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  • FAST CAR FEATURE CAR OF THE YEAR 2020

    Welcome to the Fast Car Feature Car Of The Year 2020! We’ve chosen the cream of the crop of 2020’s FC feature cars so you can pick a winner… 

    It’s that time of year again! With the Christmas festivities behind us, there’s still plenty to get excited about with our annual feature car face-off! 2020 may have been a year most of us want to forget, but we still managed to pack the mag with a tonne of world class cars that showcase the true passion us modifiers have for our rides, even in a global pandemic! We’ve narrowed the selection down to our Top 30 cars of last year, but are letting you pick the best of the bunch. To have your say on who will be crowned top dog, simply check out the selection below and select who you’d like to vote for. You only get one vote, so make it count! The competition closes at midnight on the 8th February and the winner will be announced in next month’s magazine – on sale 26/02/2021!

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  • MODIFIED TOYOTA AE86: GOLD AGAINST THE SOUL

    Having seen his friends triumph at SEMA, Richard Gutierrez wanted in on the action. The resulting modified Toyota AE86 with a BEAMS engine is a solid-gold winner – although his deeply personal project was never just about scooping trophies. No, this flawless show-stopper’s soul yearns for the track…

    Feature first appeared in Fast Car magazine. Words: Dan Bevis. Photos: Larry Chen

    The old saying goes that you should dress for the job you want, rather than the one you have. This is a notion that’s really captured people’s imagination over the generations: Roxette were telling us to get dressed for success back in 1988, S Club 7 ensured their place in posterity by suggesting we reach for the stars, it’s a relatable and practical solution to the inevitable conceptual ennui we find ourselves trudging through in the day-to-day. Better things are on the horizon, you’ve just got to reach for them.

    Take the gold paintwork on this particularly spangly modified Toyota AE86. Gold is the colour of winners, it’s the top of the podium, it’s something Spandau Ballet believed made you indestructible… and so it’s come to pass here, like a pantone reinterpretation of the concept of nominative determinism. Pigmental determinism, perhaps? Whatever, it worked – this gleaming golden hachi-roku made its debut at SEMA 2019 and immediately scooped a top-40 place in the Battle of the Builders, a top-10 in the Battle of the Builders Sport Compact class, a place in the Toyo Tires Treadpass tent, and 2nd place in the JE Pistons Masters of Motors category. Given the quality and breadth of what turns up at SEMA, it really is a phenomenal result for a car built not by a big-budget custom shop, but a plumber who just happens to like making cool cars in his spare time.

    Modified Toyota AE86

    That’s right – it’s not just the magical qualities of gold which have serendipitously led to these stellar successes, but the grit and determination of Richard Gutierrez (aka Riko), who’s basically spent his life wanting to build a car of this quality and, now that he has, he’s really got a taste for it.

    “I’ve been building cars since 2005 – they reflect my life and my passion,” he explains. “My first build was a Laguna Blue Honda S2000 with the full Mugen treatment; when things got rough with the recession I sold my cars and drove an EG Civic hatchback for three years, but then things turned around and I was able to have a Nismo 370Z, a 700bhp Nissan GT-R with an Amuse kit, a TechArt Porsche 997 Turbo… and today all the cars I’ve got are matching in my own custom shade of gold paint: my RWB Yoshiwara Porsche 993, my 1985 Corolla AE86 GTS, my Rocket Bunny 240SX with LS1 swap, and now this N3 AE86 SEMA build.”

    Modified Toyota AE86

    The regular visits to SEMA speak for themselves – Riko is a man with an eye for quality; he may be prolific in his work, but every micron of each project is superbly planned out and sublimely finished, as you can see from the photos laid out here before you. This AE86 also represents an interesting twist, as his previous SEMA visits had been on RWB Porsche duty rather than actually in the show – doing rallies, hanging out with hotel valets… but in 2018 something changed. “I saw how successful two of my friends were displaying their own builds at SEMA, and how much exposure it got them,” he recalls. “Khyzyl Saleem (@thekyza) with his E30 and Scott Girondo (@dunk186) with his Honda K-swapped Porsche 911 – I wanted some of that shine. But what to bring? I knew budget would be important, and also the time frame. And at the time I had a 1984 AE86 SR5 shell sitting in my backyard…”

    Decision made, then. The base-model Corolla would be reinvented as a show-stopper, using Riko’s unique style to prove to the world that there’s life in the hachi-roku yet. The quality, the fabrication, the creativity, and overall the vision – this would be an AE86 like no other.

