MX5 GT3?

Friday 7th September 2012

Driven: Mazda MX-5 GT4

It's now got wings, a turbo and genuine GT4 pretensions - and you can buy it too



"It's very easy to drive and you won't have any problems but whatever you do don't hit the kerbs on the chicane because you'll rip the front of the car off." So says Jota driver Owen Mildenhall of the MX-5 GT4 car he's hoping to race in the British GT championship this weekend.

GT4 car capable of podiums in Brit GT
GT4 car capable of podiums in Brit GT
Prophetic words that echo around my head - along with a few others - as cold brakes and tyres struggle to scrub off the considerable extra speed into Donington's Fogarty Esses 320hp, slick tyres and a full aero kit have given me compared with the near-standard production racer MX-5 I've swapped from. But then, I should have known that shouldn't I.

With more luck than judgement I manage to keep the wheels from locking up and though it doesn't show much enthusiasm to do so the nose just - just - turns in enough for me to miss those ominous red kerbs.

A close shave
There's the smallest opportunity to catch breath, let out a little sigh of relief, and then it's out of the chicane and a bwaaa-THUNK-bwaaaa-THUNK-bwaaaaaa-THUNK up the pit straight towards Redgate.

Lap with pit limiter = fouled plugs. Oops
Lap with pit limiter = fouled plugs. Oops
This car has changed a lot since I last drove it and feels a whole lot more serious than before. But it's undergone a very serious development programme, not least the addition of proper aero, a turbo and additional 50hp or so over the normally-aspirated version that competed last year. It's also now on sale as a customer car - yours for £125,000 plus VAT and a proven performer in British GT with podium finishes in GT4 at Snetterton and Brands to its name. As it would have to be if Jota expects people to lay down that kind of money on an MX-5 rather than an Aston Vantage GT4, Lotus Evora G4 or Ginetta G50.

Out on track I'm just glad to be under way properly, my first lap being perhaps the slowest ever circulation of Donington after my failure to locate the pitlane speed limiter button (yellow, with a 'P' next to it as it turns out...) sees me trundle a full lap at what feels like walking pace, fouling the plugs in the process. Not the best start.

Know your limits

Huge wing part of aero updates
Huge wing part of aero updates
Back out and up to speed as ever when swapping from a road car to a race car, not least one with double the power, aero, slicks and 20 per cent less weight, it takes a while to acclimatise. You'd think having scared myself silly the previous time around I'd have picked a more conservative braking point for my second lap too.

You'd think.

No, there we go again, those angry looking red kerbs once again licking their lips in anticipation of a chomp at the MX-5's carbon splitter. Once again they're denied, just. Sort it out Trent!

Like a 'real' MX-5, the race car's true talents aren't explosive speed but more about carrying it and using it well in the corners. OK, the pace has increased by a significant margin. And maybe it's the new turbocharged engine's more linear power delivery because that swell of revs and induction howl from the previous normally aspirated engine has been replaced with a savage monotone roar, punctuated by explosive pops with each tug of the dinky carbon shift paddles. But the acceleration doesn't strike you quite as much as the speed you can carry into and through the corners.

Get on it

Road car's handling traits still present
Road car's handling traits still present
I'm too tentative into Redgate, the still cold tyres missing the apex by miles as the nose pushes wide before settling as the corner opens out and I can feed the power back in with a rapid-fire staccato of gearshifts into the downhill run to the Craner Curves. Comfortably flat in the production car I've since had a huge tank slapper in the GT Concept road car, doubtless much to the amusement of the marshal at Old Hairpin, and even though the aero would probably allow it I'm a little more tentative now.

And again I'm not decisive enough with my turn-in, conscious of Mildenhall's warning to avoid even these more conventional rumble strip kerbs so as to avoid pad knock-off. It's a totally different mindset to the knockabout fun we've been having in the road and production cars - you need to drive this car with a racer's focus and accuracy.

Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!
Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!
Finally by lap four it's all coming together, my concentration is up, tyres and brakes are at full temperature and the car really feels like it's coming to me. A more decisive turn-in to Redgate hooks the tyres into the track surface, I can get earlier on the power and the corners start flowing into each other rather than appearing as obstacles to be contended with. Mildenhall's right too, it's a very easy car to drive and, though now (in Jota boss Sam Hignett's words) 90 per cent race car and 10 per cent road car, elements of the MX-5's character shine through, not least that inherent balance and friendliness.

Time's up
And then I'm flagged in as my time is up. "How was it?" asks Mildenhall's teammate Mark Ticehurst. "Brilliant, it was all coming together and I was really getting comfortable!" I gush. "Why do you think we're only giving you four laps," he grins. Ah.

