If I Were Ever Going to Break and Enter…

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…This would be the place.

I don’t know too much about this, but it looks like the owner of these photos took a trip to some sort of Nissan warehouse slash museum, and promptly wet himself. Well alright, he didn’t wet himself, but I’d forgive him if he did. Packed with examples of just about every Nissan from every generation—from track-specific builds through to regular road cars—this place is a-maz-ing. So go check out his photos, but make sure you slide a rubber mat under you first, huh.

Man, we really know how to pile on the Nissan stuff! But hey, according to the poll over there, that’s all good. And remember, if you’ve seen anything you think we should be mentioning, shoot us an email.

Posted in Galleries, nissan | 9 Comments

High Mile Club

hondamile.jpgIf you’ve got a classic that’s been on the road for a while, some car companies want to hear from you. Honda recently launched its Mile Makers Club, which welcomes any dream-powered machines above 100,000 miles. Strangely, the near-million mile Civic has yet to appear.

Also, Toyota Truck Nation has been going on for a while now. Again, 100,000 milers get past the velvet ropes, but 200,000 milers are rewarded with a t-shirt, sticker, and license plate frame.

Most of the well-traveled vehicles on these sites are from late model cars, but hopefully some of you nostalgic Honda and Toyota truck owners can contribute your odometer readings.

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The Skyline Supremacy: C10 GT-R Hakosuka

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Hakosuka. What more can you say.

We all know that’s it’s cool and we all definitely want one….but what IS a C10 GT-R, and where did it come from? That’s a good question for a great many Skyline fans. For every 1000 guys who would gladly sell some internal organs to own one, there’s maybe only one guy who might be able to tell you anything meaningful about it.

So let’s change that right now. GrandJDM readers, welcome to the Cliff Notes on our favourite car, the C10 Skyline 2000GT-R.

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Posted in nissan, prince, racing | 9 Comments

EVENTS: SEMA

Report from our recent visit to Lost Wages. [LINK]

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Racing Sim

Will Wright is the designer of the hugely popular life simulator video game, The Sims, in which you can command your virtual characters to eat, sleep, defecate and even play other video games, but the one thing they can’t seem to do is drive a car. Ironic then, that Wright was enough of a speed nut to compete in the US Express, the early 80s successor to the Cannonball Run. Competitors set off from Brooklyn, New York and headed for the finish in Santa Monica, California with only one rule – get there first. Not only did Wright compete, he won the inaugural illegal coast-to-coast race in 1980 with his electronically pimped Mazda RX-7.

Festooned with every gadget imaginable on the day disco died, the Mazda was Wright and co-pilot Rick Doherty’s mobile command center and could have served as the inspiration for Jackie Chan’s Subaru in the Cannonball Run movie. Stuffed into the 2-seater was a CB radio, radar speedometer control box, dash mounted computer for distance and fuel calculations, police scanner hidden inside the glove box, fuel cell that could fill the stock tank on the fly, refrigerator, night vision scopes, a radar detector, and a backwards mounted radar jammer to set off competitor’s radar detectors.

With an arsenal rivaling the Pentagon’s, the duo won the outlaw cross-country dash in 33 hours, 39 minutes, despite taking a longer route to avoid the fuzz while driving regularly at 120 mph. Keep in mind that because of the fuel crisis, the nationwide speed limit, regardless of state or straightness of road, was a strict 55 mph. Clearly, some moving violations took place. Needless to say, with today’s sensitive and litigious climate, the chances of an organized race on this scale happening again are nil. Wright’s escapades are part of the upcoming movie, 32 Hours 7 Minutes, named after the record time set in 1983.

[Wired]

Posted in mazda, streetracing, Video Games | 1 Comment

Old Charm

Old Japanese Cars

JDM-Freaks, we bring you today a bit of a curious website. This one is dedicated to the lesser-known old J-tin. It’s in Japanese of course, but thankfully there are lots of pictures to check out! The website states proudly on the front page;

“Funinki-kyushakai” feature customized unloved and worthless Japanese nostalgic cars for real enthusiasts.

You heard the man! We’re talking ugly old Toyota Crown, Nissan Laurel, Daihatsu Charmant amongst others. Not as popular as your S30Z or Celica, but for us, equally as interesting. We hope you find them interesting too.

Visit Funinki-kyushakai

There are lots of links on the site, so make sure to click everywhere! A lot of affiliated Japanese websites too, all of which are worth checking out. Yup, you can spend hours just looking around if you like!

