on, and it’s fair to say he picked up that baton and ran with it. “They probably didn’t expect me to take four years to start trimming it though,” he laughs.

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    VWs were in his blood from the start, having grown up around various classics that his dad was working on, and Max’s first car – a Lupo – provided a solid learning curve. Road-trips with mates to buy wheels, fitting coilovers on the drive, this is the stuff lifelong memories are made of. Around this time he started an apprenticeship at celebrated trimmers d:class Automotive, which was when the cabrio arrived on the scene. Then another Lupo appeared, and a ’65 Beetle, and a 6N Polo rally car… but all the while the Mk3.5 had been lurking in the background waiting for its time to shine.

    VW Cabrio 3.5 golfVW Cabrio 3.5 golf

    “My dad bought it from a painter he used to work with, where it was being used as a work van and family car, so the interior was absolutely destroyed,” Max recalls. “It was completely stock, a 2.0-litre Colour Concept in Jazz Blue. The carpets were soaking wet with hydraulic fluid from the roof, and it had a few mouldy surprises around the interior. We also found endless toys and Lego men dotted around – which have been decontaminated and kept safe! Yet, for a Mk3 of its age, it had very little rust so it proved to be a perfect base to work from.”

    VW Cabrio 3.5 golfVW Cabrio 3.5 golf

    And without further ado, Max got to work. Having run budget coilovers on all his previous projects, he was keen to try air-ride with this one, so job one was to fit a used Air Lift setup with 3P management, and this was quickly followed by addressing that questionable Jazz Blue finish. So he began to prep for paint and, since there’s no point doing things by halves, he also set about rolling the wings flat and filling in the indicator holes, relocating the repeaters and welding the aerial hole. The car received a smattering of USDM chic too, with the front bumper and rubstrip providing a transatlantic flavour along with the ‘twindicator’ headlights. (And if you’re wondering why they’re Mk4 headlights – the Mk3.5 cabrio was a facelift of the Mk3, which kept the same body but adopted the styling of the Mk4. Clear? Great).

    VW Cabrio 3.5 golfVW Cabrio 3.5 golf

    With these details taken care of, the shell was handed to a professional for a fresh new coat of Sahara Beige… and with the old 2.0 8-valve engine removed anyway, he figured he may as well swap in a 2.0 16-valve ABF. Why not, eh? The GTI-spec motor was treated to twin Weber 45s for an old-school twist, having been stripped, cleaned, serviced and painted. It sits in a beautifully smoothed bay, a custom manifold-back single-box exhaust helping it find its voice, and having had an astronomical quote to sort the wiring loom, Max opted to do it himself. “This was by far the longest and most confusing part of the entire project,” he says, “although it did lead to one of the funniest memories – accidentally having the horn wired to be permanently on every time the key was turned, making my girlfriend jump out of
    her skin!”

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    While all this was going on, he’d been putting a lot of thought into wheels; Max knew he wanted something custom and deep-dished, and ultimately landed on the idea of Porsche cookie cutters. These were reimagined as 16-inch three-piece splits, with the arches reprofiled to house their broad and staggered girth. “DR Services helped with widening the rear arches,” he explains. “No cutting of the outer arch skin took place, they were panel-beaten out to be at least 1.5-inch wider than factory while keeping the original look – meaning most people probably wouldn’t even notice this has been done! The inner arch was also cut and reshaped to allow for clearance of the tyre in the arch when aired out.

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    “Once the car was wired and water-tight, it was then the last push to go to a family friend’s business, JKM Motor Services,” he continues. “They did an outstanding job making the car run perfectly for the first time since we ripped out the old engine. It then went for its first MOT with the new engine, where it passed first time and was legally roadworthy! And then came the deadline: Players Classic 2019 at Goodwood, where I was on the stand for Kenwood. The final stage of this build was where my expertise lie – the interior build…”

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    This is where things start to get really juicy. Such is the level of detail, Max reckons he put well over four-hundred hours into the retrim, which frankly just boggles our minds. First stripping everything out, he meticulously planned where to fit the sound-deadening and position every element of the comprehensive suite of Kenwood upgrades he was planning. “One of the biggest modifications was to fit a doubleDIN headunit into the singleDIN dash,” he explains. “I wanted this to look as original as possible, as if it was factory. With the help of John Mandeville, the entire centre section was modified and reshaped to accommodate the brand new, state of the art Kenwood headunit”.

