Tag: Cars

  • PICKUP ARTIST: 1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    Having found this rare 1JZ-powered Mitsubishi pickup in Thailand, James Hoole brought it back to the UK where it’s gone down a storm…

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    Mention the word “Thailand” to most people and they’ll think of unspoiled golden beaches, amazing food and a nightlife that’s best described as lively. It’s the chosen destination for many Brits who want a taste of paradise or for those looking to party hard.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    If you’ve never been to Thailand, you may think the locals all drive tuk-tuks, and to be fair, a lot of them do. But away from the bustling streets, there’s a vibrant car scene.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    That’s because the Thais are bang into their modified cars – the more unusual, the better. There’s something hugely satisfying about taking a mundane vehicle and transforming it into something that stops folk in their tracks; the kind of thing that gets non-car people asking “what is it?” And “why did you do that to it?” James Hoole, from Ultimate Car Giveaway Ltd, takes up the story.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    “A friend of mine lives over in Thailand and realised there were lots of these old Jap cars around. Many of them have already been modified as there’s a strong Thai-tuning scene – and the best bit is that they’re all right-hand drive.”

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    As part of the family business established over 30 years, James is used to working on all types of cars and has been tuning and modifying them for as long as he was old enough to hold a spanner. But it’s his love of rare, retro Japanese stuff that really ignites
    his passion.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    Over the last few months, he’s has been importing a stream of ’80s Jap cars with plans to offer them as prizes in his Ultimate Car Giveaway concept. While several of these Best of the Best type schemes offer brand new cars, James wanted to do something with custom Japanese rides.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    In this case, it’s something very special and indeed rare. Back in the early ’80s, the L200 pickup was a great workhorse. With bags of room in the back of the long wheelbase version and legendary Mitsubishi reliability, they were popular all over the world. But they were never considered ‘cool’. So it’s impressive to see one that’s not only survived the ravages of time, but that has also been totally transformed. This pukka pickup is now packing blistered arches, serious lows and some beefy rims, while there’s also a cheeky 1JZ lump under the bonnet.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    “It’s an early naturally-aspirated Toyota 1JZ,” explains James, “but it’s been tuned and is good for around 200bhp, which makes for quite lively performance in this old pickup!” It’s rear-wheel drive, of course, which James ably demonstrates by spinning the nearside rear wheel for a smoky burnout shot. “It’s a shame it doesn’t have a diff, because then it would be a proper animal,” he laughs.

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    The straight-six engine slots neatly into the engine bay and features a bunch of chromed and polished goodies. It’s actually a pretty good fit, although James admits that the only thing that bugs him is that it’s not a Mitsubishi engine. I guess an FTO V6 could have worked too, or maybe even an Evo 4G63? But having heard that sonorous V6 burst into life in the workshop, then watched it being given a good thrashing outside, it’s fair to say that it sounds incredible – so for me that Toyota engine is just perfect.

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    Pop your head inside the driver’s door and you’ll discover the once utilitarian cabin has also been transformed. A pair of BRIDE bucket seats (surely there’s a Thai Bride joke here? – Jules), trimmed in the finest Alcantara kicks things off, joined by some harnesses. The original steering wheel has been replaced by an OMP Drifting item, which suits the inside of this ’80s truck perfectly. It also feels much nicer than the van-like thin-rimmed effort that it originally came with. Elsewhere you’ll find some neat diamond-stitched material used for the roof lining and behind the seats, as well as some two-tone door cards.

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    One of the first things that strikes you about this L200 is the sheer size of it. The rear appears to stretch forever and that flatbed has acres of room. “It’s the only long-wheelbase version in the UK,” reveals James. The rear deck itself has been finished in bright orange, including the chequer plate flooring. There’s also a chunky roll bar that’s been bolted in to give this perky pickup some added muscle. Move to the rear and the tailgate is embossed with the Mitsubishi logo, and underneath, there’s a rather fat, polished tailpipe, which emits an awesome sound when you provoke that straight-six engine.

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    In fact, it sounded so good that someone went and bought it. “It was due to be given away in our draw, but the guy really wanted it, so I ended up selling it to him,” says James. But fear not, because there are several more retro treats tucked up in the workshop. And these will be available as prizes over the coming months. If they’re anything like this, we can’t wait to see them!