    Modified Toyota AE86

    The SR5 (which is a lowly US-market spec; it came with an 87bhp single-cam motor rather than the fabled 4A-GE) was originally bought as a parts car for Riko’s Corolla GTS, on the grounds that it was cheaper to buy a whole car than scratch around for the individual bits. It had been sitting out in a forest in the Santa Cruz Mountains for the better part of a decade, and frankly it was a mess; the steering wheel rubber had been totally eaten away by rats, the stock interior had been removed and then thrown back in like a dumpster. When Riko bought it, principally for its straight body, he parked it in his yard and essentially ignored it for four years, until this whole project kicked off in February 2019. Amazingly the only part that was rusty was the rear hatch, which shows what a canny purchase it was in the first place, but of course Riko wanted to do this properly. So there was more than a little remedial work to do.

    “The shell was media-blasted, perfected, and treated to a full rotisserie paint job,” he explains. “I like old cars, but I don’t like the old wiring, or dealing with hunting for classic parts. I find it more reliable to redo everything – still keeping the soul of the car, but bringing it up to date. And yes, this did cost a lot to build, but any race car project at this level will run that bill and much higher; I wanted to show that there is a level of quality that can be seen in professional race cars and to do the same with this one – to show people that you can apply those same principles to these old Japanese street cars. And I hope it will inspire others to push for higher quality with their builds.”

    Modified Toyota AE86

    Riko was fully hands-on with this project, as with all of his previous ones; running his own always-on-call commercial water heater company leaves little spare time, but his role in the process is more managemental: “I have the idea and vision, I choose the parts, I pick the paint, I schedule, I budget, I manage emotions,” he says. “I am the contractor and I sub out the work. I’m extremely involved with the build process – it’s like having a child and raising them the way you want to; ignore them and you will have lots of trouble ahead!” So the build took place at the hands of Marcus Fry Racing in Redwood City, California, with the paintwork carried out by Juan Ayala at 24/7 Auto Body. Grant Hendricks at Battle Garage Racing Service was on hand to supply all the parts on Riko’s detailed wishlist, and with all of these experts working in harmony, the build came together impressively quickly. “The main hurdle was waiting for the Custom Garage Speed N3 bodykit to arrive from Japan, we had to wait three months,” says Riko. “It was hard to recover from that lost time, and the car ended up coming out of the bodyshop two weeks before SEMA! We took a freshly painted body, assembled it and had it running by 5am on the Sunday before the show… I’ve learned that every step matters, even if it’s in the beginning of the game with four quarters left to play! You have to manage every piece as if there’s no overtime.”

    The level of customisation throughout the build really is astonishing. That slick shaved and wire-tucked bay houses a Gen-5 BEAMS engine, the ITBs packing massive trumpets as a siren song to every Toyota fan out there, and despite being unashamedly a full-on show car, it’s been built from first principles to fulfil that race-car brief Riko was so insistent upon. The suspension has been totally reworked, the rear end wearing a ‘true’ coilover setup (whereby the OEM spring-on-axle arrangement is wholly replaced by proper coilovers), and the entire Techno Toy Tuning catalogue has been pillaged to make everything possible under there fully adjustable and dialled in for pure function. Indeed, the only factory-stock part underneath is the front lower subframe, everything else has been upgraded for track-biased thrills. The wheels are a story in themselves, as Riko worked closely with JC Pepino at WORK Wheels to build up a set of Equip 40 Smoky Black Edition four-spokes – only twenty-five sets had ever been made, all of which were sold, but Riko was able to convince WORK to produce just one more set using the last drip of paint they had left, set number 26-of-25.

