Project Hakosuka: Umm….yeah. Still not going.

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With the rust now dealt with, and the clutch now fixed, attention was turned to the car’s running gear. Translation: are the wheels going to fall off?

Well…I hope not.

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Project Hakosuka: Nope. Still doesn’t go.

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Where we left things last week were that I’d sent off the carbs to a specialist for rebuilding, and the wayward clutch was fixed. The carb guru estimated that it might take a week to re-do the Webers, so this left plenty of time for little jobs while the Hako was up on jackstands.

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RB-Powered Hako Hits The Hills

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A nod goes out to Auto Otaku once again for yet another great find.  Here’s a couple of videos of RB-powered C10s, and while I admit I’d rather have an L28 myself, there’s definitely nothing upsetting about these swaps; especially with the ITBs they’re packing.  That sound, oh that sound.

Click through to check ’em out.

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Stelvio: love for sale (is love blind?)

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A few months ago we did a feature on one of the oddest JDM cars ever. The uber-expensive, very limited edition, handcrafted-in Italy Autech Stelvio. Well…there so happens to be on for sale at the moment on Yahoo Auctions: LINK

One of the ugliest cars ever, and as someone said, quite possibly just a big joke being played by the Italians on Nissan, but (to me anyway) it’s strangely desireable and collectible. If you agree…here’s your chance! I can’t buy it, I just bought the Hakosuka 🙂

Posted in nissan | 4 Comments

Classic CM: Celica XX, Electric Boogaloo

This one goes out to all the MkII Supra owners out there. Never say JNC doesn’t love ya. As you know, the second-gen Toyota Celica Supra was known as the Celica XX in Japan, and this commercial for the home market from 1983 contains more 80s cliches than a cocaine overdose on Wall Street. Special effects drawn by a Commodore 64, bluish neon that glows like a Tron nightclub, Grace Jones, and music that can only be described as Depeche Mode and the Pet Shop Boys beating each other to death with their keyboards… it’s all there. And what is up the suggestive placement of the Super Sports Machine’s headlights in the final shot? Double X double entendre, anyone?

Posted in cm, toyota | 6 Comments

Tetsuuuooooo! Akira Live Action Remake

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Seriously, Hollywood? Were the millions you made peddling dumbed-down versions of Speed Racer and Transformers not enough? You even managed to dumb down Knight Rider, which had the intelligence of a baked potato to begin with. Do you really need another mountain of gold scraped from the treasured memories of our youth to fill the vaults of your McStudio? Please, Hollywood, no more. We’re begging you. For the love of wrinkly mutant babies, just let us hang on to this one unsullied shred of our childhood.

Readers, in case you haven’t heard, the latest casualty in the remake rampage is Akira, Katsuhiro Otomo’s groundbreaking series about a delinquent biker gang in post-WW3 Neo-Tokyo. If Akira was a car, it’d already be a classic, according to most states’ 25-year threshold. But hell, those who’ve seen it know it was a classic on the day it was born.

Publication started in 1982 in Young Magazine, the Japanese manga weekly also responsible reigniting our passion for hachirokus and Fairlady Zs with Initial-D and Wangan Midnight. It was widely acclaimed as one of the best manga of all time. Likewise, the 1988 anime adaptation cost $10 million for its revolutionary artwork, a record sum at the time, and is credited with introducing Japanimation to the western world.

We’ve watched it at least three times and we still don’t fully understand what the heck is going on. All we know is that it takes place in a dystopian 2030, after Tokyo has been destroyed by a nuclear bomb.  And it contains layers of subplots involving terrorists, government conspiracies, nightmarish children that look 87 years old, a hallucinotastic trip with creepy anthropomorphic toys, and killer motorcycle chases. In other words, Totally. F’in. Cool.

In fact, the bikes ridden by main characters Kaneda and Tetsuo have become so iconic that fans have created a slew of real-life replicas. If only Akira‘s transformation into live action were to stop there. But no, Warner Brothers is strip-mining this specimen of storytelling perfection and putting Leonardo “King of the World” DiCaprio and some other guy we’ve never heard of in the leading roles. Also, they’re moving the whole setting to Manhattan. At this point, why not just call it something else? Because they want to extinguish our souls, that’s why.

Thanks (we think) to Van for the tip!

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Tokyo Daze: Tokyu Hands!

220_433_japantrip118.jpgIf you go to Japan, one of the JDM institutions you need to pay a visit to is Tokyu Hands. Ostensibly it’s a department store, which seems hell bent on stocking pretty much everything: from hardware, to stationery, to toys and clothes, to luggage and much more besides. It’s a chain of very large stores all over Japan.