    1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP1JZ-POWERED MITSUBISHI L200 PICKUP

    TECH SPEC: MITSUBISHI L200

    Engine
    Toyota 1JZ 2.5-litre straight-six, Brian Crower cams, Konshi Racing ECU, 3in manifold back custom exhaust, polished air intake, Sard performance filter, painted rocker cover, custom alloy radiator, blue silicone hoses, polished inlet manifold

    Suspension
    Custom springs and dampers

    Wheels and tyres
    MeisterR-style 9.5in and 11.5x16in wheels with Nankang tyres

    Interior
    BRIDE bucket seats on custom mounts, harnesses, OMP Drifting steering wheel, colour-coded door cards, diamond-stitched headlining and rear panel, alloy pedal covers

    Exterior
    Custom steel wide arches and front lip, chrome front bumper, bump strips removed, painted custom white pearl with orange rear deck and cage

    Thanks
    Far East Classics

    Words & Photography Davy Lewis

    Source

  • FC THROWBACK: WAR PIG – TUNED VW RABBIT

    Welcome to this week’s FC Throwback, where we take a look back at some of our favourite previous feature cars. This week it’s James Taylor’s 1983 VW Rabbit from 2013… This stanced-out, bomber-style, rat-rod Rabbit has plenty of military bits inside and out… and so does the owner.

    nato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbitnato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbit

    When James White blew the motor in his turbo’d 2006 Jetta, he did what any self-respecting tuner would do. He bought an ’83 Rabbit beater to run around in while he rebuilt his main car.

    nato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbitnato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbit

    What he didn’t plan on doing was acquiring such an affinity for the little pocket rocket. “Something about the Rabbit just made me fall in love,“ said James. “At first, I just started doing small mods like putting a 1.6L cam in the 1.8 head.” He also added an adjustable cam gear, headers and exhaust and deleted everything that wasn’t necessary for it to run, freeing up horsepower.

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    James continues: “Then one day I decided to turbo. So my attention shifted away from the Mk5 Jetta as I proceeded to source parts for the turbo build.” Sometimes a mistress is just more intriguing than the wife.

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    Looking to make his mistress a little more, er, muscular, James started scouring junk yards in search of parts. His first turbo came from a Saab, a 9000 T3. After that blew up he moved to a T3 unit with ported and belled compressor housing. And to keep it in sleeper mode, the turbo is hidden behind the firewall. Of course the machine gun-end blow-off valve suggests something sinister lurks under the hood.

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    James estimates power to be a little over 200hp with 13lbs of boost. Since the gutted Rabbit weighs only 1,860lbs it has the uncanny ability to put a few big block Corvettes on their asses. And all this power is made with the stock 1.8L bottom end! Non-military issue equipment includes the V-Maxx coilovers and 14×6 Scirroco teardrop rims among other upgrades.

    nato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbitnato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbit

    James White and his friends have come through with a menacing military rat that deserves accolades from soldiers and citizens alike. The fact he pulled it all off on a budget and with shrapnel in his leg – sustained in Iraq during his eight years service – makes both he and the car deserving of a full, 21 gun salute.

    nato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbitnato green olive mk1 VW golf rabbit

    TECH SPEC 1983 VW RABBIT (MK1 GOLF)

    Styling
    Custom rattle-can paint job, Cabriolet tail light swap, single rounds conversion with H4s, badgeless grille, GTI front lip, anodized gold JDM tow hooks, military jaw decale.

    Chassis
    V-Maxx coilovers, prothane poly inserts for motor mounts, control arms, 9.4in rotor brake disc up front, Mk3 8.9in Wolfsburg, 6x14in 16v Scirocco teardrops painted in textured black, Toyo Proxes 195/45x14s tyres front with 205/50x14s at the rear.

    Interior
    Custom 6-point cage, MK2 GTI Recarro seats, 4-point harnesses, all VDO individual gauges, AEM UEGO wideband, Wolfsburg steering wheel, 5-pane wink mirror, custom M249 machine gun barrel shifter.

    Tuning
    Stock 1.8L JH bottom end, P&Pd ABA head, Techtonics 268 cam, Autotech adjustable cam gear, custom turbo manifold, custom short runner intake manifold, EMUSA .50 Trim T3 Turbo with ported and belled compressor housing @ 13psi, Forge boost controller (mounted in cabin), Godspeed 38mm external wastegate (hood dump), Ford Probe side mount intercooler, Digifant 1 ECU, 26lb injectors, BBM FPR Adapter, BBM fuel rail, silicone intake systems slim line 12-inch fan, ACCEL plug wires, MSD Blaster 2 coil, NGK plugs, custom 2.5in straight piped turbo back exhaust, Clutch Masters FX400 sprung 6 puck clutch, Sachs pressure plate.