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    The DMX8019DABS Multimedia System is one of the most advanced releases we’ve ever seen, the new headunit is the pinnacle of Kenwood’s popular DMX range, and the one with a monster spec that you’ll inevitably end up drooling over in Halfords when it hits the shelves this month. What makes this slimline mechless system so special? Well forget the term ‘game-changer’ for a second and think ‘wireless Apple CarPlay’!

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    That’s right, this box of tricks is the very first from Kenwood to use wifi to offer Apple CarPlay without the need for a hard cable connection. The future’s wireless and Max is already ahead of the game. “I also created a wireless charging facility in the base of the centre console, so that I could effectively charge my phone while maintaining connection to wireless CarPlay featured within the new stereo.” explains Max.

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    The doorcards were then extensively modified, carpets replaced in a more old-school style, and then a thorough design laid out for the retrim: Max wanted all of the stitching to flow from one panel to the next, a cohesive aesthetic with each piece drawing the eye to the next. Brown leather was chosen, with contrasting cream twin-stitch to tie the interior and exterior colours together. It’s extremely cleverly done, with the stitching visually isolating the driver zone from the passengers, while the side sills run alongside to tie in the B-pillar and rollbar, finishing in the rear quarters and over the rear seat. The details are mind-blowing too – the fusebox cover has even been lasered with the original fuse order. The attention to detail is staggering.

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    “Aside from the stitching, I used a CNC machine – courtesy of d:class – to perforate the speaker grilles on the doorcards and rear quarters,” he goes on. “The pattern consists of a range of varying-sized triangles, inspired by the Kenwood logo, which expand toward the speaker itself. The CNC machine also produced the centres of the seats; this was a hard part to design, as I needed to ensure that it remained simple and fit in with the rest of the theme of the car, while also showing the capabilities of the machine. A lot of people may not notice that the perforation in the seat base fades from front to back, and also has a body-colour beige within the holes. The embroidery in the seats is perhaps not so subtle, but is an ode to all the companies that have helped me along the way.”

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    With the Players Classic fast approaching, Max decided to trim two of his custom wheels in matching leather, before trimming the original hoodbag to match. Everything on the car that could be refinished was, with our hero using a full six hides of brown leather. “My colleagues and boss helped massively, but nearly all of the retrimming was done by myself,” he says. “As a final flourish, I got my friend James Giddings to re-cover the BBS steering wheel – he said it was the hardest wheel he’d ever retrimmed in his entire career, a fact he pleasantly reminded me of every single day!”

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    The finished product we see today is sumptuous, fabulous, impeccable, and it’s key to remember that it was really all about the build: this Golf has basically been Max’s whole life for the last four years. A group of close friends helped keep him sane and pitched in where they could, but around 90-percent of what’s been achieved was all Max’s own work, and it really is a phenomenal achievement. Four-hundred hours painstakingly retrimming the interior alone, as well as finding cunning places for all of those Kenwood speakers, and of course that super-clever head unit; then there’s the flawless bodywork, the custom wheels, the hot-to-trot carb-fed ABF… the level of work and creativity in this car is simply unbelievable. So when you see it at shows – which you will – bear this fact in mind: it takes a hell of a lot of stress to look this relaxed.

