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  • It’s Dyno Time For The Skid Factory’s MR2! How Does The Fresh Four-Banger Do On The Hub Dyno?


    It’s Dyno Time For The Skid Factory’s MR2! How Does The Fresh Four-Banger Do On The Hub Dyno?

    It’s not the most powerful, or the fastest, or even the most comfortable Toyota ever produced. But the first-gen MR2 was a neat little pocket-rocket that has a cult following. I remember the day my aunt’s boyfriend showed up with his, brand-new, and my brother and I went nuts because it was the wildest thing that we had dealt with. It was the first rear-engined car that we had ever seen, the first two-seater we’d seen up close, and the way it screamed around corners was something to behold. Unlike the other fast cars we had ridden in to that point, a quick corner didn’t mean that we were flung from one side of a big Chrysler to another. Over time, a lot of the AW11-era MR2s disappeared off of the roads and now, the only time I give one any thought is when I see the aborted Toyota 222D rally machine. Which is why I’ve been buried in The Skid Factory’s re-working of their project MR2. Other than being unique (and rather complete for a project beater) there wasn’t a real reason to build the car besides Woody simply wanting it. But most project cars start life like that: someone simply loves the beast and the wrenches start spinning.

    The car is done. It runs, it drives, it’s on a wheel/tire combination we wouldn’t have spec’d out for a Toyota Starlet, let alone an MR2, and it’s time to tune it. This will be done by putting the car on a hub dyno and feeding the 4AGE five-valve 98 RON fuel and E85 to see which it likes better. Here’s the result:

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  • Rampside: Jay Leno Goes Over His 1961 Corvair 95 Rampside Pickup


    Rampside: Jay Leno Goes Over His 1961 Corvair 95 Rampside Pickup

    Okay, you have to admire Jay Leno for heading to the garage with a camera in hand, ready to go. One, the dude is up there in age where he should probably be a bit careful. Two, he’s in California, the land where “panic” isn’t a personal action, it’s a state motto. And three, it’s just Jay. It’s the guy who is living the gearhead dream, going over the vehicles that he has acquired over the years, the vehicles that he hasn’t showed off over the years. And this funky little truck is on the menu.

    I’d known about Corvair ever since I met the first-generation sedan that my stepmother’s father had sitting in the back of his property years ago. I knew they made sedans, coupes and convertibles. All of that’s good. But I didn’t see my first “other” until I saw a Corvair Greenbriar van roaming around the small little town in Washington I grew up in during my middle-school days. I’d seen Falcon vans and Dodge A-series before, but the Corvair van was an oddity even by those standards. The engine was directly underneath the rear passengers’s backsides, how was that a better idea than having a huge doghouse and a six cylinder up front? Then I saw my first Rampside when I was about…oh, it had to be 1996 or 1997. And unlike the van, seeing a pickup truck bed with a huge fold-down ramp on the side made perfect sense. I still didn’t understand engine location except “it’s a Corvair thing” but the utility aspect of the Rampside couldn’t be ignored. What better way to load up a dirt bike?

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  • Unhinged: My First Automotive Sin, And It Involved A Mustang II

    It’s no secret that I appreciate the Mustang nobody else seems to, the Ford Mustang II. The early cars through 1970 are nearly worshipped. The 1971-73 big-body cars have a lot going for them, even if many are critical about those big hips. Fox bodies are the easy speed high going right now, a do whatever platform that can drag race, road race, rally, or be perfect just fk’ing off in a parking lot until you hear the siren of the security guard’s car pop off. The Deuce, however, gets crapped on simply for being a product of it’s time. Lee Iacocca didn’t like how big the Mustang had gotten and wanted a return to his “little jewel”. Ford fans were echoing those complaints. And in 1973, as if to ram the point home with a back-handed slap to the head, the first gas crisis hit. The Mustang II made perfect sense when it showed up. Smaller, lighter, and more fuel efficient. Perfect, minus the fact that for 1974 they forgot the V8 altogether. The next year they fixed that one mis-step and started cramming 302s back into them. In stock form…once again, they were a product of their times. But a hot rodder in 1988, who knew what a 1970 Boss Mustang could do and who had a then-disposable Cobra II to play with, could spend a weekend turning the PintoStang into a little nightmare.

    I have to be a bit thin on the details here for two reasons: one, this story happened 31 years ago and between then I’ve had concussions, nights of heavy drinking, and some excellent painkillers along the way. The second part is that the people involved in the story, for the most part, are dead, some before I was even born, and those that are still alive I haven’t had communication with in years, maybe decades.

