When the sharknoses come out to play…..bring earplugs

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Yesterday we did a piece on a rarely-seen Hakosuka sharknose, and while we’re on the subject of these of lowdown/garuchan/yankee/bosozoku sharknosed cars, let’s look into the culture a little bit further.

When we see these cars parked up, it’s easy to conclude that they’re just cosmetic projects that are built for a bit of a laugh, just for the look. And it’s easy to assume that these things would fall apart if they so much as exceeded 20km/h. Well, we have some video evidence to suggest that this is not so.

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Posted in Lowdown/Garuchan, Video | 8 Comments

Now With 55% Less Domain

fujicabin.jpgFrom the Less Is More Bureau, it has come to our attention that JapaneseNostalgicCar.com can be hard to spell rather annoying to type out in its entirety. So for the 2008 model, our weight reduction engineers have put the domain on a crash diet for your added convenience. We’ve purchased the domains jclassics.com and jnostalgics.com, and set both of them to redirect to this site. Or, you could just bookmark it. Either way. Of course, the original full-size JapaneseNostalgicCar.com will still work as well.

Keeping with the fat-cutting theme, the car in the photo is a 1955 Fujicabin 5A (also sometimes called a Fuji Cabin), which was a 1-cylinder, 5.5hp model that was more or less a scooter in a fiberglass shell. While other cars had four wheels, the Fujicabin made do with just three. No need for the opulent luxury provided by two windshield wipers, either. One is plenty. And two headlights? What excess! The Fujicabin sports a single, Cyclopean beam. Even its production run was sparse: Fuji, a Nissan affiliate, built only 85 between the years 1955 and 1958.

Posted in datsun, jnc, kei, nissan, other marques | Leave a comment

The Japanese Have Landed

In honor of our compadres at Old Japanese Car and the grand opening of their forum, here’s a 1979 Toyota Carina advert. Instead of British Leyland products, which were busy not being built by striking auto workers, blokes wishing to dramatically scale the white cliffs of Dover had a new steed, one that disembarked by hovercraft and scared the crap out of local waterfowl. See, the Carina symbolizes OJC, and its landfall represents the British Isles finally getting their own nostalgic car forums. Okay, so it’s a stretch, but reading meaning into vague symbols is what all of Shakespeare’s works were based on. Tally ho, lads. Best of luck!

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'67 Toyo Kogyo Lineup, No Corks

toyokyogo.jpgOver at online magazine Winding Road, they’ve posted the pages of a 1967 Toyo Kogyo brochure. If you’ve been paying attention, that’s the manufacturer Mazda was formerly known as, and it made corks. Each company had its humble beginnings. For Toyota, it was looms; for Subaru, planes; and Honda, motorcycles. Hey, someone had to supply Hiroshima with sake stoppers. By 1967, however, the company had moved quite a bit beyond bottle bungs and had expanded their lineup to include Luce 1500s, Familia 1000s, vans, trucks, buses, three-wheelers and their pièce de résistance, the brand new rotary-powered Cosmo Sports. Fun times!

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Movin' on Up

toyotajefferson.jpgNow that 2008 has arrived, the bean counters can go back and tally up the official scores from last year. As it turns out, Toyota has overtaken Ford for the #2 spot here in the US. Honestly, is anyone surprised at this point?

According to the article, this is the first time since 1931 that Ford hasn’t finished the year with a silver medal behind GM’s gold. For the record, Toyota sold 2.62 million vehicles this year to Ford’s 2.57 million.

[via Forbes]

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Signing Off from RSS

scraper.jpgThis morning we got an email from Dan Strohl at Hemmings informing us that Sportstyres.net has been scraping our blog. Being the Luddites obsessed with old technology that we are, we had never heard of this new-fangled phenomenon until his warning (Thanks, Dan!).

Scrapers use software to copy posts gleaned from RSS feeds, and in our case, print them verbatim on their site. Unfortunately, because our scraper is located in Poland, we’re limited to what we can do legally. We could deploy our crack team of ninja commandos to Warsaw, but we don’t want to spark an international incident over a few meager sentences about old cars, so instead, we’ll be canceling resetting our RSS feed. In the meantime, you’ll actually have to come to the site, ya lazy bastards. We apologize to all three of our RSS subscribers, and in case this very post is on its way to the Eastern Bloc, we’ll end with this: This post was stolen from Japanese Nostalgic Car.

Posted in jnc | 3 Comments

Hako-Sharknose. Kill it with fire?

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A sharknose conversion is a pretty commonplace staple of the JDM lowdown/bosozoku/yanki/garuchan scene, and in general they are an homage to the outlandish styles of the Silhouette racing cars of the late 70s and early 80s.  Hence sharknoses are usually inflicted on boxy 70s/80s saloons like a ’79 Skyline Japan or ’84 Toyota Cresta, and you generally don’t see the earlier cars given the same treatment (after all it would be a historical mismatch).