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    TECH SPEC: VW GOLF MK3.5

    Styling:
    Full respray in VW Sahara Beige, smooth USDM front bumper, ‘twindicator’ USDM modded headlights, brand new front wings rolled completely flat – with aerial hole welded over and side indicators relocated to USDM front rubstrip, rear arches rolled and panel-beaten wider by 1.5-inch to keep OEM look, custom brown mohair roof with tinted rear window

    Tuning:
    2.0-litre 16v ABF, twin Weber 45 carbs with Pipercross filters, manifold-back exhaust system with single rear silencer and twin upswept tips, custom expansion tank, battery relocated under rear seat and swapped for 2x race batteries, ABS delete (replaced with bias valves), top mount covers retrimmed, heater matrix inlet trim cover, gas strut trimmed, scuttle panel wiper clearance smoothed and trimmed, custom Pipercross cabin filter, engine bay smoothed, scuttle panel removed with chassis legs and side panels welded in – painted Sahara Beige

    Chassis:
    7.5x16in (front) and 8.5x16in (rear) custom Porsche cookie cutter split-rims – one side painted brown, one side trimmed in leather, original Porsche centre caps painted/trimmed to match with laser-etched Porsche crests, Air Lift suspension with 3P management, rear beam relocation plates (to centralise wheels when aired out), new OE calipers and discs all round, chassis notch for driveshaft, front balljoint extenders (to allow car to sit lower), custom power-steering lines and bottle

    Interior:
    Dash centre modified to fit Kenwood doubleDIN wireless CarPlay headunit – heater controls and all switches moved to allow for larger unit, 12v socket relocated to glovebox, dash trimmed to owner’s design, dash speaker grilles trimmed with Kenwood speakers pattern (designed by owner), lower glovebox trimmed inside and out, fusebox lid trimmed with laser-engraved fuse list, BBS steering wheel retrimmed with custom hand-stitch style, all interior plastics (apart from dash driver zone) painted to match leather, centre console retrimmed including wireless phone charger, all stitching flowing into dash as one loop to highlight driver zone, front windscreen surround and sun visors trimmed, front and rear doorcards trimmed with owner’s custom-designed Kenwood speaker covers perforated and embroidered, front door pockets with leather inserts (for softer touch), window switches relocated from doors to centre console, speaker grilles modified with leather covers, full custom carpet set in brown twin-loop, retrimmed matching leather hoodbag, front and rear Recaro Colour Concept seats retrimmed with seat centres CNC machined perforated, stitched and embroidered by d:class automotive

    Audio:
    Kenwood DMX8019DABS wireless CarPlay headunit; Kenwood KFC X174 front door speakers, Kenwood KFC PS1095 rear quarters, Kenwood KFC dash tweeters, Kenwood X301 4-channel amp, Kenwood PSW8 under-seat subwoofer, Kenwood DRV N520 dash camera

    Thanks:
    “I would like to say thank you to James Horwood, Bryan Butler, Craig Searle, Drew Stanley, Harry Pitcher, Kieran Bicknell, Dan Guiery: for the hours that they have put into helping build this car! Another massive thank you needs to go to Keith @Kenwooduk, for giving me the kick I needed to get the car done in time for Players Classic. I couldn’t have finished in time for that deadline if I didn’t have John Mandeville, David Price, James Giddings, Laurence Burchall and Andy Young and others at D:Class helping out. The bodywork wouldn’t have been complete without Angus for painting, Dave Rush on metal work and Barry for last minute crises! The wiring wouldn’t have been completed without help of a lot of people, mainly John Newman who knows so much about Volkswagens it’s unbelievable. Thank you to UK Hide, Pipercross, JKM, Meguiar’s, and Laser Cut London for the services and products that they supplied. And finally thank you to my parents for buying the car for me to begin with, and also Zoe for dealing with me through the past four years!”

