1. We have moved to a new Forum System. Please let us know if you have any issues.
    Dismiss Notice

K-Car Racing - Tetsu's Tales

Discussion in 'Car News' started by garagegeeks, Oct 23, 2012.

  1. garagegeeks

    garagegeeks The All Mighty Geek!

  2. escort1991

    escort1991 New Member

    There are many parts in the tuning market, but, if you have a rare or unpopular car, it’s difficult to find. Now, K-car (660cc motor) endurance racing is becoming popular because of low cost—parts are more affordable, tires are smaller and that means rims are smaller, so again: low price. Suzuki Alto van and Daihatsu Mira van are very cheap in the used car market. A 2001 Suzuki Alto is $1,900USD; racing tires are under $77USD each. One famous K-car endurance race—K4-GP at Fuji Speedway—has over 80 cars entered every year. RAYS Engineering released new 13-inch wheels, KCDECOR A LAP, which is about $190USD each. Not only do they have new rims but RAYS employee built a Suzuki Alto race car and took part in a K-car endurance race. I know K-cars have low power and many people think that just because they’re slow means they’re not interesting, but K-cars driven on a closed race track can show you real driving skill. Making good lap times with low power requires skill because you can’t fake anything. I like promoting the idea of K-car racing for one important reason: in the USA and UK, some people were able to buy Japanese K-cars and put a Japanese Suzuki Hayabusa motor into it so they could enjoy driving and/or drifting. In the USA, before 1975, Honda was selling K-car-style cars, like the N600 and Z600. Daihatsu sold a Hi-Jet truck and van a few years ago, but still, it’s hard to find any K-cars in the US. In the near future, Honda will sell a mid-ship, 2-seater, sports K-car Beat; Daihatsu will release the Copen. For those interested in real, modern Japanese car culture, make sure you check out our K-car tuning/motorsport market.

    Read more: http://www.superstreetonline.com/features/sstp_1211_k_car_racing_tetsus_tales/#ixzz2A8HImW1d
     

Share This Page