Just make sure not to miss the gallery page.

Posted in Miscellaneous | 3 Comments

Forbes' Greatest Japanese Cars

datsun510forbes.jpgWay back when (and by when we mean 2001), it was the dawn of a fresh millennium, our new president Dubya had yet to make a mess of the country, and the nation was still riding high on the dotcom boom. So say your corporate overlords at ebubble.com had given you enough stock options to make you a paper gazillionaire, but you still had to wait till they vested to cash in. What reasonably priced Japanese car would hold you over until payday, or would ensure itself future classic status in case the economy turned south? You were probably too busy to find out, thanks to overtime at the office because you spent the day playing foosball in the lounge. Luckily, Forbes came to the rescue, listing their greatest Japanese cars of all time, circa 2001.

1917 Mitsubishi Model A
1951-80 Toyota Landcruiser
1958-66 Datsun 1200 Pickup
1967 Toyota 2000GT
1968-74 Toyota Corolla/Tercel
1968-73 Datsun 510
1969-73 Datsun 240Z
1974 Honda Civic
1976-79 Honda Accord
1977 Subaru Brat
1978 Mazda RX-7
1979 Toyota Celica Supra
1984 Toyota MR2
1986 Acura Legend
1989 Mazda Miata/MX-5
1990 Lexus LS400
1990 Mitsubishi 3000GT
1990 Acura NSX
1992 Infiniti J30

A few glaring omissions, uh, glare, though. What about great milestone cars like the Mazda Cosmo Sport, or the Nissan Skyline of any vintage? Still, for a list came before the whole nostalgic craze, it’s not bad, which means it’s way better than the Chicago Tribune‘s recent compilation. Click over to Forbes to see the slideshow.

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VQ? Why, that’d be Very Quick.

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I first mentioned Austin Hoke’s S30Z way back in September (I remember it like it was just over a month ago), but I discovered this week—I’m a bit slow sometimes—that he’s in the process of slotting a VQ35DE into it.

While not exactly an M3-beater when in its standard form in the 350Z, the VQ35DE is no slouch either, and when I think of it sitting in the belly of the much lighter S30, I’m reminded of this Mallrats line: “Do you know why Lois Lane could never have Superman’s baby? His Kyrptonian biological makeup is enhanced by earth’s yellow sun. If Lois gets a tan the kid could kick right through her stomach”. I’m sure the VQ won’t be kicking holes in Austin’s car, but the metaphor’s a good one right? Right? Ah screw you guys!

Check it out at www.vq240z.com

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Hit The Polls

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Firstly, folks, thanks for all the responses to the sticker poll. We’ve got a good idea now of how to go about our plan for world domination hooking you all up with stickers, so that’s ace. But now, we want more feedback.

We need to know which Japanese manufacturer is, in your eyes, responsible for the best, most memorable, and most inspiring range of classic JDM steel. Are you all big Daihatsu fans and we’ve failed to give you enough love? You get the drift. So hit the polls over in the far right column there, and let us know!

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Mazda Parkway: Rotary Power for you and 25 of your best friends

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One of the first articles we posted here on GrandJDM was a quick piece on some of the more oddball rotary-engined concoctions that Mazda cooked up in its early years (here).

The most unexpected one was of course the 13B engined Parkway 26. Now 26 doesn’t mean that it has two 13B engines, although it probably needs two since it’s a big, 2750kg 26 seater bus. Alas, it only has one rotary engine, the poor pollutionised REAPS 135hp 13B struggled to power it to a top speed of 125km/h (no word on how long it might take to get there). Mind you, two 13Bs would have been a good start, since the Parkway weighs as much as an RX3 Savanna…towing a trailer with two more RX3 Savannas on it. Load it up with 25 of your best friends and you can add yet another two RX3s to that hypothetical trailer (but look on the bright side…maybe they’ll spring for gas).

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Posted in mazda | 3 Comments

More on Toyota's 50th

toyotahq1957.jpgWe’re back from SEMA week, and as you all know, Toyota celebrated its 50th anniversary during that time. Our previous post was made minutes before rushing over to the Toyota display at the Vegas Convention Center for the press release on the very morning of the momentous occasion. Unfortunately, only the briefest of passing mentions referenced the 50th at all, as the focus was the unveiling the 2009 Corolla and Matrix.

But even if Toyota themselves aren’t talking about their half-century in the US, other people are. Thanks to the Classic Toyota Town group, here’s a roundup of stories regarding the Big T: Toyota’s Open Road Blog, PRI’s The World, Automotive News, CNN Money, DailyBreeze, and Toyotageek.