    Words Daniel Bevis Photography George F. Williams

    Source

  • FC TV EP14: TWIN TURBO LW HURACAN

    Welcome to Fast Car TV! With awesome builds, new products, tech talks and which cars we’d buy to modify, think of it as the magazine…but moving and talking! In this episode, Jules from Fast Car is joined by Elliott from Performance VW to discuss some modern Volkswagen bargains and drool over a twin turbo LW Huracan show car built for SEMA in a week! Make sure you check out Ep13 here and don’t forget to subscribe to our channel

    [embedded content]

    With no SEMA 2020 event for obvious reasons, it was a good time to look back at some of the crazy cars that appeared at SEMA 2019, with this twin turbo LW Huracan, just one of the special, unique cars on display. It’s made even more special when you realise the team behind the build had it completed in just one week…

    Also in the video, Elliott talks us through some VW bargains that you can get your hands on if you’re looking for fun, but cheap thrills. And Jules talks us through products and tech.

    You can have a nosey through our selection of cars from SEMA 2019 here.

    Source

  • AFFORDABLE TRACK CAR PROJECTS: TOP 10

    Time on track is probably the most fun you can have in a car. Here’s our Top 10 affordable track car projects to get you started in the world of track days.

    Any car can be a track car. You’ve literally just got to drive a car onto a track and bingo, you’ve already won. The first stage, really, is to teach yourself to be a track driver: adjust your methods of driving so that you’re essentially unlearning all of the good habits you use around town to be more aggressive on the circuit. Late braking, wide-open throttle, taking racing lines through corners, all the things you wouldn’t do on the way to Tesco (unless you’re some kind of terrifying menace to society). As your skills grow and you start to reach the limits of the car, you can begin to refine and optimise things to improve the experience – upgrading to some quality track-biased tyres, fitting more aggressive brake pads, uprating your suspension, maybe going a bit mad and throwing your rear seats in the bin in the name of weight loss. And once you get really serious, you’ll probably find that you’re building yourself a dedicated track car rather than using your daily driver.

    Now, this might sound like an expensive hobby, but it doesn’t need to be. Once you’ve budgeted for the essentials, like a quality helmet and the necessary track day entry fees, the amount you spend on your track car is totally up to you – it needn’t necessarily cost a fortune, it can be surprisingly inexpensive. So we thought that, in the name of encouraging some entry-level track fun, we’d pull together a top-ten of our favourite bases for affordable track-based projects. Naturally the concept of ‘affordable’ is entirely subjective – some people may have earmarked a couple of grand for their next project, others will be lucky enough to have £5k, maybe even£10k, while some (like us) will be picking the lint out of their pockets in search of an extra 50p. So we’ve tried to keep this list sensible – some of these cars can be found for a couple of thousand (or less), but none of them will set you back more than £5,000 to buy. We’ve had a little look at the performance potential for each one, so you know what you might be getting into. Have fun choosing, and be sure to send us some pictures of your track exploits! Remember, shiny-side-up, and keep out of the kitty litter… Here’s out top 10 affordable track car projects.

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    Vauxhall Corsa VXR

    We’re talking about the Corsa D here, the one sold from 2007-14, and the VXR is looking like pretty decent value at around £3,000. Within that aggressive little bodykit and hunkered-down stance you’ll find a 1.6-litre turbo motor spitting out 189bhp, and you also get a decent set of Recaros as standard. These are cars that were made to be modded, as Vauxhall proved by having a crack at it themselves more than once: in 2008 they offered a ‘888’package, which included AP Racing brakes and a bunch of suspension tweaks. And then of course there was the Nürburgring Edition, which came bristling with 202bhp, Bilstein dampers, lowered springs, uprated exhaust, forged wheels and, most importantly, a Drexler torque-sensing LSD. But even if you have a bone-stock VXR, you’ve still got a super playful track toy, and all of those upgrades are things you can readily find in the aftermarket. We’d suggest the most entertaining route is to find one that’s a bit aesthetically shabby but mechanically tip-top, then just strip out and throw away the interior, whack it on a set of Bilstein B14s (replacing all the bushes as you go), fit some sticky Nankang AR-1 tyres, then blow the budget on Tarox6-pots. That little package would be a whole bunch of fun.

    Price today: £3000

    Top mods: Bilstein B14 Coilovers, Drexler LSD, semi-slicks, Goodridge braides hoses.

