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Surprise, It’s Not a Death Trap


I have been on a Fiero kick lately, wanted one since the early ’80s. I had to get it out of my system eventually so I grabbed a 2M4 that needed help for next to nothing, to kick around in, use for commutes and the occasional countryside cruise with the sunroof popped out. My wife’s reaction was that I had bought a deathtrap.

Before jumping in I researched the hell out of Fieros. I remembered the fires and recalls long ago, so I wanted to know all I could before buying one. A LOT of interesting info was uncovered while Googling Fieros, but most importantly Pontiac made the cabin’s structural integrity a priority. They employed a space frame cabin design that offered unprecedented protection for a car of its size. According to Consumer Reports, the only car rated safer was the Volvo DL.

I have also read and watched accounts of the protection Fieros have given when all went wrong. Of course, no car can keep you safe in every scenario and Fieros are small and still vulnerable depending on the circumstances, but this video I found is impressive when you think of how such a small car could have kept its occupant on this side of the soil.

 



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Bike Shows How to Stick a Landing!


In case you were curious, doing a stoppie is kind of sketch. The only time I got the back wheel off the ground on my old Suzuki, I wound up doing a total face plant. So when I saw the the brutal angle this rider gets into, I knew this was going to be a nasty bail. And while this stunt doesn’t really play out for him, you have to admit that his bike really sticks the landing. Nice work, bike!



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Working V8 Made Out of LEGOs


When I was a kid, I’d spend hours playing with LEGOs, and while I eventually graduated from the space-themed sets to the more technical engineering style ones, I never put together anything close to this insane working V8 model. According to the description over on StreetFire, over 300 hours of work went into designing and building it, which is easy to believe. Just look at how the wires light up to simulate the firing order!  Next, I think the genius who built it should make a replica motor for the full-size Ferrari F1 car. Check out the video to watch it in action.



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BTCC 2009: Knockhill


Another catch up post! This time we focus on the latest rounds of the British Touring Car Championship at Knockhill. Silverstone will follow tomorrow. The Knockhill rounds took place in mid August. A smaller field than normal as a couple of teams decided to skip this Scottish Round. After a few lack-luster results, Jason Plato dominated the first race of the day in his Chevrolet Lacetti from Pole Position. Local boy, Gordon Shedden was close behind, under pressure from the Airwaves BMWs. Continue reading at Speedhunters.

—By Andy Blackmore



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The 1979 Chevy K10’s New Paint


We’ve all heard the old standard “you get what you pay for.” Here at Sound Classics we’re using our 1979 Chevrolet K10 4X4 pickup as the guinea pig in testing if you can get more than you pay for with a cheap paint job—if you’re willing to do some prep work yourself.

The last installment detailed the four arm-wrecking days of sanding, Bondo, more sanding, priming, and more sanding on our 1979 Chevrolet K10 4X4 pickup. With this done it was time to hand it off to a cheap painter. Seeing an advertisement in the newspaper for a $199 special deal at Maaco in Lacey, we had our place.

As readers might recall, we already did a mock-up of how we wanted the truck to look. We printed out the “Sound Classics Virtual Paint Booth” (actually nothing more than a photo-chop) comp of the truck in black and silver and gave to the quote manager at Maaco.

Maaco’s $199 special is for a spray of standard single-stage paint. Trucks cost $50 more. Two colors doubles the price, including the truck fee. Want primer and extra prep, like block sanding? That adds $149, but is well worth it. The bottom-line quote for painting: $730, which sounds expensive until you visit a paint supply shop and find out what paint actually costs these days.

We brought paint books into the sunlight to select our final codes. Then we signed numerous sheets authorizing work, including a page-long disclaimer describing that Maaco is a “production” facility, and that our $730 wouldn’t net a “show finish.” With the last John Hancock, the keys were tossed.

A week went by and the Chevy was ready. Upon first gaze of the finished product, we were awe-struck by how similar the vehicle looked compared to our Virtual Paint Booth rendering. That’s a good thing, because it was exactly what we wanted.

Well, almost exactly. To our surprise the truck bed wasn’t prepped or painted. Evidently most paint shops no longer paint beds, because most owners now opt for a professional spray-on bed liner instead of paying Maaco’s $150 additional fee for painting the bed. Wish they would have told us that bed-painting wasn’t included, rather than assuming we already knew that piece of trivia.

Given our lack of previous body and prep experience and Maaco’s production-line painting, the truck came out pretty darn well. The only bad runs fell on the tailgate’s “CHEVROLET” stamping, but this is covered by the Silverado package’s metal trim plate. Small waves also present themselves during close scrutiny under direct lighting conditions. Finally, a mist of light silver overspray from the center appears in areas of black, but this is nothing thirty minutes with a random orbital polisher and a bottle of Griot’s Garage Machine Polish #3 can’t fix.