Can an MX-5 really cut it as a viable GT4 car though? Hignett reckons yes, a bit more rubber on the ground among the upgrades on the way. Yes, a Ginetta will get you to the front of the grid for a lot less money, an Aston appeals to well-funded gentleman drivers and the Evora looks fabulous. Getting more serious has removed some of the MX-5 GT's underdog charm and puts a bit more pressure on a need to score some wins. But it's still an MX-5 at heart and to see it even with a shout in such company warms the heart.


MAZDA MX-5 GT4
Engine: 1,999cc 4-cyl turbocharged
Transmission: 6-speed pneumatically actuated Hewland sequential,rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 320@7,200rpm
Torque (lb ft): 258@6,200rpm
0-62mph: N/A
Top speed: N/A
Weight: 1,000kg (plus driver)
MPG: N/A
CO2: N/A
Price: £125,000 + VAT





Author
Discussion

nsa

Original Poster:

1,683 posts

228 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
It's a shame Mazda never released a roadgoing £30k GT3-like version of the MX5 with more power and wide arches. There must be a market for that.

Chris71

21,536 posts

242 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
nsa said:
It's a shame Mazda never released a roadgoing £30k GT3-like version of the MX5 with more power and wide arches. There must be a market for that.
There probably is. But one of the great things about MX5s is that they're usefully cheaper to buy and run than something like a 370Z or a Boxster. The moment you start edging towards that market you have a lot more competition.

Mandatory Fields

52 posts

140 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
"Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!"

for £125k + VAT I'd expect as much!

J4CKO

41,557 posts

200 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Er, call me ignorant but where does the 125 grand come from ?

8bit

4,867 posts

155 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Love it, especially the Zoom Zoom button smile

boxsey

3,574 posts

210 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Nice write up of your thoughts and experience of driving it around Donington Dan. smileIt sounds like you were on the national circuit...in which case the chicane which takes you on to the pit straight and then Redgate, is not called the Fogarty esses. For those you need to turn left which leads you up the Melbourne loop. wink

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
I stand corrected! Either way, that kerb was huuuuuuge!

A pity the onboard vid lap we got was the one while the pit limiter was stuck on too. I'd put it up but, to be honest, a racing car trundling round at 20mph with a bloke making desperate calls over the radio saying 'how do I switching the *&!@ing pitlane limiter off!' is probably of limited entertainment value. Bless 'em, they gave us a very thorough briefing before we drove the car but the one bit that was missed was the big yellow 'P' button!

Pistonwot

413 posts

159 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
£125,000 is too much,
you can buy a ready to go Aston Martin N24 in GT4 trim for that money and a GT4 Cayman that is ready to race is 10,000 less.

soad

32,894 posts

176 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Looked good 'til I saw the price.

OlberJ

14,101 posts

233 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Dan Trent said:
to be honest, a racing car trundling round at 20mph with a bloke making desperate calls over the radio saying 'how do I switching the *&!@ing pitlane limiter off!' is probably of limited entertainment value.
Au contraire, that's the stuff of Youtube thread legends.

Get it posted biggrin

BBS-LM

3,972 posts

224 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Mandatory Fields said:
"Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!"

for £125k + VAT I'd expect as much!
Just what I was thinking, how the hell did they manage to spend £125K

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
And let me just take this opportunity to wish Owen, Mark and all the boys at Jota the very best of luck for the weekend at Silverstone - give 'em a cheer if you're going!

Dan

em177

3,131 posts

164 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
BBS-LM said:
Mandatory Fields said:
"Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!"

for £125k + VAT I'd expect as much!
Just what I was thinking, how the hell did they manage to spend £125K
Everything in racing costs big bucks!

RX7

258 posts

244 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Mandatory Fields said:
"Turbo ups power to 320hp - in an MX-5!"

for £125k + VAT I'd expect as much!
I would expect a lot more for £125k smile

Nikko 40691

710 posts

190 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
Can someone please change the thread title!

GT3?
More like GT4 - Geez...

Sigmamark7

326 posts

161 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
£125k seems cheap to me - it cost me more than that to get rid of my wife!

Seriously though, you can get a lot more for your money elsewhere, so this must have been built by a Government Department to spend that much!

Fonz

361 posts

184 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
RX7 said:
I would expect a lot more for £125k smile
A lot of that money will be spent on workshop bills, wages, testing the car to develop it into what they are selling. It will take just as much time to fit all the safety gear, radio kit, air jacks and dry break refuelling couplings etc into a GT4 car as it would a GT2 or GT3 and they still cost the same. A lot of the costs are kind of fixed between the different classes, that is until you start running them…*

PUA

1,060 posts

159 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
looks nice but 125k-someone is dreaming! You can get a highly modified rx7 for less than 5k which is probably just as quick

Fonz

361 posts

184 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
but can you race it in British GT or any other GT championships?

em177

3,131 posts

164 months

Friday 7th September 2012
quotequote all
PUA said:
looks nice but 125k-someone is dreaming! You can get a highly modified rx7 for less than 5k which is probably just as quick
Are you being deliberately retarded?