    Ford Fiesta ST150 (Mk6)

    The Ford Fiesta ST150 has a hell of a lot going for it as a track project. We’re talking about the Mk6 Fiesta ST here, the one sold between 2003-08, and it’s often referred to as the ST150 because (you’ve probably guessed) it has 150bhp. This is courtesy of a 2.0-litre Duratec, a big engine to shove into a little car at the time – and it’s pretty tuneable too. The ST also received a fresh bodykit with different bumpers and spoilers, disc brakes at the rear (lesser models sometimes had drums), lower and sportier suspension, and part-leather seats – with the option of full heated leather. The best part is that you can pick up a tidy example for about £2,000, and there are plentiful upgraded parts available off the shelf. A set of Newman cams, a Cosworth intake manifold and a bigger throttle body will get you well over 200bhp, and that’s just for starters! Throw in a 3J Driveline LSD, a set of KW coilovers and some meatier brakes and you’ll be laughing. Quite literally. All the time.

    Price today: £2000

    Top mods: Newman Cams, KW Coilovers, 3J Driveline LSD.

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    BMW 3 Series (E46)

    The E46 makes for an awesome budget track rocket these days – the prices have come way down, and they’re still plentiful enough on the used market that you can pick and choose to find a good one. And despite the number of them that are being ragged to destruction on the drift scene, it’s worth remembering that these aren’t just skidders, they make for excellent circuit toys. Naturally you’re not going to find a cheap M3, and you may well find that the petrol/manual 325i options (or, if you can track one down, the 330i) are increasingly prone to scene tax. But any E46 is a fun E46 – you may be lucky and get one with a big engine, but even a 318i will be a hoot once you’ve stripped it out and got it on some decent suspension and rubber. There are plentiful parts options available, and a huge number of owners groups on various social channels that can help you pick out the best mods for track heroism –so it’s not just a fun project, it’s a gateway into a whole new community. Start with some HSD coilovers (and we’d recommend OEM shock tower reinforcement plates to prevent ‘mushrooming’) and a set of Nankang NS-2R tyres, and work up from there.

    Price today: £1500

    Top mods: Shock lower reinforcement plates, HSD Coilovers, Nankang NS-2Rs.

    Porsche Boxster (986)

    How brave are you feeling? Buying a cheap early Boxster is one of those life decisions which could end up being the best choice you ever make, or the most financially ruinous. And the fun part is that there’s no way of knowing which way it’ll go – still, it’s good to roll the dice sometimes isn’t it?

    There are a few things you can look out for to help your peace of mind: most important is a good service history, as the engine’s pretty inaccessible so it’s possible a budget-minded owner won’t have bothered. Check for wet carpets caused by roof leaks, as the ECU’s under that soggy carpet, and walk away from overheating cars as early ones sometimes had terminally porous engine blocks.

    However, if you’ve bought a good one, you’ll find yourself with a fabulous track car right out of the box –awesome handling, endless grip, perfect steering, and oodles of potential for upgrades. Suspension mods can be handled in three phases if you want to spread the cost: first upgrade the anti-roll bars to H&R items, then whack on some Eibach springs, and finally (when you’re ready for maximum attack) swap in some Bilstein B16 coilovers. A lightweight flywheel and Quaife LSD make a massive difference, and the combo of K&N induction and Milltek exhaust is a no-brainer.

    Price today: £5000

    Top mods: H&R anti-roll bars, Milltek exhaust, Quaife LSD, Goodridge braided hoses.

