Category: Maxxd News

  • PAGANI HUAYRA R V12 SOUNDS INCREDIBLE

    Stop what you’re doing and listen to the new Pagani Huayra R, or more specifically, it’s naturally-aspirated, 6.0-litre V12 engine, which revs to an incredible 9,000rpm!

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    While we’ll have to wait to see the new Pagani Huayra actually driven hard on track, the video above is how its engine sounds. The 838bhp, nautrally-aspirated 6.0-litre V12 engine was built from the ground up by none other than HWA AG, in other words, the same people that built the engine in the Mercedes CLK GTR and also reportedly had a hand in the engine seen in the Apollo IE hypercar. Other Pagani Huayra variations saw the marque use Mercedes-AMG twin-turbo V12 engines.

    Pagani Huayra R

    The car in which this engine was designed and built for is Pagani’s all-new track-only Huayra R, which follows in the footsteps of the predecessor, the Zonda R.

    Rather than develop the regular Huayra into a track-only special, Pagani has reportedly built the car from the ground up, debuting a new chassis, aero package and of course, that V12 engine.

    Pagani Huayra R

    Officially, that engine weighs just 198kg and produces 838bhp at 8250rpm and 553lb ft of troque between 5500 and 8300rpm. It also revs to a colossal 9000rpm.

    HWA also developed the bespoke six-speed sequential gearbox, transferring that power to the track.

    Where the magic happens is in the acoustics department, with a bespoke Inconel system that was designed to extract the most performance and sound as possible. It would be fair in saying it’s nothing short of an f1-esque sound.

    It’s worth noting now that the Pagani Huayra tips the scales at just 1050kg (dry weight), thanks to not having to comply with safety regulations of the road.

    That bonkers, motorsport-tailored aero package helps the Huayra R to develop 1000kg of force at 199mph.

    Prices start at £2.2m before taxes, with just 30 examples being built.

    Tech Spec: Pagani Huayra R

    Engine 6-litre naturally-aspirated V12, 9000rpm redline
    Max power 838bhp @ 8250rpm, 553lb ft @ 5500 – 8300rpm
    Transmission Six-speed sequential
    Suspension Independent double wishbone with helical springs and electronically controlled active shock absorbers
    Brakes Brembo CCM-R carbon ceramic discs; 410mm front, 390mm rear, six-piston calipers front and rear
    Weight (dry) 1050kg
    Power-to-weight 798bhp/ton

    Source

  • MITSUBISHI 3000GT BUYING AND TUNING GUIDE

    The Mitsubishi 3000GT has never shone like its Japanese counterparts. However, with prices for the high-tech supercoupé relatively low, is now the time to buy one? Here’s our quickfire Mitsubishi 3000GT buying and tuning guide.

    What is it?

    The UK-market Mitsubishi 3000GT and JDM GTO represent phenomenal value for money right now. They’re pretty rare, but naturally-aspirated examples can be found for £4,000 with turbocharged variants hovering around the £10k mark. Although it’s worth bearing in mind that, as hideously complex high-performance cars, there isn’t actually any such thing as a cheap one – you’ll end up spending the money somewhere!

    Mitsubishi 3000GT

    The 1990s supercoupé market saw Japanese manufacturers developing high-tech sports cars aimed squarely at the American market: the Mk4 Toyota Supra, the Nissan 300ZX, the quasi-supercar Honda NSX, and of course the feisty Mitsubishi GTO – badged as 3000GT in the UK due to copyright issues. The big Mitsi was a full-on geekfest of a car; the transversely-mounted 3.0-litre V6 engine had 24v heads, with the top-of-the-range model also getting twin turbos and, because Mitsubishi know a thing or two about chassis development, it had four-wheel steering, adaptive suspension, and full-time all-wheel drive. It also had active aerodynamics, with the front and rear spoilers adjusting themselves automatically, and there was also a variant offered with a mechanical retracting hardtop, creating the GTO Spyder. While they are essentially the same car, the JDM GTO and the UKDM 3000GT are markedly different propositions; the GTO was offered with the full suite of spec options – you could have the 6G72 V6 motor in nat-asp form for 222bhp, or with Mitsubishi’s proprietary turbochargers (one for each bank, each with its own intercooler) to amp things up to 276bhp. You could choose between a five-speed manual or a four-speed auto, and between cloth or leather trim. With our own domestic Mitsubishi 3000GT, however, the only real option was the full-bore, all-boxes-ticked variant. If you were buying one of these, it came by default as a twin-turbo (upped to 296bhp) with a manual ’box and leather trim. Early examples had super-cool pop-up headlights, although post-1994 cars replaced these with fixed units.

