
Shaking stigma can be the hardest thing one can do in a lifetime. Being branded in a negative way by those who don’t understand often lead weaker men down the path of submission as they give in to the standards around them. Worse yet is the small number that will give in completely and abandon what they love most, saving face by living a lie. This was the exact opposite of four individuals gathered by chance at Thunder Hill raceway, Sunday February 6. Call it luck or call it fate, when four men passionate about the second generation Mazda RX-7 showed up that day, they came together as rivals to let a crowd of onlookers know that the FC is still a very capable car.

Made popular by social media, the RX-7 has long been the dream of tuners of varying ages. Widely recognizable in any form, it is makes just as many negative waves as it does positive ones, often regarded as an unreliable mess of a car, burdened by cheap quality and an unusual power plant. Carried from generation to generation, handed down from one owner to the next, that stigma has been the monkey on the back of RX-7s since their early critics in the late 1970s. A critique that fell on four sets of deaf ears. On his second foray onto the track, Harold brought his recently acquired S5 Tii out to get used to the car and see what it can do. Coming from a strong history in tuning Hondas, Harold was attracted to the RX-7 based strictly on the reputation that precedes the car on the street. The rarity and extreme differences keep him coming back to the car, and he says he takes joy in being able to learn new things as the build progresses. Attracted for some of the same reasons, young Mike has proven time and time again to be a formidable opponent in a GoKart, and applies the same theories to the RE-Amemiya clad GTU-S FC he pilots. A daily driver with flair, the FC is Mike’s longstanding passion, and car he won’t give up on until it’s perfect. Unknown to either Harold or Mike, two serious contenders had shown up Sunday ready to prove to the world that the FC chassis is alive and well(thank you) and that it still has enough juice in the tank to give everyone a run for their money. One brought in by trailer, one driven by the owner, the White FC piloted by Mike and D, and the Grey FC by Jack and Alice were seriously built in comparison to the other two cars. Brandishing the negative side of rotary ownership like a flag of pride, each man set out in the first session to feel out his car, and have fun on track. Quickly things began to heat up, and a long time fan of Mazda’s best effort in the 1980’s set up a contest during the moderate heat of the third session. The most well rounded, young Mike would take point and give his new suspension a work out, followed closely by Mike and D in their built S5, with Jack’s stripped and built NA and Harold’s Tii bring up the rear because they possessed the most power. With all the cars lined up, Turbo dropped the flag these four men competed in three laps of close competition; Limitless Motorsport’s first shot at a Best Motoring like comp.
Set up spartan but comfortable, young Mike’s FC has a cat back, suspension and a custom intake. Basically a stock car that would pass yearly emission inspections as is, it put the burden of proof on the driver, exactly where Mike wanted it to be. The white S5 NA was a clean example of a sunroof-less car, though it didn’t start out as a Mazda special edition like the other Mike’s car. Stripped and caged, it was purpose built to run the course hard. An aluminum radiator addressing cooling needs. Factory Turbo 4 pot brakes to keep it in line, and larger 17 inch 5Zigen FN1R-C wrapped in 245 and 255 rubber front and rear respectively gave the car its road hugging ability. Harold boasts the most power, his S5 Turbo rated at just over 200 crank horse from the factory, and he rounded it off with MazdaSpeed ground control suspension, an N1 type cat back, and BOV. Built near the extreme for an NA car, Jack’s FC is a serious piece of work, but matches the driver perfectly. Build S4 block with S5 9.7.1 compression rotors, stripped completely inside and out, caged, and a built 4.88 rear end, the car makes ears bleed when it goes past the start/finish line, and leaves most competitors sucking the fire balls it produces with each shift.
With the drop of the flag they were off, lead through the first section by young Mike who shown that smoothness equals speed. Dominating on turn #3, young Mike was able to put a small gap in between the tightly knit pack as they headed up the hill to turn #5. Blown away and a bit intimidated by the power delivery of the NA car before him, Harold played it safe in the earlier tighter section, doing his best to stay hot on Jack’s heels as the grey car assaulted the lines of the car it was chasing. Down the slope the four cars were running hot, tires screeching as they were forced to hold grip and get hot at the same time; neither man wanting to give up any advantage. In the flat back straight the higher output of the Turbo and the quicker winding of the two cars in the rear brought the pack near even going up the hill to turn #9. Things were quickly sorted out by the sharp curve and steep incline. Around the back side Jack found the opening he was looking for and was able to overtake the white FC piloted by Mike, and hit the straight between #13 and #14 with enough momentum to pass the red FC in the lead as well. Braking competition at #14 brought the three cars in the rear together again, with a short drag down the front straight.

