I think any big Supra fan would agree that they liked the Fast and Furious Hero 1 car, the one which the original Energy Suspension bushings were made for.
About a week after my subframes were completed with polyurethane bushings, I got a call from a guy named Dave asking for bushings on a 94 Supra.
I explained to him how we do not make them yet, and how we just barely made the first production-ready set for my own car.
He was taken back when I told him that the only two cars with Energy Suspension bushings were Hero 1 and my own 94 Supra.
Turned out, he knew Craig personally, and he was building his own replica of the hero 1 car. He really wanted these bushings for his own car, to truly replicate Hero 1. He was known as FNFDave online.
Moments later, Craig Lieberman himself calls me. It was then that I realized I had to make this happen.
I took this opportunity to make a promotional run of the new Supra bushing set and install them on this Hero 1 replica car.
There were some problems figuring out who would perform the labor of the arm removal, and not many shops were willing to touch the F&F replica. Our team at work were too busy already.
I literally woke in the middle of the night and yelled out, RAD INDUSTRIES!
I called Rad Dan Burkett and he was willing to help out with the project.
Craig Lieberman approved and we got the ball rolling.
Here she is... drove my MK3 that day just to be part a of the Supra crew!
(Wing is stored to protect the actor's signatures)
Traveling on the 5fwy south. Eyes everywhere, gazing.
Joe from RAD Industries backing it up into the shop.
You can't make this stuff up...
Not long after getting the car on the rack, Craig Lieberman arrives in his 2015 R35 GTR
He showed us around the car and we realized just how accurate of a replica this car was.
Dan was totally stoked... we were all pretty much in disbelief.
The arms were removed for us and Craig gave us some great video for the new product release.
Will post up the video and photos of the completed arms later on, everyone was extremely cool to work with. It was great meeting all of them.
That flywheel is a thing of beauty. Was that for the MKIII? I just went with a stocker in mine but found out a 1960's Chevelle SS clutch bolts right up to the 2002 Dakota flyweel and has the same center spline as the Viper T56. I had to have a large spacer machined for the slave cylinder but much cheaper than a custom clutch. McLeod Super Street Pro.
Those last few posts delivered 200%! Awesome stuff here!
Thanks cblock
Quote:
Originally Posted by QwikKotaTx
That flywheel is a thing of beauty. Was that for the MKIII? I just went with a stocker in mine but found out a 1960's Chevelle SS clutch bolts right up to the 2002 Dakota flyweel and has the same center spline as the Viper T56. I had to have a large spacer machined for the slave cylinder but much cheaper than a custom clutch. McLeod Super Street Pro.
It was for the MKIII, yes. The MKIV clutch is a twin-disk OS Giken that has a built in flywheel, it's pretty unique.
I love a nice franken-setup, haha, that's a nice looking sporty truck. T56 6-speed is a sweet trans for a sporty build! My friend has been trying to find one for his Camaro.
It was for the MKIII, yes. The MKIV clutch is a twin-disk OS Giken that has a built in flywheel, it's pretty unique.
I love a nice franken-setup, haha, that's a nice looking sporty truck. T56 6-speed is a sweet trans for a sporty build! My friend has been trying to find one for his Camaro.
Thank you. What has your latest progress been? We'd love to see more pics.
The truck is awesome. Great tool. No way could I have fit all of this in my 4Runner.
Finally mounted and balanced. They look AMAZING. Definitely among my favorite wheel designs.
To be clear on specifications, the wheels are all 18x9.5 due to the difficulty of obtaining the SBC finish. Getting the fronts to fit is going to be an ordeal, but I'm going to give it everything I can before resorting to a different wheel, or perhaps getting a pair of narrower/higher offset RPF1 and getting them PVD coated.
Front tire 265/35/18
Rear tire 285/35/18
Quick test fit with the coilovers still out of the car... they're gonna look just right
Speaking of coilovers, it's time to install the KW V3's.
The OEM top hats must be reused. The original shock shaft had two flats on either side, but the KW's don't, so the hats have to be drilled to eliminate the flats.