    The relatively high price and so-so press reviews kept a lot of buyers out of the showrooms, but enough of them sold to ensure that they’re still findable as used cars today. It’s the kind of car you almost certainly won’t see another example of as you’re driving it about, which is a lot of cachet for such a relatively small outlay.

    Mitsubishi 3000GT

    Mitsubishi 3000GT – what to look for

    The key thing to check is that everything works – all of the buttons, gauges, active aero, every electrical system. It’ll probably all be working fine, being a Mitsubishi, but if things are failing, quite a lot of the tech is hard to access and work on as it’s all so tightly packed in. So cars with faults need to be markedly cheaper.

    You’ll probably find sellers using the names GTO and 3000GT fairly interchangeably in their adverts, but it’s important to know which you’re looking at. If it’s nat-asp and/or automatic, it’s definitely not a UKDM car – not necessarily a problem, it’s just good to know. The GTO does tend to resist rust a little better; they’re all galvanised, but the Mitsubishi 3000GT received underbody protection which actually just traps moisture and accelerates rot. So have a good poke around underneath!

    Black or grey exhaust smoke suggests piston ring failure, white smoke is a failed head gasket. Ensure the timing belt’s been done at the correct intervals. Don’t be surprised if the gearbox rattles at idle or crunches going into second, that’s common and rarely terminal. And don’t be put off by shabby leather trim – it doesn’t wear well in any GTO/3000GT, and can be a good bargaining chip.

    3000GT top 5 modifications

    Suspension – from £1,740
    The GTO active suspension is very clever, but you can remove a lot of weight and complexity and infuse a bit more control with a Variant 3 coilover setup from KW.
    lkperformance.co.uk

    Exhaust – £POA
    For a properly retro look (plus a naughty noise) you need a pair of huge oval pipes, don’t you? We’d have a word with Powerflow, to see if they can come up with something special.
    powerflow-exhausts.com

    Audio – £499
    It’s a high-tech car, but the audio is dated. Bring it up to date with the new Kenwood DMX8019DABS, the only one on the market with trick wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.
    kenwood-electronics.co.uk

    Clutch – from £331
    The stock clutch is fine for stock performance, but won’t last long if you ask it to deal with extra power. Talk to Competition Clutch about a… er,  competition clutch.
    competitionclutch.com

    Intercooler – £900
    An uprated FMIC will bring tangible benefits to the GTO – a classic mod for these cars. Eurospec offer a superb ESP unit. It’s a bit of a no-brainer this one.
    euro-spec2000.co.uk

    Mitsubishi 3000GT
    Source

  • S55 BMW 2002: THE GREATEST SHOWMAN

    Just when you think you’ve seen it all, someone builds a wide-body BMW 2002 complete with a single-turbo S55 engine that obliterates your senses and makes you question everything you thought you knew.