Where it gets interesting is the “much more besides” stuff they you will find there.

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Return of the 'Roku, Part V

ae86hatch.jpgToday we received the most convincing news yet that Toyota is seriously considering a return to its rear wheel drive roots. We thank dear reader Buddy J, who informed us that an unnamed lead project developer at Toyota has contacted Moto Miwa, founder of Club4AG, to ask his readers what they’re looking for in a revived compact sports car. If you haven’t been keeping up with this saga, catch up via this post.

While it’s clear that everyone would like to see a responsive, lightweight, RWD sports coupe, some people want it all. Let’s face it, Toyota will not be able to toss in VVT-i, a 6-speed transmission, LSD and keep the price at a “reasonable” level. In 2008 dollars, a 1985 Corolla GT-S should cost almost $25,000 today.

Frankly, we’d be more than thrilled with a simple, lithe FR sportster that takes styling cues from the AE86 (or first-gen Celica, if it will be badged as such). Weigh in at Club4AG.

Posted in retro, toyota | 3 Comments

Nissan Motorsports Exhibition 2008

nissanmsexpo.jpgIf you’re lucky enough to be in Japan on March 1-2, head over to the Nissan Motorsports Exhibition 2008 at the Red Brick Warehouse and Yokohama Marine Disaster Prevention Complex. It’s an annual event Nissan Japan puts on to celebrate all things racing and they typically pull out a good selection of cars both old and new from their collection for display.

This year’s theme is, naturally, all about the Skyline GT-R, as the birthday party continues in full swing. A full range of historic GT-Rs, in both production and racing form, is expected. They’ll even hoon it up a bit in actual race cars, and a Super GT-spec Nissan GT-R will be making demo runs. Other attractions include a “pitwork demo,” Nissan Collection merchandise, and a dedicated kids zone. Gotta start them off early, you know.

UPDATE:  Official website for the event now up.

Click here for a gallery of the 2005 event. [toshi358]

Posted in datsun, events, japan, nissan, racing | 2 Comments

Project Hakosuka: No, she doesn’t go

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One of the truths about old cars are that classic cars that are in regular use are the best ones to buy. Old cars (even low mileage cars) that have been inactive or stored for a long time often have issues when you try to recommission them for the road again, and my car was no different.

It’s a good thing it was towed to my house, because I don’t think it would have made it from the cargo terminal to my place under its own steam anyway.

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Badge Engineering

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Here’s a great piece on Neatorama about how some of the world’s most recognizable automobile brands got their logos.

For instance, Mitsubishi’s logo combined the crests of two families. The diamonds came from the Iwasakis, a former samurai clan to which Mitsubishi founder and Yataro Iwasaki and his well-groomed mustache belonged. Their radial arrangement came from the three leaves of the Tosa Clan, whom Iwasaki was working for when the Meiji Restoration abolished the feudal system. The name of the company itself comes from the Japanese word mitsu, meaning three, and hishi, meaning water chestnut but is used to denote a diamond. Somehow, “triple water chestnut mafia” just doesn’t have the same ring.

Check out the article for logo origins of Mazda and a host of other European and American car companies.

[via Jalopnik]

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Project Hakosuka: Right Back At The Beginning (Part Two)

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Ok, where we left the story yesterday was that I’d paid for the car, and J-Spec basically takes it from there. The car was picked up from Red Megaphone, and then towed to the docks at Yokohama…where it would wait….and wait.

Now, by far this was the worst part of the whole process. It had been a lot of fun up until then, but now there would be a long period of waiting.

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Happy President's Day from JNC

president.jpegFor those of you reading from other parts of the world, today is President’s Day here in the USA. All hail the the greatest influences on our beloved nation’s history: George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and the three day weekend.

What better time could there possibly be to talk about the Nissan President? The “Prezzy,” as it is sometimes called, is Nissan’s top of the line, over the top, top banana luxury sedan model. Nissan debuted it in 1965 to compete with those bastards at Toyota, who had unveiled a V8 version of the Crown a year earlier (that would later become the Century). Nissan priced the President at nearly double what the Toyota cost, when most commoners could barely even afford a three-wheeled Daihatsu, so the only people to buy these ultra-VIP cars were actual VIPs: heads of state, corporate execs, the royal family, and the occasional yakuza boss.

The first generation, chassis code 150, came with a 3.0L straight six in base trim, but no Prime Minister or crime lord wishing to command the full respect of his underlings would be caught dead without the 4.0L V8. In 1973, the first redesign, saw a the body extended and a pointy upright grille installed, the V8 upgraded to a 4.4L unit, and the chassis code changed to 250.