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    Toyota Celica (Mk7)

    The Mk7 generation was very few people’s favourite Celica. But that’s their loss and your gain, because these peachy little coupes can be picked up for around £2,000 (often even less), and you’re buying a whole lot of performance potential for the money. The most important thing is tomake sure you buy the right one to start with; you see, they all came with 1.8-litre engines, but confusingly there were two different ones sold at the same time. The 1ZZ-FE motor served up 140bhp which was perfectly OK, but the 2ZZ-GEis the one you want; co-developed by Yamaha and sporting variable valve timing and two-step variable valve lift control(which is sort of Toyota’s version of VTEC), it gives you more revs and 188bhp, which is much more like it. How can you tell if you’ve got the right one? Helpfully, it’s written on the engine cover: the 140bhp motor is badged VVT-I,while the 188bhp one says VVTL-I – that little L makes all the difference.

    So, you’ve got a decent starting point. And once you’ve added in some Goodridge braided lines, grooved discs and Orange Stuff pads from EBC and a set of BC Racing coilovers, you can talk to Fensport about a remap. These engines love being cammed too, Cat Cams can help you with that.

    Price today: £2000

    Top mods: EBC discs/pads/lines, BC Racing coilovers, Fensport map.

    Honda Civic Type R (EP3)

    The EP3 is one of those cars that you can buy for under a couple of grand, but you probably shouldn’t. There’s a fair few of them about still, and a lot of them have been thrashed mercilessly, so the sub-two-grand cars are always a bit baggy – cheap to buy, but you’ll spend a fortune fixing it up. If you’re after a tidy road car for daily use you can budget up to £5k, although good usable ones for track purposes will be between £3-4k. The most important things to check for are a) a good service history and b)a sympathetic owner – because the K20 motor uses a surprising amount of oil, and its sky-high redline and VTEC lunacy encourage drivers to push it hard… if it hasn’t had its oil checked and topped up regularly, it’ll be eating itself.

    Find a good one and you’ll be very happy. These thing sare simply phenomenal on track! Start with the chassis mods: Hardrace rear camber arms and lower control arms, Eibach front camber bolts, JDM rear anti-roll bar and Eibach Pro Kit springs will get you cornering like a champ. If you’ve got cash to splurge, an LSD is a strong option (although with your chassis mods and a decent alignment setup, by no means essential). Exhaust upgrades are more for noise than actual power unless you swap the manifold too– Tegiwa can help with a full system, and a carbon-boxed ITG Maxogen induction kit is a great addition. And bear in mind that if you want to map it, you’ll need to physically open up the ECU and get a Hondata piggyback chip fitted.

    Price today: £4000

    Top mods: JDM anti-roll bar, Hardrace camber arms, ITG Maxogen induction.

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    Mazda MX-5 (NA)

    We can’t stop looking at these in the classifieds, as we’re waiting for the time to come when serious big-money collectors start snapping up the mint ones for silly prices and drag up the values of all the crap rusty ones. Amazingly, it’s still possible to pick up a solid and MOT’d Mk1 (NA) MX-5 for about £1,500, which has to be the bargain of the century. Aside from the fact that it’s got pop-up headlights (and all the coolest cars have pop-ups), it’s another worldly experience to drive: probably the sweetest manual gearshift of any car ever, a super-playful chassis which you essentially steer with your butt-cheeks, an eager little twin-cam that wants to rev for days. Believe the hype, these cars are fabulous.

    Look out for rust in the sills and rear arches, and avoid any car that has ‘DETUNED’ stamped on the V5 (these UKDM-only 1.6s only had 88bhp,for some reason), and you shouldn’t have anything to worry about. The mechanicals are bombproof, and there are plenty of tuning options whether you go for the 1.6 or the 1.8. A Japspeed short-ram intake is a good start, along with a Racing Beat exhaust. With the 1.6, a set of Kent Cams ‘SportsR’ camshafts eliminate the flat-spot at the top of the rev range. It’s also worth bearing in mind that while there was never a factory turbo MX-5,these engines were designed with forced induction in mind as they also appeared in the 323 Turbo – so there’s a lot of aftermarket turbocharging options. BBR are the experts to talk to there. Whiteline ARBS are well regarded, and if you’re getting really serious then Öhlins Road and Track coilovers are the way to go. Goodridge braided brake lines are a must and try some EBC Yellow Stuff pads too.