    When it comes to next-level builds on a scale that you can’t really wrap your head around, SEMA takes the cake. Every single car on show there is absolutely incredible, it’s a non-stop assault on the senses and when SEMA rolls around we always brace ourselves because we know we are going to see some of the best BMs anywhere in the world and we know they are going to blow us away. To stand out from a crowd of that calibre, then, really takes some doing and, even on the scale of SEMA projects, George Dalmakis’ (@m3ane30) truly astonishing 2002 left us absolutely breathless with its levels of sheer insanity, ambition and attention to detail. This is truly a car that is the very definition of a custom build and it’s really unlike anything you’ve ever seen before. Strap yourselves in, this is going to be one hell of a ride…

    S55 BMW 2002

    George and his S55 BMW 2002 arrived at SEMA from Toronto, Canada, where he works as a Master Technician for Parkview BMW so it’s safe to say that not only is he a big BMW fan, he also knows his way around one and then some. “I’ve been interested in BMWs since I started working on cars. I realised very early on that the engineering and design that went into them was the best, bar none, so that’s what I decided to specialise in,” he smiles as we chat and begin to learn about what makes the man behind this machine tick. “My first BMW was a 2006 E90 325xi with a blown engine – the price was right,” he laughs and this was followed by several Bavarian machines over the years, with his current fleet comprising an S54-swapped E30, an E53 X5, an E60 535xi and the S55 BMW 2002 you’re looking at here.

    The 2002 is iconic, a beloved BMW classic and a machine most of us would love to own so it’s no surprise that George found the draw of one irresistible. “I was always a fan of the 2002 model and felt that the whole idea with the powertrain would suit the car and keeping every component BMW would make it stand out,” he says and he’s not wrong. The powertrain in question? Just an S55, no big deal… “I found the car through a friend who had seen it outside an old body repair shop, it had been outside and hadn’t been driven for years. The condition was extremely rough,” says George, which would have put a lot of people off but a man of his talents was undeterred and, in fact, it was perfect for a build that would leave almost nothing of the original car behind. George made the 2002 his and, with a definitive plan of what he wanted to achieve with this build clear in his mind, set about creating a show-stopping machine that would blow everyone who saw it away.

    S55 BMW 2002

    Take one glance at the photos and you can instantly see just what an insane amount of work has gone into this build but, before George could get started on bringing his vision to life, he first had to bring the car up to standard. With the 2002’s body being in terrible condition from sitting outside for all those years, there was no way he could do any work on it as it was, and so the first step was the complete disassembly of the car and disposal of any parts that were unusable or that were simply not needed. With the shell prepped, it was then mounted to a rotisserie and media blasted. Now the real work could begin. First of all the complete underside of the car was cut, including the floor, firewall and the boot, and then the chassis work started. “The new tube chassis of the car was built by Chassis Stop around the powerplant and, as well as fitting E9x subframes, the track was widened by 4-inches front and rear,” explains George. “The suspension components all come from the E9x M3 from the bushings, control arms and thrust rods to the sway bars as well as the LSD. The shocks and springs are from Air Lift as this car is fitted with air-ride; the management system is AccuAir ENDO-CVT as it is the quietest, has the cleanest look, and the ride height sensors make for a better ride and adjustability,” he says. Also worthy of note is the fact that a Z8 hydraulic steering rack has been fitted and it’s powered by a rear-mounted electric power steering pump and reservoir.

    Full Metal Jacket

    With the E9x M3 subframes and custom tubular chassis in place, theS55 BMW 2002 was looking a little naked as its stock bodywork had no hope of being able to cover up those massively wide underpinnings, so a custom metal wide-body was constructed along with the front lip, side skirts and diffuser. The whole lot was then mounted to the shell. The custom cooling, exhaust and turbo setup were then assembled and installed before the body panels were restored, painted and the finished car was fully assembled.

    S55 BMW 2002

    The presence that this 2002 exudes thanks to those absolutely vast arches is absolutely incredible and it almost doesn’t look real, more like a computer render than a real car and there’s actually a good reason for that. “A lot of inspiration came from the well-known artist @the_kyza, his 2002 render was a big inspiration for the initial designs and planning,” says George and a quick browse of @the_kyza’s Insta account and the insane renders therein instantly makes it easy to understand why George was so inspired. The work that’s gone into the wide-body is insane and the finish is incredible, the quality is just mind-blowing and the stunning San Marino paint pops like you wouldn’t believe and sets the whole thing off perfectly. Then there are all those details – the way that front lip flows from the arches and blends seamlessly into the front end, the shape of those side skirts, the simple aggression of the rear diffuser – it’s all art.