For the next nine years, the only major revision was the addition of mandatory smog equipment, a second clock, and that sign of the changing times, an AM/FM stereo with cassette deck. Welcome to the eighties!

In 1982, Nissan gave it a thorough revamp, with new interior sheetmetal, while upgrading the rear suspension from leaf springs to a four-link, yet the chassis code remained the same.

Then nothing significant happened.

The true second generation finally arrived in 1990, a genuinely complete redesign that, unfortunately, ended up looking exactly like an elongated Infiniti Q45. From then on, the look of the President has always resembled its lesser cousin, which is why the old school ones are much, much cooler.

UPDATE: The pointy grille treatment came in 1973, not 1982 as we originally said. Thanks to Ed from Ratdat, master of all things Datsun, for the correction!

Posted in nissan, toyota, vip | 3 Comments

New Crown in Town

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Today, Toyota unveiled the 13th generation Toyota Crown in Japan. It doesn’t look much different from the 12th generation Crown, but it looks a helluva lot different from the first generation Crown from 1955. There aren’t many models in the world that can boast such a long continuous run. Seriously, it’s even outlasted its original marque, Toyopet. Though it’s no longer the king in Toyota’s lineup, having been displaced by Centuries, Celsiors and Lexuses, it remains what it’s always been, a stylish luxury car that is to Tokyo what a pickup truck is to Texas. And most importantly, it’s still RWD. Available engines are all V6s, with sizes ranging from 2.5 to 3.5. Symbolic of our times, a hybrid version is available with the 3.5L motor.

[Toyota Japan]

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Project Hakosuka: Right Back At The Beginning (Part One)

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Well, I guess I better tell you guys a little more about the car! And I suppose the best place to start is at the beginning.

It was almost three months ago that I decided to take the plunge and buy a JDM classic. I’d owned JDM imports before (there are plenty of second hand imported JDM cars in Australia) but nothing this old. So on 12th November I send an email to our friends at J-Spec.

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Nissan USA Quietly Avows 50th Anniversary

nissan50th.gifDown at the JNC ranch, one of our favorite dead horses to beat has been the fact that Toyota, the richest and largest car company in the world, did nothing to celebrate their 50 years of business in America except affix a small badge to a Camry Hybrid sedan. Nothing to honor the legions of fans who have painstakingly restored Corollas, Celicas, Crowns, Coronas and Supras. How sad!

Recently, this mysterious logo has appeared on the Nissan USA website. 50th Anniversary already? Well, although Nissan Motor Corporation, USA wasn’t an officially established US company until 1960, exports began as early as 1958 with the Datsun 1200. Right now, the only thing they appear to be celebrating is the desire to move a few leftover Muranos, but hey, the year is still young. Let’s hope Nissan can throw a better party than Toyota.

Posted in datsun, nissan | 1 Comment

So…..I bought a Hakosuka

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It’s been quite a long time in the making, but I think we can now let the cat out of the bag. Late last year we hinted that we had some surprising big plans for 2008, and this is one of them. I’ve bought a Hakosuka!

She arrived on the back of a tow truck today, fresh from her long journey from Japan, and I can’t tell you how excited I am. I’ll tell the whole story soon, but getting this beauty into my garage was a very long journey that began in October last year.

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Love Ear Art: Oldschool Paint Skillz

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We came across Love Ear Art the other day, an airbrush artist in Japan who does a lot of work on JDM classics in a true 70s style. Check out his Blog for more of his awesome work.

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JDM Mystery Toy Draw WINNERS!!

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Wow, we got quite a lot of entries from all around the world, including Poland, Brazil, Netherlands, New Zealand, Canada and the USA but most of the entries came from Australia. Thanks to everyone who participated, and if you didn’t win, don’t worry, I’m sure I’ll think of more giveaways very soon!

Click on to see if you WON!

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DR30 Skyline RS Turbo: Group A Lovin'

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We did a piece on the DR30 Skyline and the FJ20 engine quite a long time ago, but a cache of old Group A racing videos on YouTube brought some memories flooding back. I used to have one you see.

Here are some videos from the 1987 Japanese Group A season, the year after the DR30 won the All-Japan championship. The videos include a time attack between a stock R31 GTS-X roadcar and the Advan Group A DR30 racecar (um…the racecar wins!) as well as highlights from a race at Tsukuba. This looks like an very early episode of Hot Version. Ahh…the memories.

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Posted in nissan, racing | 1 Comment