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    • Apr 26thLast weeks poll results

      Last week we had the sudden death between the Impul Silvia Turbo S12 and the Tomica Skyline DR30 super silhouette racers and the outcome isn’t a tie anymore: the Tomica Skyline DR30 wins with a large distance from the Impul Silvia Turbo S12! To celebrate this we have some nice footage of the Tomica Skyline DR30 on a Nismo Festival:

      Enjoy! 🙂

      So, this week we seek the answer to the following: how big should oil coolers be?
      A small oil cooler looks better!
      A small oil cooler looks best!

      The bigger the better!
      The bigger the better!

      Oil coolers? No thanks, better keep it clean!
      Oil coolers? No thanks, better keep the looks clean!


      by bosozoku with no comments yet
    • Apr 25thExhaust of the week: double U or double V?

      This week we have a big W (double-U) shaped exhaust on a Toyota Celica. Or would it rather be a double V shaped exhaust then?
      Big double V exhaust on bosozoku styled Toyota Celica
      Big double V exhaust on bosozoku styled Toyota Celica


      by bosozoku with 1 comment
    • Apr 23rdBosozoku lifestyle: Motorcycle gangs in Tokyo

      As promised in our poll: we’re trying to get in depth on the bosozoku lifestyle! 🙂
      The only problem is that the subject is very wide, the bosozoku designation is dating back to the 50s and where should we start??

      Well, I think we will start with this video I found on Youtube some time ago. It shows the golden era of the bosozoku gangs in Tokyo during the 80s and 90s with a nice ballad on the background:


      by banpei with no comments yet
    • Apr 22ndHow deep is your dish?


      While browsing auctions.yahoo.co.jp I came across a really nice set of, for me, unknown rims under a bosozoku style Toyota Mark II MX41 Hardtop Grande. I looked it up and found them to be vintage Hart Racing rims:
      12.5J wide Hart Racing rims on a Mark II MX41
      12.5J wide Hart Racing rims on a Mark II MX41

      Eventhough this picture is very blurry the Mark II really looks nice with those Hart Racing rims:
      12.5J wide Hart Racing rims on a Mark II MX41
      12.5J wide Hart Racing rims on a Mark II MX41

      In my search on identifying these rims I found an old advertisement of Hart Racing rims on Japanese Nostalgic Car blog:
      Hart Racing rims advertisement
      Hart Racing rims advertisement

      They really are good looking rims, especially when they get a big lip after 10J and more!

      Just in case you actually want to buy them:
      12.5J Hart Racing rims on auctions.yahoo.co.jp

      And how deep is your dish? 😛


      by banpei with no comments yet
    • Apr 21stPopular Bosozoku cars: Nissan Skyline C210 Japan


      This week we feature one of the most popular bosozoku style cars: the Skyline C210, also known as the Skyline Japan. Only the Skyline C110 and Nissan Laurel are more popular than the Skyline Japan.

      This Skyline may be well known amoung the visitors here, our logo is showing one of the headlights of this Skyline:
      Bosozoku style Skyline C210
      Bosozoku style Skyline C210

      In my opinion the best bosozoku styled Skyline C210 and maybe even the best styled of all bosozoku styled cars I’ve seen! It has got almost everything right: the oil cooler, headlight and grille swap from a Laurel, wide over fenders, wide sideskirts, big grachan styled lip and spoiler. Only thing missing is the sharknose but that would ruin this car I guess.

      Speaking of sharknoses:
      Sharknosed Skyline C210
      Sharknosed Skyline C210

      A good example of the many sharknosed Skyline C210s I’ve seen. Sharknoses are most probably popular on the Skyline Japan because of its longer bonnet (6 cylinder engines only) and boxy image. It makes the bonnet look even larger, like on the G-nosed Fairlady Z S30, and it just looks right in combination with the trunk sloping downwards.

      Also very beautiful and popular on the Skyline Japan is the kyusha look:
      Kyusha styled Skyline C210
      Kyusha styled Skyline C210

      This example is just about right: a small cooling duct for the turbo in the bonnet, small overfenders, a decent spoiler and a 70s sports lip. The removal of the left headlight in favor of the air intake is also a nice choice, however without it the car would have been perfect.

      In august 1977 Nissan launched the C210 as the 5th Skyline: the successor of the Skyline C110 (better known as the Kenmeri Skyline) which featured a coupe, sedan and estate as bodystyles. It got, just like the Kenmeri, its nickname from the Skyline tv advertisements which praised it as the “All new Japan Skyline”

      The car was just as popular as the Kenmeri eventhough this Skyline never got a GT-R badge nor raced! Due to the oil crisis Nissan ruled out any performance designation on their cars to prevent a bad image.

      Factory stock Nissan Skyline C210

      However after a few years the oil crisis was already forgotten and racecars entered the turbo age. Nissan responded in April 1980 with the Skyline GT-EX featuring a 2 liter L20ET turbo engine and this was the first Japanese production vehicle ever to make use of a turbo engine!

      Back then this turbo engine was very crude compared to what we are used to nowadays: the L20ET did not feature an intercooler nor a blowoff valve however it did feature an emergency release valve in case the pressure became too high, so imagine how this car must have felt when driving it: big turbo lag and the turbine stalling when you release the throttle while the exhaust gasses have no where to go! Scary!

      Talking about engines, the Skyline C210 had only a limited range of engines: the coupe and sedan only featured the Nissan L engine ranging from 1.6 to 2.0 liter and of course the 2.0 liter L20ET turbo. The estate did feature a 2.8 diesel engine and the export models did feature a 2.4 and 2.8 variant of the L engine. This turbo engine delivered an extra 15HP above the normal 2 liter engine and outputted 145hp. It may not sound as much, but remember this was dated only at the beginning of the turbo age!

      Factory stock Nissan Skyline C210
      Factory stock Nissan Skyline C210

      The TI models (1.6 and 1.8 4 cylinder cars) got rectangular taillights while the GT models (2.0 and turbo 6 cylinder cars) got the round taillights.

      The 4 cylinder cars were 10 cm shorter between the front wheelarch and the front door than the 6 cylinder cars. This was basically the same solution as used with the Celica XX: to fit the 6 cylinder engine the chassis was lenghtend.

      Factory stock facelifted Nissan Skyline C210
      Factory stock facelifted Nissan Skyline C210

      In august 1979 the C210 gets a facelift: the round headlights are replaced by square headlights.

      The facelifted version of the car is very well known from Seibu Keisatsu (????) as the black Skyline GT-EX Turbo Super Machine-X cop car:

      It was featuring a lot of nifty 80s cop stuff like an automatic high speed camera, electrically operated patrol light, a gun behind the grille and of course a complete computer!
      The exposure of Skyline thanks to the GT-EX turbo Super Machine-X boosted sales of the Skyline C210 so much that Nissan decided to donate brand new models as the new police cars. In this way the 280ZX, Skyline R30 and S110 Gazelle were plugged by Nissan this way.

      In august 1981 the life of the Skyline C210 ended and it was replaced by the Skyline R30.

      I really understand why this car is one of the most popular styled cars: it has got a turbo (ahum)) and it just looks right with or without a lot of modifications!


      by banpei with no comments yet
    • ‹ Older Posts Newer Posts ›

      Good Old Fashioned Hand Written Code by Eric J. Schwarz

        Bosozoku StyleBosozoku style showing the maddest Japanese car styles!

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