    The Wheel Deal

    With those massive arches and air on board, George needed wheels that would wow wherever he went and he knew what he wanted for this build. “BBS has been a long-time manufacturer of race wheels for BMW and the classic E55 centre-lock wheel was the perfect blend of a modern look but with a timeless style,” he smiles. “Through the major sponsor JRP Online, I was able to convince the BBS Motorsport division to pull out their old moulds and sketches and make a brand new set of E55 wheels to my exact specifications. Initially, four BMW steel rims were used as test wheels with the tires, they were widened in place of the BBS wheels so that the wide-body could be matched to the nearest mm,” and the end result is sheer perfection. Persuading BBS to make a one-off set of wheels for this build? That’s the sort of thing that elevates this car beyond all others. The resulting 17-inch E55s look incredible – you’ve got those mirror-polished stepped-lips, the gold centres, and they measure 10-inches up front and 12 at the rear. Also, not that you can see them through that incredibly tight mesh, but this 2002 is packing some serious stopping power in the shape of a Forge Motorsport BBK that boasts 356mm discs with six-pot calipers up front and 330mm discs with four-pot calipers at the back..

    S55 BMW 2002

    We’ve already mentioned that this BMW 2002 is running an S55, but you can very quickly see that this is no ordinary S55. “Aside from building the custom engine mounts, firewall, transmission tunnel and floor to house the engine and transmission, the engine had a keyed hub installed and was fitted with a twin-scroll BorgWarner 8374 turbo,” George happily explains. “The entire cooling system and exhaust system were custom-made with Vibrant Performance parts and the entire exhaust system is full titanium with a side-exit,” says George. “The carbon fibre intake is a custom one-off piece built by Custom Plenum Creations in Australia; it was quite a process to ensure fitment, 3D files were exchanged, it was 3D-printed in Canada for test-fitting, and revised until the final product was built in Australia. A custom alternator relocation bracket was also designed locally and machined out of aluminium to shift the alternator down and allow room for the custom intake. Port fuel injection was also added to spray additional fuel under high boost,” which lets you know that George is gunning for some serious power with this engine. The mods he has mentioned are just scratching the surface, however, and there’s even more to this S55 than meets the eye. The head has been ported, there are twin Tial 44mm wastegates, a 50mm Tial BOV, in the boot sits a Radium custom fuel cell with two pumps and one lift pump feeding the dual OEM high-pressure fuel pumps. In addition to that there’s a MoTeC PDM 15, which replaces all the traditional relays and fuses in the car’s wiring, and everything is looked after by a MoTeC M142 ECU. So, just how much power does this full-on S55 make? “It’s unknown at this time,” says George; “we need to do some fine-tuning and adjustments to get some dyno pulls and see if it exceeds expectations. Jim Colley from Fast Attack Motorsports will be fine-tuning the engine. We’re expecting around 800hp, but from the people I have talked to at SEMA, who have modified the S55 extensively, I might even be able to expect horsepower numbers close to four digits,”
    he grins.

    After all that there’s just the interior to talk about and, as you will have gathered going by the rest of this build, it’s as special as the rest of the car. “Through the main sponsor JRP and Recaro’s involvement, I secured the Recaro Sportster GT seats which were the number one choice due to size and design,” George tells us. “They were re-upholstered along with the dash and all-new interior panels. A Dakota Digital custom cluster was fitted and paired with a modern M4 Alcantara steering wheel. The interior is a minimalist race-inspired design yet comfortable enough, and shows off the incredible metalwork that went into creating the new floor of the car,” he says and while it may be sparse, what’s there has been beautifully executed. The seats and door cards are absolutely stunning, and that vibrant caramel colour is the perfect contrast to the exposed deep blue metal. There is a lifetime’s worth of work in this S55 BMW 2002 and yet the whole thing went from its original abandoned state to the car you see before you today in just 10 months, which makes the whole thing even more incredible. The most satisfying thing about this astonishing machine is that George built it exactly as he wanted; “I don’t have one specific modification that I would say is my favourite, I think the sum of all the parts and modifications speaks so much more than one specific thing,” and that sums this build up perfectly: the whole thing, all of it, is just amazing.