    Words & photos Isaac Mion

    Source

  • BLACK MIRROR: FORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    Hide the children and lock your pets away. This dark-hearted Model A is holding a distorted mirror up to the very concept of hot rod culture…

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    It’s often said that cars have a face. You can see the logic of it really – two headlights representing the eyes, a grille for the mouth (or sometimes the nostrils); some cars, like the 2nd-gen Mazda3 and the Austin Healey Frogeye Sprite, look dementedly happy. The rear end of the SEAT Altea XL looks incredibly sad, like a clinically depressed robot. And the Model A Ford we have here? Well, it doesn’t so much have a face as a personality, an aura: a really bloody scary one. This is the kind of car that’d give small children nightmares. Hell, it’s making our palms sweat, and we’ve seen the Scream trilogy twice and hardly hid behind the sofa at all. Its nickname is ‘The Marauder’, a term which describes those who rove the country looking for things to pillage and plunder and defile. It’s a car with an ingrained sense of malice.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    For a lot of readers, the world of old-school hot rods like this will be murky and confusing, so let’s start off with a little history lesson. It stems back to early 20th-century America; the vast culture clash of bootleggers and moonshiners souping up their motors to outrun the law, and returning GIs with new-found engineering skills, meant that America was brimming over with restless young guns eager to race each other on dry lakes and gleaming new highways in the 1930s and ’40s. Shoving a Ford flathead into whatever car the tearaway in question was dealing with was a very popular choice, with the ‘60 Horse’ becoming an iconic unit of locomotion. This was the 136ci (2.2-litre) V8 that appeared in 1937, offering a heady (at the time) 60hp. Hence the nickname. Obviously these numbers are small fry compared to what came shortly afterward, but these were fledgling steps into backstreet spannering for Saturday night success. You took what was available in the scrapyard, and you made your car faster. It was as simple as that.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    The Ford Model A goes hand-in-hand with early hot rod culture, which is why its popularity endures with such enthusiasm today. This motoring icon first came chuntering onto the flourishing automotive scene at the end of 1927, representing a fresh new era of customer-pleasing options and technological advances for the Ford Motor Company. Its predecessor, the Model T, had been lumbering along for the thick end of eighteen years, so it was about time for a shake-up, and the cutting-edge new A offered logical pedals, all-round brakes and a variety of body styles, from a choice of coupes (standard, deluxe, business coupe, roadster coupe, sport coupe) to the tongue-in-cheek Tudor and Fordor, town car, station wagon, truck, cabriolet, sedan, phaeton… it was mind-boggling. By the end of its relatively short production run, halting in early 1932, the company had shifted almost five million of the things. This, naturally, led to an enduring popularity with hot rodders – a bountiful supply equates to cheap second-hand prices, and their simple construct and swappability of componentry immediately created a tuning aftermarket subculture that’s endured for generations.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    Kyle Hands was certainly paying attention. The owner of the Marauder, he’s been dreaming of something like this ever since he was pushing 1:64-scale customs around the living room carpet as a child. “I’ve always loved cars, from Hot Wheels and remote-controlled toys as a kid, to buying my first car and modifying it before I had passed my test,” he grins. “I had a few different ones before I started my first proper build, a Mk1 Audi TT; it was a race-inspired show car which won a few trophies and was magazine featured. I sold that to realise my dream of owning a hot rod, and now I don’t think I’ll ever own anything different!”

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    There’s a sense of fatalism to all this, as Kyle wasn’t the sort of kid who had posters of Ferraris and Lamborghinis on his bedroom wall, it was always street rods and muscle cars. This wasn’t a matter of if, but when. “I sold my TT and bought a Harley Davidson as a little project while I saved to buy a hot rod,” he continues. “Three weeks later this one came up for sale! I bought it from a guy who had built it to advertise his company, although he then sold it without it ever leaving his garage. The chassis fabrication was perfect, but the rest was a mess – a mix of cheap products and poor attention to detail. I could immediately see the potential in it and had to buy it; the day after I got it I stripped it all back to the chassis and set about redoing everything.”