    The brakes that sit behind them are proper because-race-car stuff too, the Brembo ‘Baby Daddy’ BBK at the front precision-engineered to fit behind smaller wheels, and the rear being Ford-fitment because, naturally, Riko’s decided to run a Ford 8.8 LSD rear axle. But of course. Peek through those lightweight polycarbonate windows and you’ll see that it’s all built for the track in there; it may be so clean you could genuinely eat your dinner off it without getting any nasty infections (but seriously, don’t – Riko puts a lot of effort into keeping it this clean), but there’s no denying how function is on a level pegging with form. The AiM Strada digi-dash, that incredible rollcage, the Bride Zeta 3 seats (mounted lower in custom floor cut-outs for optimal driver position), the low-down Radium fuel cell… the car’s first job was to win trophies and hearts, but make no mistake, this dude’s off to the track. That’s what this was really built for.

    “It’s so personal for me,” Riko smiles. “I love watching my door roll up and seeing a race car in my stable! I keep building these racers, and one day I’ll have time to track them; the day job leaves me little time to get away on weekends, but it is a dream one day to take them all to the track and show the years of building had real purpose. It’s something you can’t just buy, these cars took years and I wasn’t sure if people would get the message or even know what I was doing, but thankfully I was wrong. People knew I was nuts to go this far with this little old car, but they seem to truly appreciate why I did it. It was awesome, I want to build again for 2020.”

    Modified Toyota AE86

    …and that’s exactly what Riko will do. The build for the next SEMA show is already well underway. Although we suspect that this time, despite the punishing build schedule, he’ll be finding some time to take this world-class Corolla out onto the track and use it for what it was built for. That gleaming golden hue has a lot to live up to.

    Tech Spec: Modified Toyota AE86

    Styling:

    Custom Riko gold paint – by 24/7 Auto Body, Redwood, California; Custom Garage Speed N3 bodykit (imported from Japan), TRD rear spoiler, JDM Levin front end conversion, JDM headlights with fogs, AE86 Sprinter taillights, Craft Square carbon fibre mirrors, polycarbonate windows by Marcus Fry Racing

    Tuning:

    3S-GE Gen-5 BEAMS 2.0-litre four-cyl, shaved and wire-tucked bay, Battle Garage Toyota 20v ITBs with SQ Engineering adapter plate and 100mm trumpets, SQ Engineering slimline rear housing, SQ Engineering slimline alternator kit, SQ Engineering exhaust flange, SQ Engineering throttle pull-down linkage, Link ECU and harness, Xcessive Manufacturing engine mounts and frame spacers, Marcus Fry Racing custom chassis harness, Marcus Fry Racing custom cooling setup with Spal fans, Marcus Fry Racing custom Radium fuel cell, Toyota J160 6-speed gearbox with SQ Engineering shifter relocation kit and custom MFR mounts, Southbay Driveline custom propshaft, Ford 8.8 rear axle with LSD

    Power:

    220bhp

    Chassis:

    9.5x15in -35 (front) and 10.5x15in -47 Work Equip 40 Smoky Black Edition wheels, 225/45 (f) and 235/50 (r) Toyo R888R tyres, Annex Suspension coilovers (‘true’ setup replacing OEM spring-on-axle), Techno Toy Tuning (T3) equal-length four-link kit with box kit, T3 panhard rod, T3 GTX2 front lower control arms, T3 knuckles, T3 outer tie rods, T3 rear ARB control brackets and drop-mounts, Cusco anti-roll bars, T3 Wilwood ‘Baby Daddy’ front BBK, Wilwood Ford 8.8 rear BBK, Tilton brake pedals and reservoir, custom brake lines by Marcus Fry Racing

    Interior:

    AiM Strada Link Edition digital dash, Bride Zeta 3 XL seats, Takata harnesses, illest / The Hundreds special edition steering wheel with Renown USA, Techno Toy Tuning racing floor plates, metal rear panels, weld-in rollcage, cut floor to lower driver’s seating position, control panel box and wiring by Marcus Fry Racing

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  • 11 most expensive Japanese cars sold at auction

    (Editor’s note: During the month of January, the ClassicCars.com Journal presents a series of stories related to and perhaps explaining the recent increase in interest in collecting cars produced by Japan-based automakers.)