    Feature taken from Fast Car magazine. Words: Elizabeth de Latour. Photos: Viktor Benyi.

    S55 BMW 2002

    Tech spec: S55 BMW 2002

    Engine and transmission:

    3.0-litre straight-six S55B30, ported head, keyed hub, custom aluminium alternator relocation bracket, port fuel injection, Custom Plenum Creations carbon fibre intake, BorgWarner 8374 turbo, 2x Tial 44mm wastegates, 50mm Tial BOV, custom Vibrant Performance titanium 3in exhaust with side-exit, MoTeC M142 ECU and 15 output Power Distribution Module 15, Radium custom fuel cell, twin fuel pumps, single lift pump, dual OEM high-pressure fuel pumps, flex-fuel capable with sensor. Six-speed manual gearbox from F82 M4, custom brackets, custom Cardanic propshaft, E92 M3 LSD

    Chassis:

    10×17-in (front) and 12x17in (rear) custom BBS E55 centrelock wheels with 235/40 (front) and 275/40 (rear) Toyo Proxes R888R tyres, Chassis Stop custom tubular chassis, E9x M3 subframes, 4in wider track front and rear, E9x M3 bushes, control arms, thrust rods and anti-roll bars, Air Lift Performance air-ride, AccuAir ENDO-CVT management, hydraulic Z8 steering rack, rear-mounted electric power steering pump and reservoir, custom Forge Motorsport BBK with six-piston calipers and 356mm discs (front) and four-piston calipers and 330mm discs (rear), braided hoses

    Exterior:

    Custom metal wide-body with integrated front lip, side skirts and rear diffuser built by Kyle and Warren Scaife (@MustangKyle), full respray in San Marino blue

    Interior:

    Full custom retrim in orange Nappa leather and black Alcantara including new interior panels, Recaro Sportster GT seats, custom-fitted Dakota Digital cluster, F82 M4 steering wheel, golf ball gear knob

    Thanks:

    @The_Kyza for initially inspiring the look with his aggressive car designs, @Blastforceinc for going out of his way to get the car media blasted, @Chassisstop for putting in a lot of hours and making a few design modifications to the full tube chassis they built and keeping everything functional and accessible, @MustangKyle for designing and building a custom wide-body for the car, @Schmuckbuiltllc_ for putting together the cooling and entire exhaust system, @JRP_Online for being on board with the project very early on and securing multiple sponsorships, @Vibrant_Performance for their support and amazing high quality performance parts, @ParkviewBMW for providing a space to assemble the car, @bbs.wheels for manufacturing a very custom E55 race wheel, @forgemotorsportusa for building an incredible custom big brake kit for the car, @recaro for their amazing Sportster GT seats, @accuair for their customer support and top quality air management system, @AG.Designs.cnc for the extremely detailed centerlock adapters, @wyfromtoronto for help with getting the car to SEMA, Jim Colley owner of @Fast_Attack_Motorsports for developing custom firmware to run the S55 on the Motec ECU, @daemonblitz for helping me with the project from day one, @stay_woke_im_rossi_6ix_god and @wing_k_lam for putting in sleepless nights to get the car assembled for the SEMA deadline, @alilamaa15 for running around and picking up parts so I could stay working on the car, @adcsta and @theodore404 for helping with transporting the vehicle around, @S65M3nas for designing and building the rotisserie and helping with all the custom machining, welding needed, @Mstamkos for stickers, Cardanic Driveline for the one-of-a-kind driveshaft, @SEMAshow for being a gracious host

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