PH Fleet Update: Mazda Eunos Roadster
Myleene Klass wasn't available, but the guys from Dent Wizard have done a sterling job making the Mazda look 10 Years Younger
Eunos basks in blemish-free paint
Mechanically the Eunos is now absolutely singing, the Performance5 suspension and stiffening chassis rails transforming it into a proper little weapon. A loud one too, thanks to the cast-off Moss exhaust from my brother.
There was no escaping it was looking, well, like a car approaching its 20th birthday, though. Nothing critical, apart from a slight paint mis-match on that replacement nose cone and a few little dings and scratches here and there. Disheartened by the response from a couple of bodyshops when I looked at getting the bumper resprayed I put it down to one of those things I'd have to live with.
Then I got chatting with the guys at Dent Wizard. For a car like this smart repair is just the ticket, dents and paint blemishes dealt with in a fraction of the time and expense of a 'proper' bodyshop job. Dent Wizard boss Phil Newstead suggested I bring the car up to the firm's training facility south of Birmingham and let his guys loose on it to see what they could do, this also being the headquarters of partner firms Wheel Wizard and Flying Colours.
Most of the work they do is out of the back of mobile, van-based workshops and their speciality is prepping cars for dealers and auction houses where Newstead boasts every pound spent on a car is worth a return of double that. Some of the work they do is pure magic as well, a Ford S-Max with a roof dent transformed from write-off to right as rain in just a couple of hours while I was there.
Arriving at the workshop head of training Darren and his team seemed a little disappointed that the Eunos didn't have more for them to do. A couple of 20p-sized dents on the bonnet, a nasty crease on the nearside wing and an assortment of scratches were all declared 'do-able' and wheel-man Adam took one look at the 14-inch alloys (yes, I'm still flitting between these and the 15-inch OZs) and declared his intention to do away with them.
My eBay nose-cone was the cause of much teeth-sucking however. Not only was the colour a shade darker than the rest of the car, but Darren also reckoned the crazing in the paint suggested it had had a wallop. "That'll need painting properly," was his assessment. Happily the now-spare original nose has now been sent up for the boys to work on at their leisure.
A methodical machine polish for the rest of the panels meanwhile showed how much the small swirls and scratches had dulled the finish, Darren saying oxidised red paint finishes show the most dramatic improvements. Following dent man Adrian around the car panel by panel, by the time the guys had finished the transformation was dramatic.
Adam was making swift progress with the wheels too and my long-held ambition for getting them painted black was, unexpectedly, about to be realised. Reunited and dropped off the axle stands we all stood back to admire their handiwork. "That looks well!" said Phil and I have to confess to being stunned with the results.
Okay, it's no concours queen and never will be. But given that the whole job would cost around the same as the £400-and-something quoted by a reluctant paintshop for doing the nose cone alone it proves there are viable ways of sprucing up cheap cars.
This is important too, given that my other brother has also taken the plunge. That's three Trent brothers and three Mk1 Mazdas, fraternal rivalry meaning there's real pressure to have the best of the bunch. Further competition comes from fellow motoring scribe John Simister who, on the back of driving my Performance5-equipped car, went out and picked up a sub-£1,000 Mariner Blue Eunos he's now busily 'de-chavving' (see right).
On the drive to pick John's new purchase up I was irritated by a noise from the nearside rear wheel that, once removed, revealed itself to be a worn out brake pad. Having these just a couple of thousand miles ago it looked like a sticky caliper - a common MX-5 problem.
Having ordered new pads and had a look I was relieved to find it was a rusty slider rather than a frozen piston. Cleaned up, lubricated and with the fresh pads installed it all seems fine now.
So much for the fettling and polishing - a car is meant for the driving and, in that curious way, on the way back from its makeover the little Mazda seemed in ruder health than ever. There's little fun to be had on the motorway though and rather than sit it out on the M40 I took in some of my favourite backroads linking through from Banbury to Silverstone and then along the fabulous A413 that runs from Buckingham to Aylesbury. Heater blasting, roof down I had one of those proper zen drives where every gearshift and steering input seems just-so, the exhaust cackling and gurgling with every lift and gearchange and P5 suspension proving its ability to let the Eunos corner harder without diluting the signature adjustability and feedback.
There's something very special about driving in the dark with the roof down and it's that ability to make even a dull drive back from Birmingham into something a bit special that transcends the Mazda's humble pricetag and lack of on-paper performance. This, and the fact that even in the dry the Tigars' hold on the tarmac is minimal enough to permit the odd dab of oppo, ensures that even when faster, more exotic metal is available it's hard to resist the temptation for a little blast in the Eunos.
Previous reports:
Slammed ride height, loud exhaust. Oh dear - has Dan's inner chav finally been let loose on the Eunos?
Eunos looks good, might consider this bodywork refurb as an option on my Stilo too - plenty of minor things to be sorted but trying to avoid a full respray
Apart from that, nice write up. I might even pay them a visit but how deep does a dent have to be before they deam it too big a job? My Delta has a dent 20cm in width and probably just needs to be pushed out... is it do-able?
Just say - "that'll be £80 please or I'm calling the police/insurance/small claims etc" - in my experience a general dent costs between £40 and £80 to remove and it's never perfect but usually only noticed if you're looking for it.
That 5 does look good, my cousin has picked one up and I'd love to see him do some of these sensible upgrades so he gets the best from it.
http://travel.aol.co.uk/2011/11/02/britain-to-be-h...
:massivepinchofsalt:
"Klass was announced as the new presenter of Channel 4 series 10 Years Younger, on 21 December.
From this, I assume it is safe to say that you didn't actually have to pay for this freshen up?
http://travel.aol.co.uk/2011/11/02/britain-to-be-h...
:massivepinchofsalt:
That reminds me, I need to get ice 'grips' for my shoes, last winter was filled with too many 'almost arse over tit' shenanigans!
Had a couple of them in p/ex, this is my new "shooting car" soon to be filled with rifle & shotgun debris.....
I'll enjoy destroying one of these overrated pieces of st
Apart from that, nice write up. I might even pay them a visit but how deep does a dent have to be before they deam it too big a job? My Delta has a dent 20cm in width and probably just needs to be pushed out... is it do-able?
Our dent chaps down here would be able to.
But, as with all of these type of things.. Depends on the actual chap doing it, rather than the company. I'm sure the dent chaps above would be fine though!
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