Well…until now.  Here, ladies and gentlemen, is a Hakosuka sharknose.

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Posted in Lowdown/Garuchan, nissan | 9 Comments

Cotton Celica

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Check out this awesome t-shirt we got from our friend Joji of Toy Garage. On the front is a head-on pic of an A2 Celica comin’ up on ya for a pass like an angry daruma closing in on its prey. On the back, a rear view of the Celly nanoseconds after it’s flown by. Has there, in the whole history of human civilization, ever been a more worthwhile use for the lowly cotton plant? Answer: No. Thanks, Joji! Now excuse us as we wear it to the mall and run past innocent consumers while making vroom-vroom noises.

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0-300km/h: JDM Tuner wars of the 90s

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JDM tuners are nothing if not enthusiastically competitive, and today, that manifests itself in the regular Super Lap time trials at Tsukuba raceway. It’s where all of the major tuning houses pit RX7s, Lancer Evolutions, Imprezas and Skyline GT-Rs against each other. Back in the day, it’s interesting to note that Option Magazine played an important part in fostering these friendly rivalries, which in turn played a big part in forcing the JDM tuning houses to raise their game to stay competitive, and in doing so, building the most professional tuner scene on the planet.

Many months ago we brought your attention to an excellent series called Legend of Option. It’s a series of magazines, which go over the good old days when the JDM tuner scene was very much in its infancy. The series goes beyond just reprinting old articles from the era, but rather it’s a freshly written retrospective.

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Posted in Miscellaneous | 2 Comments

Jam Session

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No, that’s not the control room at NASA, Section 9, or Godzilla Defense Force. It’s the Tokyo Traffic Control Center. If you’ve ever driven on the capital’s elevated highways and concrete tangle known as the Shuto, you’ve seen the big electronic roadsigns that map out the intersections ahead of you and the traffic jams taking place at each one. How do they do it? According to this article, it’s a system of cameras, choppers and 17,000 vehicle detectors at over 1,000 intersections and 15,154 traffic signals all working in massive symphonic unison to smooth out the vehicular movement in one of the worlds busiest and most crowded cities. The system doesn’t just govern the Shuto, but the surface streets as well. The wall clock, however, remains curiously analog.

[via Gizmodo]

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Toyota Automobile Museum

tam1.jpgFrom our English Channel bureau, courtesy of UK reader Mash and a French 2000GT enthusiast, here’s some photos of the Toyota Automobile Museum to start the new year off right. Eagle-eyed viewers will notice that not all of the vehicles within are necessarily Toyotas. That’s because while the Big T owns the museum, the facility is more of a celebration of the car as an entity. Classy!

Next, from the faith in humanity bureau, the reason we didn’t bring you photos of the museum sooner. When we visited in the winter of 2003-04, a combination of poor planning, a miscomprehension of Japanese geography, and a primitive camera sporting a resolution of approximately 9 pixels conspired to prevent this particular destiny.

Back then, the ultra-cool mag-lev train taking you to the museum’s doorstep hadn’t been built yet, so there we were, wandering around an Aichi bus depot like a couple of wide-eyed gaijin tourists, which is, of course, exactly what we were. We asked a kind Japanese businessman tam2.jpgfor the right bus queue, and by asking, we mean pointing to the museum brochure and gesticulating like an itchy chimpanzee in a game of charades, but miracle of miracles, he actually understood!

Instead of directing us to our bus, however, he glanced at his watch, asked us to follow him, and hailed a taxi. Jumping in the front seat, he told the driver in Japanese what we can only assume was, “To the Toyota Museum, and step on it!” We arrived about 45 minutes before closing, but without him, we would have missed it entirely. We insisted on paying for both the ride to the museum and his fare home, but he would have none of it. We said arigato gozaimasu until the taxi left, bolted up to the third floor where all the Japanese cars were, and took a bunch of blurry, dim photos that were too embarrassing to post.

If the unnamed gentleman by some chance reads this, thank you so much and Happy New Year!

Posted in japan, museum, toyota | 1 Comment

Mazdafarians in Amsterdam

mazdanetherlands.jpgIf you still have wayward champagne corks lying around from your new year’s eve party, now would be a good time to reflect on those bottle stoppers, especially if you’re a Mazda owner. That’s because before there was Mazda, there was Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. And before that, there was Toyo Cork Kogyo Co., Ltd.

That’s right, prior to screaming rotaries and zoom-zoom sport sedans, the manufacturer of some of the sweetest nostalgics around got their humble start making wineplugs.

