Tuesday, July 28, 2020

welp, here we go.

After getting the car back and taking a closer look at everything; The frame rails are shoved over roughly 2.5inches to the passenger side, seams on the strut towers have ripped and a lot of sheet metal is buckled. The front driver side coil-over lug is also bent.  I could probably cut everything off, weld another front end on (tube or factory) and be fine, but I decided to go another route.



Last weekend my pops and I picked up a 91 Mariner Blue (barf) rolling shell in Loveland, CO for the low low price of $500. Body is straight as an arrow with absolutely ZERO rust. The 1.6L in the car is half there, but it's scrap at this point. The 5speed feels decent (hooray, another spare). PO did a 1.8L LSD rear end swap (another spare!), and it  came with garage star fender braces, which I didn't realize until I got home, and the interior is maybe 50% gutted. Good for me because that's less work I have to to. If I didn't find this car I would continue with and rebuild the 95, but this was too good to pass up.



I've replaced the front LCA's on the 95, taken the hood and fenders off, put on a new PS rack from the junkyard, also replaced the endlinks and outer tie rods with some shit I had around the house. Hoping it can get a decent alignment and I can drive it for the rest of the year and maybe next year at events. I fucking hate being that guy with the cobbled together piece of shit, but I'm going to focus on rebuilding the 91 for now and keep racking up seat time in the 95 until the 91 is completed. The 95 will be stripped and I'll hoard it's parts as spares.

As far as the 91 goes: I already ordered a Spec Miata cage that I'll install and paint to match the car. I'm going back to Montego Blue because I fucking love that color and I don't want to paint my OEM hardtop. I'll fabricate some front and rear bash bars while I'm at it too. Uh, I ordered some cheap Godspeed rear upper control arms to get closer to zero degrees. I know, they suck but I'll use them as a template to fab my own or just swap in some better bushings. Just got a Racing Beat tubular front sway bar and some heavy duty mount brackets to hopefully reduce the body roll enough to where I can keep my existed Tein coil-overs (replacing the bent one only). Planning on going polyurethane for all bushings in the suspension... Might get some stiffer motor mounts? I'd like to get a nicer steering wheel and a seats too. Engine wise I can either swap the 1.8 that's in the 95 into the 91, or rebuild the original 1.8L from the 95. I'll likely do the latter to build for turbo and to keep the 95 seat time going as long as possible. That's about it really. I don't want anything to crazy, just making this new chassis a little more resilient to frame damage when crashed, a little better suspension, hopefully close to 200whp, and a halfway decent paint job. I got my work cut out for me if I want to get this done by next season, but we'll see what happens.Cheers!

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Another Wreck...

Well, got into another wreck... Tandemed behind a G35 and a 350z and the G35 spun and hit his brakes. 350 hit the Z, I crunched the Z, and almost got t-boned by a Mustang coming at the passenger side ass first. I need to stop tandeming with people that don't understand that you DON'T hit the brakes when you spin.

Damage report:
The driverside headlight, fender, LCA, endlink, and turn signal are fucked. Core support is shifted a little; I think I can bend the frame back though. The OEM impact bracket or whatever is crunched (I'll take them off)Hood isn't bad, I think the brackets deformed a little..I should be able to get that back to "normal" to where its barely noticeable once the frame is straightened. The passenger fender buckled also. I think my outer tie rod ends are okay? I'll know once I pull the rack. Got the headlight motor to work too.

Plans are to get new driver and passenger LCA's, a new steering rack (been long over due), inner tie rods, maybe outers?, fabricate a bash bar, new turn signal (IDK if I want OEM or the intake style), stitch the bumper, and end-links. Hopefully that's all it takes to get it feeling normal again. I might wind up having to replace parts later on that I haven't noticed, like the lower coil=over bushing, but we'll see.

Kind of sucks, but whatever; it happens. Drifting is still tight as fuck.





Wednesday, July 15, 2020

KC Drift, Fender Fix, FullLock Drift

 Quick update; Went to the 2nd KC Drift event of the year and had a blast. The track was faster than the previous with less sweepers, so the miata did well. Alec and I pushed ourselves on some tandems and were getting some pretty close proximity to each other and other cars all day long. Then at the end of the day the old "one more run" curse got me. A 240 spun out and instead of rolling back he hit the brakes and I couldn't stop in time. Popped my drift crash cherry quick, haha. Luckily it was all fender damage on my end. Wheel was turned so it didn't get hit either. Sadly the guys hood, driver side pop-up, and fender were pretty wrecked. Luckily he wasn't mad and realized that it's just part of drifting.

Loaded the miata up and headed home still buzzin' from the event. Beau Desmarteau (@breau_desmarbreau) said it best, "Tandems ruin solo runs". The next day I removed the fender and banged on it for a few minutes until it was "good enough". Wound up looking way better than I expected!

A few weekends later Full Lock Drift had an event "Red, White, and Drift" at the MacPark go-cart track in OKC. Alec and I have been eyeing MacPark for a while and decided to give it a shot. This is the first legitimate track either of us have driven; up to this point its just been streeting and cones on skid pads. The track was a little more technical than I expected, so I had to do quite a few gear changes in my runs, but it was a fun and really productive in terms of seat time. MacPark has a little elevation change (nothing like the rollercoaster of love - still the wildest shit I've ever experienced in a car) but it still feels huge when you're going sideways. The track seemed narrow, but then again what do I know? I'm used to skid pads and being able to veer off if things go wrong. This event really pushed me to focus more on entry's and being as smooth as possible (I still have a ton of work to do). It took a few laps to get it sorted out, but within a dozen or so laps and a getting a few "cowabungas" into the dirt out of our system Alec and I were comfortable enough to start doing some tandems. Tandems on a track are a whole new experience. On skid pads I tend to focus probably 75% of my attention on the lead car and my proximity, but at this event it was a solid 50/50. This event was also a fucking oven with absolutely no wind.  I'm so glad I brought a pop up tent, but I'm pretty sure Alec was on the verge of heat stroke before we left. Shouts out to my dad and Alecs lady, Celsi for tagging along and sticking through the heat. Oh, and my #1 homie, Otis, is a champ. I brought a ton of ice and made him a bed of it in the grass under the trailer; but that still had to of sucked. He slept the entire drive home hugging the AC floor vent. Hopefully the 3rd KC drift event is a little more bearable and he's not miserable. Overall it was a good fucking time and I can't wait for the next one. Full Lock Drift is definitely on Alec and I's radar now and we're going to try to hit at least one more of their events this year.

Alec and I did a few ride along's from early on in the day and got some footage, so here's some solo runs after we kind of figured out what we were doing.

KC Drift #3 is a couple days away. Surprisingly Alec and I have everything repaired and inspected before hand, so we're not rushing this time around. Both of us wanted to check underneath to make sure we didn't fuck anything up too bad by going off course; all is well. Alec fixed his exhaust (you can hear it in the video below towards the end), replaced a wheel stud, got some steel lug nuts,and drift stitched his front end back together. I changed the CAS o-ring and re-timed the car, wrapped the exhaust under the tunnel (it's SO hot), got a cheap white delrin shift knob, and topped off fluids.







Saturday, July 4, 2020

Kellogg Skatepark - July 4th, 2020

Just another typical Saturday


Kellogg Skatepark - July 4th, 2020 from Josh Brown on Vimeo.