    So here it goes: an uncle in my family line was a gearhead to the core. He built cars for the other siblings…I know my mother was rocking a 383-powered 1969 Plymouth Fury in high school thanks to this guy, and he might have had a hand in building the 1973 Newport that my cousin Vance used to introduce me to the drug of speed. He passed on shortly before I was born, but not before providing one of my aunts with either a Cobra II or a Mach 1 Mustang II. Either way, it was red, it was rowdy, and it was an automatic. That last part is key. At the age of five, I proved to be an insatiable learner, to the point of freaking out the adults. Not only was I an avid reader, but I had comprehension skills that football players in my high school lacked. I read encyclopedias for fun and soaked up every ounce of information I could acquire like a sponge. So, when I watched my mother drive her 1982 Ford Mustang around, I mentally took notes. When my grandfather drove me around in his 1984 Chrysler E-Class, I took notes. And when this aunt drove the Mustang II around, I took notes.

    Now, around this time frame, I’m feral. My mother works, my grandparents are up in age and aren’t up to keeping me under strict control, and the others…well, no. They weren’t bothered. So nobody noticed when I hooked the keys to a little red coupe, fired it up, and slowly backed it out of the driveway. Nobody gathered that I took great care to not scrape the tailpipes on the road backing out of the sloped drive. But somebody saw the car moving with me in it. And as they bolted outside to stop the scene, it happened: I selected “D”, and matted the throttle hard-core. The Mustang, facing uphill on a steep section of Rockies foothill, was pretty much in standstill burnout mode. The little fourteen-inch tires didn’t have a prayer…and neither did I once a hand reached in and in one swift motion, killed the engine, ripped the E-brake up and ripped my ass out of the front seat.

    Rumor has it that somewhere in a box is a Polaroid picture of me being dragged away from the Mustang II by either my aunt or my mother, with an uncle dying of laughter in the grass. Somewhere, that picture has my first burnout recorded for the record. And that’s why I dig the Mustang II…it’s one of the most base parts of my gearhead history.

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  • 2021 Porsche 911 Targa 4S Heritage Edition Limited to 992 Examples

    With a comprehensive list of amazing features, we have no doubt that the new Porsche 911 Targa for sale will be very successful. Many customers will be happy with the versatility and styling of the Targa 4. But if you want an heirloom worthy of any Concours, the 2021 Porsche 911 Targa 4S Heritage Edition is limited to 992 examples.

    As the first Heritage Edition 922 to be based on the 992 chassis, no detail was overlooked. First off, each car will be offered with a matching Porsche Design chronograph. The face evokes the same shape as the exclusive wheels, and the bands are made of the same premium leather found throughout the interior.

    2021 Porsche 911 Targa 4 & Targa 4S Unveiled

    Each car will arrive with 2-tone leather on the dash, doors, pillars, seats, and almost every surface. Bordeaux Red and Atacama Beige hides have been stitched by hand. Courdoroy inserts on the seats and door panels are a throwback to the 356 series while keeping you held in place during spirited driving.

    The original Porsche 911 badge from 1963 can be found on the hood, steering wheel, keys, and the Carrera Exclusive wheels (20″ & 21″). Exterior graphics include white diamonds behind the headlights, prominent roundels on the doors. Inspired by the overwhelming response to the 2019 Porsche 911 Speedster, the owner will be able to choose how much historical content that is included.

    It goes without saying that all optional performance and luxury options offered on the new Targa 4S are standard equipment. You will have 450 horsepower and 391 lb-ft of torque sent to all wheels. While the press release mentions the 8-speed PDK transmission, we hope the 7-speed manual is also offered. Our dealers have all the info, so click the button below to find one near you and stay with us for all your Porsche news.

     

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  • The Skid Factory Take On An Early Toyota MR2 Restoration Project…Begrudgingly, It Seems!

     


    The Skid Factory Take On An Early Toyota MR2 Restoration Project…Begrudgingly, It Seems!

    Not too long ago, during a competition for a mid or rear-engined vehicle, Marty from the Mighty Car Mods started working on an SW20-era Toyota MR2 and by the end of it, his absolute disdain for the car was palpable. Especially when he was sitting in a foldable seat, sipping something cold and flipping the car off after fighting the thing for what had to be hours that the film couldn’t possibly have explained. Apparently Woody from The Skid Factory hasn’t seen anything or heard anything about this fun because he rolled an AW11-era MR2 into the shop that has a midget with a hammer in the engine and a rat in the rear engine compartment.

    I actually loved one of these things as a kid…my aunt’s moronic boyfriend owned one and he would beat the thing like it owed him money. It looked sporty, it hustled around nicely, and I’m pretty sure it was dead within two years from the abuse. Which is a shame, because Toyota was actually building decent little screamers back then. But best of luck convincing Al that it’s worth it. The commentary is hilarious from the word “go” on this project and I’m sure it’ll only get better once they actually start tearing into the car. Just wait until you see what kind of crap is waiting underneath the valve cover. You couldn’t write that story if you tried. Check it out!

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