That’s why on this New Year’s Day, we bring you a smörgåsbord of Mazda photos courtesy of dear Amsterdam reader Ahura at the contact high bureau. Check out his site, Mazda Madness, to see how Mazdafarians from the Netherlands get down with their bad selves. Their cars are largely original and well preserved, like a nice Dutch gouda.

On the other hand, the other side of the world, and the other end of the spectrum are Australian Mazdafarians, who have a slightly different take on what a vintage Mazda should look like. There’s enough loud paint and big rims at HiOctane to make even Vin Diesel blush. But we’re not here to judge. We’re here to jam in the name of Maz.

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Hakosuka: rea-dee…..set-tto…..gooooooooo!

220_hakodrag.JPGOk. So it’s blurry. It’s short. It’s on a low res camera phone. But the sound’s good and it’s a street drag race between two Hakosukas from back in the day.

And you don’t see that every day.

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Posted in nissan | 1 Comment

MS65 Crown: front to back, side to side….pancake

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Old classic sedans have always been a staple of the JDM lowdown scene, but we’ve found that relatively few examples have the airbag suspension system that’s so popular in the USA. But here’s a Youtube of one in action. Cool!

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2007, We Hardly Knew Ye

takuri.jpgWell, it’s here, the final day of the year. Now before we all get hammered and pretend we know the words to “Auld Lang Syne,” let’s take a look back at all the nostalgic car happenings that took place during our planet’s latest orbit ’round the sun.

We think 2007 can be safely called a banner year for nostalgics. First of all, it marked 100 years since Komanosuke Uchiyama finished construction on the 1907 Takuri (pictured). It was powered by a 2-cylinder 1.9L boxer engine, but had the added effect of being the first ever Japanese-made car. Sayonara, walking!

But what about companies that still exist, you say? Well, in 1907 Daihatsu was also founded, and immediately began cranking out (ha!) engines. Their first car wouldn’t come along until 1930, and even then it only had three wheels, but theskyline50th.JPG company had been firmly established. In honor of its centennial, this past May the Daihatsu museum opened in Osaka.

2007 also saw the 50 years of one of the most revered names in motoring, the Nissan Skyline. All 12 generations were put on special display at the just-completed $3 billion Tokyo Midtown, and the newest iteration embarked on a country-wide tour that culminated at the Ken & Mary tree in Hokkaido. Nissan’s Ginza showroom housed another exhibit, and in October, the reincarnated GT-R made its debut at the Tokyo Motor Show.

cosmosport.jpgIn May 1967, Mazda’s iconic rotary engine spun freely into the world in the form of the Cosmo 110S. Of all the Japanese automakers, Hiroshima-based Mazda has made the most aggressive and much-needed push towards making its history known, with a killer website and special edition RX-8s for Japan and the US. As a result, Mazda wins the completely unprestigious Japanese Nostalgic Car‘s Manufacturer of the Year Most In Touch With Its Roots Award.

toyota50th.jpgYes, 2007 was a big year, but biggest most of all for the Big T. Not only was it Toyota’s 70th birthday, but also its 50th year in motorsport. Not that it noticed any of this, however – Toyota was too busy surpassing GM to become the biggest automaker in the world. At the end of October, Toyota USA celebrated its 50th anniversary, marking exactly half a century of Japanese cars in America. The very next day marked 25 years of Japanese cars built in America, with the anniversary of Honda’s Marysville, Ohio plant opening.

But enough about the manufacturers. What about the enthusiasts? You guys are the pioneers, baby! The nostalgic car universe is still in its infancy, but growing in leaps, bounds and jetpack-assisted flights thanks to you, dear reader. The Japanese Classic Car Show was bigger than ever this year. The mainstream media began to take a closer and much-deserved look at vintage J-cars. The Times, both LA and New York, published pieces on the emergence of Japanese classics. Shows like Motoring J Style stepped onto the scene, and even more events are planned for next year. Commercials and TV coverage too.

Oh yeah, and we started! Okay, technically we started in 2006, but the website you’re reading right now launched in January. It wasn’t just us, jncmag.jpgeither – there were also our partners in crime at grandJDM and Old Japanese Car in what Hemmings called a “mini-explosion” of English language sites about old school JDM. We’ll be sure to mention this honor next time we’re going through airport security.

Explosion or not, we’re truly honored to have been a tiny part of the fast-growing world of nostalgics. As you may have heard, we’re coming out with a magazine for 2008, with unique content and full color photography. As with all our endeavors, we hope this will help support the scene, the shops, the enthusiasts and, of course, the cars. Look for a subscription announcement in the first week of January.