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    With the Model A broken down to a jumbled and slightly spiky pile of bits, Kyle could see that the first job before tackling anything else would be to rewire the engine and hide as much of the wiring as possible. The motor itself is an utter monster, incidentally; traditionally the logical move for a rodded Model A would be to bung a V8 in it, the bigger the better, but this unnerving machine is packing a sodding great Cummins diesel straight-six – a gruff and industrial contraption displacing 5.9-litres and kicking out enough torque to ruffle up the tarmac like a threadbare hallway rug. With an imposing compound turbo setup and a shorty smokestack to aid with aggressively rollin’ coal, it’s at once recognisably an A rod and yet totally dissociated from traditional roots.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    “I upgraded the fuel system to full braided AN10 lines, an alloy fuel cell, and a FASS pump from America,” he explains. “I moved the air-ride and battery under a pickup section I made to hide it away, and then sunk the fuel tank in the oak pickup bed I made and mounted a big nitrous bottle on the back to complete the look I was going for. The air-ride system itself was all removed, and I replaced it with dual Viair compressors, AccuAir Endo tank and Air Lift Performance 3P management. This transformed the car, and with the presets it makes it so much easier to drive! I was then able to mount an iPad on the dash to control it all.” How cool is that? The redneck rodders of the forties would have their minds blown by this sort of retro-futurist caper, it really is very innovative.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    “For the pedal box and handbrake, I went to OBP Motorsport,” says Kyle. “The billet pedals are the key point of the interior; their products are amazing quality and I’ll be using them again on the next build! Then I painted the car and had it all back together just in time to take it to the FittedUK show, where it had an amazing reaction, along with its first trophy and also its first photoshoot.” Things have been naturally progressing ever since, and the spec is extremely impressive: the chopped and channelled ’29 body with its custom ragtop hides a fabulously detailed bare-bones interior, while the chassis boasts Mustang brakes behind those menacingly staggered wheels. It’s not all mouth and no trousers either, with a four-linked rear and a Panhard rod helping to tame the delivery of all that stump-pulling twist. It sure is a long way from an Audi TT, and it’s ticking pretty much every box on Kyle’s mental wishlist – so much so that he’s champing at the bit to build another hot rod. The idea’s really got under his skin.

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    “It’s an experience driving this on the road,” he laughs. “You feel a bit vulnerable as it’s not exactly the safest car, but at the same time you know everyone has already heard you coming from halfway up the road anyway…” And that’s basically the point of a hot rod, isn’t it? Sure, the genre may have evolved a bit over the last seventy-odd years from picking up cheap go-faster bits at the scrapyard and throwing them into a stripped-down chassis, but the purpose remains the same: these are cars built to go fast, and to look mean enough to intimidate anyone who pulls up alongside you at the lights. This modern interpretation is every bit as proper as a period-built A rod. And it’s absolutely bloody terrifying.

    FORD MODEL A HOT RODFORD MODEL A HOT ROD

    What the hell is a compound turbo setup?
    There are two turbos here, but this is no ordinary twin-turbo setup. With compound turbocharging, you have two different-sized turbos running in series rather than in parallel – so instead of splitting the task of providing boost, they work together to accentuate one another’s effect. Atmospheric air flows first through the large low-pressure turbo, then straight into the small high-pressure turbo – as the volume of air runs from a large to a smaller channel, pressure and velocity markedly increase, and voila: changing pressures compound the effect of each turbo. And as a special bonus, compounding turbos massively reduces lag too. It’s win-win

    TECH SPEC: FORD MODEL A

    Styling:
    Chopped and channelled 1929 Model A, Raptor black paint, Harley Davidson mirrors, custom pickup section, oak bed with alloy fuel cell and Wizards of NOS nitrous bottle, roof section cut out with custom ragtop

    Tuning:
    Cummins 5.9-litre diesel, fully stripped and painted, compound turbo setup (with Holset HX55 T6 and HX35 T3 turbos and 4in spike exhaust), all ancillaries renewed, painted or powdercoated, alloy radiator, intercooler, braided AN10 fuel lines, FASS fuel pump, ZF S5-42 gearbox, Mustang rear axle, custom propshaft, drag 4-link, Panhard rod

    Chassis:
    6x15in (front) and 10x15in (rear) steels, 185/60 (f) and 31/10.50 (r) tyres, Air Lift Performance 3P management, AccuAir Endo tank, dual Viair 488c compressors, Mustang front brakes, refurbished rear brakes, OBP pedal box, OBP hydraulic handbrake, twin line-locks, Hel braided lines

    Interior:
    Custom seats, OBP footrests, iPad mount, alloy brake/clutch reservoirs

    Thanks:
    “Thanks to my wife Janine for putting up with my car obsession. And also to OBP Motorsport, Air Lift Performance, Jay from Players Shows, Impact Metal Finishing for the metal polishing, Jim King for all the stainless welding, StanceWorks, Mike Crawat, Alex at FittedUK, and Dave Cox for these amazing photos and arranging the feature.”

    Words Daniel Bevis Photography Dave Cox

    Source