The worst view is of the cab’s roof, which was never block sanded. Luckily, one would have to be eight or ten feet above the truck to notice the paint waves. We really have to take the blame for this, since our prep on the roof wasn’t exactly up to snuff.

With the majority of the trim back on the truck, it looks pretty slick (in our humble opinion.) There’s no doubt that this isn’t a $15,000 paint job, but spending that type of scratch on the sub-$1000 K10 would be like replacing great-grandpa’s Mercury Grand Marquis drive-to-the-supermarket ride with a Ferrari 599 GTB.

We’ve had cars painted for $1500, $3000, $5000…and even a no-cost-spared body restoration of the Ferrari 328 GTS, so what do we think about the various price-value ratios? For $730 we received a good value for the basics. We gave up details like painting the bed, door sills and the engine bay…plus there will inevitably be areas that aren’t perfect (like the top), but we could crash a show and shine with the K10 and not apologize.

The $1500-$5000 range is a total crap shoot. At this level details like entire-vehicle block sanding and sills/trunk are in play, but skill, equipment and paint choice also are important to the results. This last $730 Maaco job has less dust bumps on the surface than the $3000 three-month complete body restoration job we contracted last year for a 1929 Franklin.

If you’re going high end, as long as you pick the right shop, you get the intended results. Speaking of the right shop, we took the K10 down to Hoey’s Autobody—the best shop in the area. They not only repainted the Sound Classics 328 GTS three years ago, but also have a Best In Show trophy from Monterey’s Concorso Italiano for the shop owner’s personal 1967 Lamborghini Miura as proof of their restoration prowess.

Hoey’s chief body man was actually surprised with the results for the price—expecting far more runs, waves, blotches, and overspray. It certainly doesn’t match the quality of detail we would have gotten from Hoey’s (one look at the miles of wave-free deep, glossy black paint on the trunk of the 1959 Impala they were completing illustrates this), but we did get what we paid for…and maybe more due to our four days of prep.

Think of the K10 now like that seemingly hot girl late at night during the kegger. The truck is now a “10-10-3-3-3-10” – looking like a 10 from 10 feet at 3AM…but a 3 from 3 feet at 10AM! Either way, it’s better than the solid 1 we came into the party with!

All that’s left to do is the interior. With a new dashpad and seat upholstery sitting in the garage, the K10 will be completed in a day or two!



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Revolfe Aristo


It happens to us all sooner or later. You get slightly older, the family begins to grow and your days of terrorizing the streets with your tuned sports car are well and truly over. This is exactly the situation a customer of Revolfe found himself in, except he had no intention of going down the minivan route! As long as the car he chose was big and comfortable the wife would approve, so there was really only one choice to consider and that was the Aristo V300 Vertex. Propelled by the silky smooth 2JZ this version of the Aristo opened up infinite possibilities. Continue reading at Speedhunters

By Dino Dalle Carbonare

Revolfe Aristo



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The Cars of Nisei Showoff


I know that many people have been waiting for our coverage of this weekend’s Nisei Showoff carshow, which made its final show in Downtown LA/Little Tokyo. Since I knew I’d run into a ton of old friends at the show, I knew that it would be smart to come to the show early; that was a very good decision. My friend Travis brought his Canon DSLR and his video camera to help me capture the event too, since we knew that it would be hard for me to make my way around the whole show, in between saying hello to all our old school friends that come out the woodwork just for the Nisei Showoff. For some reason, some of these guys don’t go to Formula D events or Just Drift events, but they always make it to Nisei. So for many of us, Nisei Showoff is a time for us to reconnect and chill with good friends who we don’t have the pleasure of seeing all the time, due to the busy work and travel schedules that we all have.

I was happy to see several media outlets at the event covering the show as well; I’m hoping that all the magazines and websites out there run coverage of the show. Super Street Magazine and Project Car Magazine both had a strong showing at Nisei, with booths and a build-off competition of the magazine editors’ personally owned cars. I also saw people from Import Tuner, Japanese Nostalgic Car, Urbanracer, Auto Otaku, DSport, even an ex-Jtuned guy and several other media outlets out there to support and shoot photos of Nisei Showoff. Make sure to check out their coverage of the show as well.

For any other media outlets who weren’t able to make it to the show, but still want to run coverage of the event, please contact us at motormavens(at)gmail.com and we will supply you with photos for free, just to help out our friend Ken Miyoshi who runs the show.

While it may seem to some outsiders that we’ve been hyping this event quite a lot, it’s only because Nisei Showoff really is a big deal to those of us who go there with our friends and family every year – it’s a tradition that we’ve all kept up for the past nine years.

Continue reading and view more photos at MotorMavens.com



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Munich Evolution BMW M1 in Motion




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