Wow, this is post is beginning to rival War and Peace in length, but we’d like to leave you with this. It’s a new year’s card originally sent out on January 1, 1936, and comes courtesy of our friend Dan Banks and The Dan Banks Collection. According to Dan, the 1935 Datsun Model 14 on the postcard was drawn by Ryuichi Tomiya, who did many of Datsun’s early catalogs and advertising materials. Hanging from the hood ornament is a shimenawa, a straw rope with paper strips warding off evil spirits and welcoming Toshigami, the Shinto god of the New Year. The card was sent by a Datsun franchise to a customer in Kamakura and says “Wishing you continued happy motoring in the Datsun this year!”

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Happy motoring, indeed, with much more to come in 2008!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Posted in datsun, events, honda, jnc, mazda, media, nissan, other marques, pre-war, racing, toyota | 2 Comments

Autech Stelvio: Handbuilt JDM Excess by Zagato

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For those of you who don’t know, Autech is Nissan Japan’s own in-house tuning and customisation arm. By law, JDM car manufacturers have to offer a customisation service to cater for disabled drivers, and so this service forms a big part of what Autech does. But over the years, Autech has also turned its attention to performance cars from time to time, the most notable ones being hand-built R32 and R33 Skyline 4dr sedans with GT-R running gear (and the Stagea RS260 station wagon with the same), and performance versions of the Silvia. Obviously there is the dangerous possibility of Autech overlapping with the good work that Nismo does, and so Autech has over the years mainly restricted itself to the high end stuff.

And high end certainly does describe Nissan’s big extravagance of the 1980s: the Autech Zagato Stelvio.

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Posted in nissan | 9 Comments

Bangers and Mash

bangercedric.jpgWhile life gives us LeMons here in the colonies, it doles out bangers in the UK, where before a car is put out to pasture, it’s put on a tear through a pasture. The long held tradition of taking an old car to a muddy field and letting it go out in style, or at least like a heifer with mad cow disease, is practically a British way of life, right up there with afternoon tea and bowler hats.

Take a long, painful look at The A to Z of Banger Racing to see what kind of machinery is meeting its demise at the hands of a bunch of sadistic Brits. There’s Corollas, Crowns, Laurels, Cedrics, and basically a whole smattering of awesome J-tin that we’d kill to get our hands on – even a Nissan President and a hearse. Savages! Perhaps our readers from the UK can rescue some of these barges. Otherwise, we might have to call in William Wallace to give you a good trashing. He was also The Road Warrior, you know.

[via Jalopnik]

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Citrus Bowl

lemons.jpgThere’s thunder in them thar hills. Or, at least, the combined cacophony of a hundred barely-running cars squealing their tires and revving at full tilt. Once again, it’s the 24 Hours of LeMons, held this time at Thunderhill Park Raceway in Willows, CA. Once again, teams bring a car costing $500 or less (not including safety equipment) and duke it out for a bag containing what can only be described as 20,000 nickels. And once again, many of the entrant vehicles are old and of Japanese origin. Other than the mens’ room at the Minneapolis airport, where else are you gonna find good handling that cheap?

Take this photo, for example, which depicts a 280Z, BRE-themed Sentra, Mazda FC RX-7 and an outhouse, all vying for position. Lamentably, such mayhem also means mustard yellow Datsun B210s go from this to this. On the other hand, we like the Mad Max vibe (among other things) emanating from this Celica Supra, and dig this Isuzu I-Mark campaigned by our friends at Motoring J Style. Here’s a “before” photo.

Although teams pull all nighters to install a 3TC, it’s (mostly) good-natured fun with a dab of fierce competition. Perhaps when our budget allows, we’ll have a team JNC. Question is, what nostalgic should we hoon in the name of fun? In the meantime, thanks to the miracle of human progress, you can catch up-to-the-minute updates of the ensuing hilarity over at Jalopnik.

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Cafe GT-R: If they served chicken wings, you’d never have to leave

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If you were cruising the Tochigi area of central Japan, you might come across a roadside restaurant, with a charming organic produce market at the back. There’s a restaurant serving pizza and pasta, and at the corner of the complex is a little coffee shop….called Cafe GT-R. And you can hang out and sip your coffee in the presence of a racing KPGC10, surrounded by GT-R memorabilia. The owners also encourage enthusiasts to use the cafe as a meeting point, so what more could you want?

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Posted in Businesses, nissan | 5 Comments

Debonair: When AMG met Mitsubishi

Recently, we profiled some bizarre tie-ups between JDM and European car companies, like the weird alliance between Nissan and Alfa Romeo and between De Tomaso and Daihatsu. But one that we forgot, and to be honest, it’s the one that really takes the cake…is the alliance between Mitsubishi and AMG.

Great! You’re thinking. So AMG does a deep-skirted, big wheeled, boosted up Starion, right? Well….er, no. The vehicle of choice for AMG to work its magic on is the Debonair V3000 luxocruiser.

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Posted in mitsubishi | Tagged , , , | 15 Comments