    Japanese cars don’t often bring in the big bucks at collector car auctions, especially compared to the Ferraris and Aston Martins selling for over $20 million, but that doesn’t mean Japanese Domestic Market or vehicles produced by traditional Japanese-based automakers don’t make a splash from time-to-time.

    Here are the 11th highest prices we’ve found in our research on Japanese cars at collector auctions:

    2020 Toyota Supra | $2.1 million

    2020 Toyota Supra GR signed by Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda

    2020 Toyota Supra GR signed by Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda

    2020 Toyota Supra GR signed by Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda

    2020 Toyota Supra GR signed by Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda

    Coming in at No. 1 is the world’s first production model of the 2020 Toyota Supra GR signed by Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda. It sold for a whopping $2.1 million at Barrett-Jackson’s annual auction in Scottsdale, Arizona in 2019. Note, however, that the car was sold to benefit a charity; the entire bid amount went to the American Heart Association and the Bob Woodruff Foundation.

    Nonetheless, it was a thrilling moment at Barrett-Jackson as bids came in at $100,000 increments faster than a blink of an eye until reaching the final bid of $2.1 million.

    Aside from it being the first production model of 2020, it was painted in matte-gray over a red interior with red mirror caps and matte-black wheels, making it a true one of a kind.

    2021 Lexus LC 500 convertible | $2 million

    2021 Lexus LC 500 convertible

    2021 Lexus LC 500 convertible

    Just a year later, Barrett-Jackson hit another home run at its Scottsdale charity auction when bidding on the first 2021 Lexus LC 500 convertible finished at $2 million in 3 quick minutes. The full $2 million hammer price was split between the Boys & Girls Clubs of America and the Bob Woodruff Foundation.

    The LC 500 convertible, with a VIN ending in 10001, was covered in Lexus’s Structural Blue paint Lexus engineered to be the deepest blue on the market and features a white semi-aniline leather. Along with the car, the high bidder won a set of Zero Halliburton luggage designed to perfectly fit in the trunk, a photo album of the LC’s production and driving lessons by racing legend Scott Pruett.

    1989 Mazda 767B | $1.75 million

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    In 2017 at Amelia Island, this 1989 Mazda 767B rolled across the Gooding & Company auction stage and sold for $1.75 million. One of just three 767B endurance racers built, this orange and green race car won overall at Le Mans in 1990 – the only Japanese manufacturer to claim victory at Le Mans.

    It was equipped with a 2,616cc 4-rotor Wankel rotary engine factory rated at 630 horsepower, a 5-speed Mazda/Porsche manual transaxle, and 4-wheel ventilated disc brakes.

    2017 Acura NSX | $1.2 million

    2017 Acura NSX

    2017 Acura NSX

    2017 Acura NSX

    2017 Acura NSX

    Another Barrett-Jackson charity car makes the list – no surprise here. The 2017 Acura NSX with VIN 001 sold for $1.2 million at a Barrett-Jackson 2016 event and proceeds were split between the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation and Camp Southern Ground.

    NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick was the high bidder, winning the rights to custom order the first production of the NSX.

    The bright red sports car featured a 3.5-liter twin-turbocharged V6 that delivers 573 horsepower with a top speed of 191 mph, making it Acura’s fastest car.

    1967 Toyota 2000GT | $1.15 million

    1967 Toyota 2000GT

    1967 Toyota 2000GT

    1967 Toyota 2000GT

    1967 Toyota 2000GT

    The Toyota 2000GT is one of the most sought-after Japanese sports cars, with only 351 produced. We’ve seen 2000GTs hit big numbers on the auction block but this one tops them all with a hammer price of $1.15 million.

    This 2000GT was sold from the Don Davis Collection by Rm Sotheby’s in 2013. It’s equipped with a 2,000 CC Yamaha DOHC hemi-head inline six-cylinder engine factory rated at 150 horsepower and a top speed over 135 mph.