Crossing the finish line and starting the second lap, the white FC moved to the outside and passed the RE-A GTU-S and set its sights on the speeding gray machine leading the pack. Behind the white bomber, the two red cars began a struggle for 3rd that started deep within the braking zone of turn #1. Hot on the brakes and utilizing every ounce of pressure they would give, young Mikey was able to cut at just the right moment and slingshot into turn #2 with enough force to counter the accel of the Turbo engine screaming at his heels. In a fashion similar to two lions chasing the same prey, Mike and Jack dashed up the hill to turn #5, dodging the first signs of traffic from other drivers, and separating themselves from the other two cars. Dyno’d at a similar horsepower, Mike is able to match the quick the speed of Jack’s car in the straight, and his wider tires give him a slightly more precise line, keeping him neck and neck with the quicker accelerating NA. Jack pushed the car around the back three at whirl wind speed, giving little ground until turn #9, when Mikes surgeon scalpel driving line brought them near even. Accel. gave him the right of way as Jack kept the lead back in the short straight before turn #10, but after a quick slalom through #11, #12, #13 Jack pulled aside and let Mike ahead, switching their roles to take the dog fight to the next level.

Behind the two race built cars, Mike fought hard to keep Harold from overtaking. His nervousness gone, Harold was able to push himself and his car around the back end of the track. Mike again shows the techniques he’s learned in GoKarting by putting some distance between the two in tight section of the rear of the track, but was unable to keep the turbo car at bay for long. Coming around turn #15 Harold eased ahead of the Red RE-A car, leaving Mike waving and cursing at the same moment.

Dead ahead just entering turn #1, the white FC and the gray FC are driving near identically. Mike’s larger tires gave him greater high speed stability, but Jack countered back in turn #3, inching closer just as the two went up the hill. Not pulling anything back in the third lap of the competition, both Mike and Jack had their cars pegged through the back, pedal to the metal and tires screeching up the incline at #8. Mike split through turn #9 perfectly, inching ahead. Banging the top of 3rd gear he prepared to setup the final swing at the end of the track, and put the competition to bed. Slowly it looked like Mike could pull away from the metallic colored bullet behind him, when disaster struck. Going hot into #10 and #11, Mike spun off the track, allowing Jack an easy pass and a quick sprint down the front straight to take the gold. Harold and Mike crested the hill soon after, seeing the white car off track before smoothly coming across the finish line. The red flag was dropped, allowing Mike to ease his car back onto the track and finally exit the hot pits, where the cause of his troubles would later be determined.

Coming off the track all the drivers were thoroughly satisfied in the competition, and the level of camaraderie they found in their fellow FC drivers. Harold was extremely pleased with the way his car felt and while he was still getting a feel for it, was excited to have pushed it against other drivers with the same machine. Once his nervousness was gone he was able to open up and really have fun. Jack admitted that his car felt a bit squirrelly, guessing that his tires may not have been at the proper temp. He could see/feel that he was a bit slower on throttle up out of the turns in comparison to Mike, who was aided by larger wheels and tires. All the drivers were extremely surprised by the level of competition the white FC brought, and looked over to see the cracked thermostat housing atop Mike’s engine that had distracted him, causing the spin. Catching jets of steam leaking form under the hood just before turn #10 on the last lap, Mike took his eyes of the course for a split second, and lost it when he saw how deep in the corner he was. Glad to have avoided a serious off track incident, but wary of driving the car again, Mike retired the car until he could patch the housing. Down on power, but still all smiles the group of FC guys impressed a large number of the crowd at the track, Jack’s wide open exhaust making people in the 3rd level of the tower wish they had ear plugs as it screamed by. All the drivers agreed the one lesson they took with them was skill is driver then car, but don’t ever judge a book by its cover.

Photos courtesy of Jin Na