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Group A Division 1: Racing the Shopping Trolleys

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A few weeks ago, we had an article on Group 5 racing (here). And while that era gave us some wonderfully flamboyant racing cars, everyone could agree that Group 5 didn’t quite achieve its goals. It had originally been intended as a fast racing class where the cars looked like production cars but as the 80s dawned, the outlandish Gr5 cars were barely recogniseable caricatures of their underlying production cousins. Something had to be done, and the FIA’s solution was Group A.

The FIA had learned some hard lessons with Gr5 as various race teams (well, ok, Porsche) exploited loopholes in the wording of the rulebook to the hilt. This mistake would not be made again, and so Group A rules would be a lot more strict and more thoroughly spelled out. In this, it was successful and so from 1985 to 1992, GrA cars like the BMW M3 and Ford Sierra Cosworth became legends and any person with the right amount of coin could have a roadcar just like it in their driveway. In Japan, the premier GrA car was always the Skyline, but at the 0-1600cc class, war was being waged between the Honda Civic and the Toyota Corolla.

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Posted in honda, racing, toyota | 1 Comment

Featured Car: Arnel’s C10 GT-R Replica

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It might be safe to say that Arnel Ilog has something of an obsession with classic Japanese steel. When most of us determine that it’s time to buy a new classic, we’re forced to sit down and decide for how much to sell the one that’s already in the driveway. Poor Arnel had to make the same decision, but with one difference: He had three to begin with!

Already sitting in Arnel’s drive were a TE27 and two RX-3s. Luckily having two examples of the same car made things a little easier, and finally after a teary video diary entry spent complaining about the other cars, one of the RX-3s was voted off the island (alright, so maybe it didn’t happen quite like that).

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Posted in Featured Cars, nissan | 4 Comments

25 Years of US Built Hondas

More anniversaries! Twenty-five years ago this day, the first Japanese branded car built on US soil rolled off the conveyor belts wearing the license plate “USA 001.” Although Honda had been cranking out motorcycles in America since 1979, that gray Accord Sedan was the first four-wheeler and one of just 968 produced in the remaining months of 1982 at Honda’s Marysville, Ohio plant.

Today, that same factory can churn forth 1,800 cars per day, or 440,000 Accords, Acura TLs, and Acura RDXs a year, and the original milestone Accord is displayed at the Henry Ford Museum near blue oval headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan.

Source: [Honda]

Posted in honda, manufacturing | 1 Comment

Happy Anniversary, Toyota

toyopets.jpgToday is a momentous occasion. Exactly half a century ago, on Halloween Day, an upstart Japanese company set up shop in Hollywood, California with the intent of selling cars in the US. A task of such ambition had never been attempted before, and it showed. The first passenger car, the 1958 Toyopet Crown, had a 1.5L engine, 60hp, and the motivation of a crippled tortoise. 0-60 took almost half a minute.

With a fashionable chrome grille reminiscent of Mr. Pringle’s mustache stretching the width, a Jet Age hood ornament on the prow, and nifty suicide doors on each side, it was the perfect car for a slow, stylish cruise around the narrow, then-bumpy streets of Tokyo where speed was not an issue. On America’s yawning interstates, however, ill did not even begin to describe its equippedness. Not that domestic land yachts at the time were speed demons either, but the Toyopet practically moved backward in comparison, and the lines were downright staid compared to the wildly tailfinned chrome-mobiles.

It had a speedometer needle that changed colors as its velocity increased, but to give you an idea of the Crown’s intended operating range, it started out as a soothing green. Accelerate past 30 and it turned a somewhat troubling yellow. Push it above 50, and the needle would glow a panic-inducing red. To find out why their top-of-the-line machine in Japan had such pitiful sales on this side of the Pacific, Shoichiro Toyoda himself came to the US and took one for a drive on American roads, only to discover, much to his dismay, that he couldn’t even safely merge onto the highway. The Crown overheated when climbing LA’s hilly roads and the company decided to revamp its US operations.

But therein lies the secret to Toyota’s success. It quickly got to the root of the problem and corrected it. Surviving only on the sales of the Land Cruiser and the introduction of the Crown wagon, they eked by until 1965 and the debut of the Corona, which had been designed specifically for American tastes and driving habits. Although the 1960 Crown was officially a Toyota already, it was still marketed as the Toyopet. The Toyota Corona was the dawn of a new era for the company, and the name was its new flag. Good thing, too, since few would probably take the Toyopet Tundra or Toyopet Supra seriously. Following that, the Corolla appeared in 1968 and the rest is history. Soon, Toyota surpassed the best selling import brand, VW, and the Corolla eventually became the top selling car in the world.