    The market demand for Toyota 2000GTs has fluctuated over the years, with sale prices as low as $500,000 in 2019 but, according to Classic.com, prices are back on the rise as a 1967 2000 GT sold for $912,500 this past fall.

    2012 Lexus LFA Nürburgring Edition | $918,500

    2012 Lexus LFA Nürburgring Edition

    2012 Lexus LFA Nürburgring Edition

    2012 Lexus LFA Nürburgring Edition

    2012 Lexus LFA Nürburgring Edition

    One of just 50 LFA Nürburgring Editions built and with only 885 miles driven at the time of the auction, this supercar sold for $918,500 at the 2019 Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale event.

    Powered by a 4.8-liter 562 horsepower V10 engine that revs from 0 to 9,000 rpms in just 0.6 seconds, Lexus had to develop a special tachometer with a digital needle just to keep up with the V10 revving from idle.

    The sale of the car also included Scott Pruett racing team gloves, racing team jacket and a custom small luggage set.

    1970 Nissan Fairlady Z432R | $805,000

    1970 Nissan Fairlady Z432R

    1970 Nissan Fairlady Z432R

    This Z432R, a competition-spec of the Fairlady Z, also named the Datsun 240z in the US, sold for $805,000 at the Tokyo Terrada BH Auction last January.

    Nissan designed the Z432Rs with racing in mind. The air cleaner housing was removed on the 158-horsepower S20-type 2-liter DOHC engine to give it a sportier look and 220 pounds were dropped from the original model by making the body panels 0.2mm thinner and building the hood from fiber-reinforced plastic.

    It’s estimated that between 30 and 50 of these orange Z432Rs were ever built, making it the most desirable Nissan Z.

    1973 Nissan Skyline GT-R | $430,000

    1973 Nissan Skyline GT-R

    1973 Nissan Skyline GT-R

    1973 Nissan Skyline GT-R

    1973 Nissan Skyline GT-R

    This second-generation 1973 Skyline broke a sales record for Skylines when it sold for $430,000 at the Tokyo Terrada BH Auction last January.

    It’s rumored that Nissan produced the second-generation Skyline (chassis code KPGC110) for one purpose: to use up the leftover 2.0-liter S20 inline-six engines from the first-generation Hakosuka Skyline GT-Rs. Nissan only sold 197 of these C110s.

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    You might have also heard these C110s called “Kenmeri” Skylines because of a few TV ads Nissan ran showing a young couple (Ken and Mary) taking the car for a trip in Japan’s countryside.

    1971 Datsun 240z Series | $310,000

    1971 Datsun 240z Series

    1971 Datsun 240z Series

    Finished in Racing Green with white rocker stripes, this 240z with just 21,000 miles on it sold for $310,000 last January on Bring A Trailer. Single-family owned, the car was equipped with its original 2.4-liter inline-6 engine factory rated at 150 horsepower.

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    Before the auction, the owner put together a video explaining the car’s history with the vehicle’s original mechanic, Jim Mayo, who worked at Datsun for 18 years.

    1996 Subaru Impreza WRC97 | $300,000

    1996 Subaru Impreza WRC97

    1996 Subaru Impreza WRC97

    Sold by H&H Classics in 2017, this 1996 Subaru Impreza WRC97 driven by rally legend Colin McRae sold for $300,000, breaking the record for the most expensive Subaru at the time.

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    McRae test drove this Impreza in preparation for the 1997 FIA World Rally Championship and for the model’s debut at Rally Monte Carlo in January 1997.

    1999 Acura NSX Zanardi Edition No. 51 | $277,017

    1999 Acura NSX Zanardi Edition No. 51

    1999 Acura NSX Zanardi Edition No. 51

    This rare 1999 Acura NSX is No. 51 out of 51 built special-edition models produced to honor Alex Zandari’s two CART championships with Honda race cars and was sold for $277,017 on Bring a Trailer.

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    What makes this edition stand out among other NSXs is the fixed roof, a single-pane rear glad, BBS wheels, manual rack-and-pinion steering and lightweight rear spoilers and battery.

    This article, written by Racheal Colbert, was originally published on ClassicCars.com, an editorial partner of Motor Authority.

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