    Price today: £1500

    Top mods: Racing Beat exhaust, Whiteline anti-roll bars, Japspeed short-ram induction

    SEAT Leon Cupra 20VT

    This is the forgotten Cupra. Based on the Mk4 Golf platform, it’s always been overshadowed by its upgraded Cupra R sibling, which had the TT 225-spec BAM engine. But the regular 180bhp-spec Leon Cupra 20VT has always been a bit of a hidden gem – not least because it’s pretty stealthy. These cars are usually found in burgundy or dark blue, looking like regular OAP shopper runabouts rather than full-fat hot hatches. But with a super-tweakable 1.8T under the bonnet and all the good bits from the VAG parts bin throughout the chassis, you can build a real weapon here.

    Essentially, anything you can do to a Mk4 Golf, you can do to this. A Revo remap will easily take that 180bhp base up to around 210bhp, then you can add in a Milltek exhaust, RamAir induction, and the sky’s the limit. With a few supporting mods, the bigger turbo from the 225 engine will pay huge dividends, and once things start to get really hardcore you can save those pennies for a K-Sport 8-pot BBK and some KW V3 coilovers. Keep it in that boring stock paint shade and wrap the standard alloys in semi-slicks, and no-one will suspect a thing…

    Price today: £2000

    Top mods: Revo remap, Milltek exhaust, KW coilovers, Toyo R888R tyres.

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    MINI Cooper S (R53)

    Much like the EP3 Civic, the R53 Cooper S is a car that you can very easily pick up for peanuts, but it might not be a great idea. Yes, you can buy one for under £2k, but buying one for closer to £4k with a decent history will be less painful in the long run.

    These cars are an absolute blast on track even in standard form, and the thing we’d recommend first of all is to downsize the supercharger pulley. There are various percentage options but there’s no point mucking about – go for the full-on 17% pulley, combine it with an Airtec top-mount intercooler and your stock 170bhp will suddenly rise to around 200bhp. Plus, the blower will be wailing like a banshee!

    It’s not cheap, but the next step for the serious track fan is to swap in a full Eibach chassis makeover – coilovers, top-mounts, anti-roll bars, the lot. It makes a world of difference, and turns a really good car into a great one. And one of the things R53s are known for is the pops and crackles from the exhaust – particularly facelift models, which had more of this stuff mapped in from the factory! There’s a lot of exhaust options out there, but our extensive research found that the Scorpion system sounds the best – as well as adding a few horses, of course. An LSD makes a huge difference to these cars too: some models had them fitted as factory-standard (like the Checkmate edition, for instance), but otherwise get yourself a Quaife ATB.

    Price today: £4000

    Top mods: 17% pulley, Airtec intercooler, Scorpion exhaust

    Affordable Track Car ProjectsAffordable Track Car Projects

    Audi TT 225 (Mk1)

    The Mk1 TT is another of those cars that’s so goodto drive, it amazes us that they can still be bought so inexpensively. When Audi saw fi t to bolt in a quattro system underneath, they created a chuckable coupe that would just grip and grip and grip until the tarmac itself started rucking up like a hallway carpet. Combine this with the crazy BAM engine (which involved so much more than bolting a big turbo to a 1.8T; it also had upgraded pistons and rods, juicier fuelling and bigger intercoolers), and you’ve got the recipe for something truly special. £2k buys a tidy runner, and the tuning world’s your oyster. We’d start with a Milltek cat-back and RamAir induction as your belt-and-braces mods, combined with a set of Goodridge braided lines, EBC grooved discs and Red Stuff ceramic pads. Upgrade to a Forge front-mount intercooler, and a Revo Stage2 map will catapult you up to about 275bhp. Some Toyo R888Rs will help you deploy this effectively, and a Haldex controller can send more torque to the rear wheels for fruitier handling.

    Price today: £2000

    Top mods: Milltek exhaust, Forge intercooler, Revo remap, Goodridge braided hoses.

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