So not only do we celebrate 50 years of Toyota in the US today, but it’s also 50 years of Japanese cars in the US, period. In addition, 2007 is also the 70th anniversary of the company in Japan, when it officially spun off (ha!) from Toyoda Automatic Loom, and Toyota is currently in a neck-and-neck race with GM for top selling brand in the world. You’ve come a long way, Toyota. Here’s to many more.

[Images: Toyota, Katysnest]

Posted in toyota | 1 Comment

SEMA or Bust

We are headed to Sin City for three gigantic convention halls full of cars, cars, cars. From lowriders to towering 4x4s, it’s the trade show that has it all. Well, except for a strong presence of vintage Japanese. There’s usually a few token vehicles but hopefully that will change, soon. We’ll just have to wait and see. In the meantime, check out our old SEMA galleries here and here.

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The Hills are Alive, with J-Tin

Move over, Governator, there’s a new force out of Austria to be reckoned with, and that force is Japan-Oldies.at. Like the name says, it’s a German-language forum for lovers of old Japanese cars, and it’s run by Rainer, aka Mr_Daihatsu on our forum. Check out his moving quest for a painstakingly restored 1981 G10 Daihatsu Charade that, if the Gumball Rally sticker in the original ebay photo is any indication, has led a very difficult life.

Look out world, vintage Japanese car fans are coming together like Go-Bots! And in case you haven’t already, check out grandJDM from Australia (note to pageant queens: there’s an L and some extra vowels in there) and Old Japanese Car from the UK.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Vans, They Are A-Rockin'

streetvanwagon.jpgThere’s a new magazine in town, if your town happens to be in Japan.  It’s called Street Van & Wagon, and we know painfully little about it.  We can see that it’s about longbacked cars from the 60s – 80s, and in case you forgot, there’s a defiant reminder that “We still live in this world!”  It’s no secret that we love wagons here at JNC, and the clean custom Toyota Crown and Nissan Skyline on the cover promise what we can only imagine are pages full of sizzling hot wagon action on the inside.  We want this mag, now!

[Love Old Cars]

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Return of Nissan's Own GT-R

nissankpgc10gt-r.jpgmotorsportjapan.jpgUnless you’ve spent the last two years being probed in an alien mothership, you know of the triumphant return of Nissan’s GT-R, which (finally!) debuted at the Tokyo Motor Show this week. But at the recent Motorsport Japan 2007 festival, Nissan unveiled another GT-R, sure to be of more interest to you nostalgic fans – their very own KPGC10 GT-R, which just underwent a thorough restoration. Check it out, in all its original splendor, complete with high ride height and blacked out wheels. It was all part of the ongoing party honoring the 50th anniversary of the Skyline.

Held in Odaiba, Tokyo, Motorsport Japan is a celebration of racing, with live runs of everything from Toyota’s own replica of the yellow and green 2000GT that broke 16 world speed records on a 72hr endurance run in 1966, to modern F1 cars like the planet Earth-schemed Hondas. Other notable classic race cars included the massively-winged Nissan R381 and turbocharged Toyota 7.

[Nissan]

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240Z: Early US Racing Success with BRE

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BRE stands for Brock Racing Enterprises, which is Pete Brock’s race shop that dominated all the classes of US racing that it competed, from the late 60s until 1974 when it was disbanded. BRE was also a contracted racing team to Datsun and hence the BRE cars are some of the most significant Datsun/Nissan race cars ever to grace a racetrack.

Enthusiasts of 60s iron will recognise Pete Brock (no relation to Australian racing icon Peter Brock) as the designer of the Shelby Cobra Daytona. At the time, Pete worked for Carrol Shelby, who was having a lot of racing success with the Cobra. Having an enormous power to weight ratio, the Cobras were always quick, but the vintage lines of the AC Ace based body were a serious aerodynamic liability at super high racing speeds. Not only was it high in drag, but it suffered from tremendous front end lift. So Pete designed a sleek, windcheating body to clothe the musclebound Cobra, and it worked too, winning its class at Le Mans in 1964.

Pete Brock would part ways with Carrol Shelby in the late 60s however, to start his own racing shop, BRE. And thus starting a decade-long dominance of amateur racing by Datsun in the USA.

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