RE: Affordable, fun-tastic JDM cars | Six of the Best
RE: Affordable, fun-tastic JDM cars | Six of the Best
Saturday 13th September

Affordable, fun-tastic JDM cars | Six of the Best

Cost-effective fun is what Japan specialises in - we defy you not to fall in love with this little lot...


Mazda MX-5 BBR, 2012, 27k, PH Auction

No other nation on Earth can claim to monopolise the full bandwidth of automotive fun quite like the UK. We can do you a McLaren 750S, a Defender OCTA, a Bentley Continental GT and a Caterham Seven - each diametrically different from the next - without breaking a sweat. But Japan, with a domestic performance market also built on a thriving enthusiast scene, comes a close second. It will try its hand at practically anything. And when it gets it right, as it did with the MX-5, for example, global success typically ensues. Of course, the little Mazda owes much to England - even more so when the car you’re talking about has been breathed on by BBR. This NC, up for auction next week, has been turbocharged and tweaked in Brackley, and subsequently cared for like a firstborn infant. It really would be almost impossible not to enjoy it. Which is exactly what we’re talking about. 

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Lexus RC F, 2015, 58k, £26,990

The stick that’s often used to beat the JDM with is its perceived preoccupation with the four-cylinder engine, a legacy that does encompass many of its most famous exports. But Japan’s prowess as an engine builder extends far beyond the humble four-pot, the 5.0-litre V8 in the Lexus RC F being a wonderful case in point. The manufacturer continued with its high-revving naturally aspirated donkey long after most European OEMs had retired the configuration, and today it offers a terrific (and terrifically affordable) way into atmospheric eight-cylinder ownership. Granted, there are more exciting and better reconciled coupes to drive, but few that offer quite the same beguiling mix of looks, noise, reliability and modernity for well under £30k. This one hasn’t even hit 60k yet and therefore ought to be more than up to the job of putting a smile on your face for the electrified decade to come. 

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Toyota GT86 Tuning Developments, 2012, 33k, PH Auctions

Obviously, if you’d prefer to keep the focus on chassis-based excellence, there are plenty of other Toyota-developed alternatives— not least the GT86, which remains a touchstone for anyone even remotely interested in beyond-the-limit, rear-drive handling antics. Discussion of the coupe as a solution to what ails you usually requires mention of its lacklustre performance at low engine speeds; not so here though, thanks to a Tuning Developments turbocharger, which is said to improve torque output by as much as 50 per cent. That ought to deliver the same kind of cheek-squashing fun factor that makes such a difference in a BBR’d MX-5. Which means that whatever price it has attained once the hammer comes down in a couple of weeks, it is likely to be a steal in smile-per-mile terms. 

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Nissan 370Z NISMO, 2016, 64k, PH Auction

For something a little burlier than an MX-5 or 86, you could do much worse than a 370Z. Especially the NISMO. Now found on the back of the Ariya EV, not so long ago the Nissan Motorsport badge meant a proper performance derivative. While power was up only modestly over stock for the NISMO, the chassis was lowered, the springs and dampers overhauled, and the brakes treated to some GT-R goodies. It made Nissan’s Zed car even better to drive and, thanks to the trademark red NISMO accents, even more visually arresting as well. But a price that knocked on the door of £40k, while being not much quicker than a 370, suppressed demand. Not that many years later, the NISMO is already a very cool modern classic: manual, rear-drive, naturally aspirated and very handsome. This auction car has a great service history, a recent wheel refurb, and matching Goodyear Eagle F1s around them— nice. 

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Mitsubishi Colt Version R Turbo, 2011, 81k, £7,495

We couldn’t do an affordable Japanese heroes rundown without a JDM pocket rocket curio. This mini Mitsubishi was never sold in Britain and, actually, that decision makes complete sense: we were offered the Colt CZT over here, with the same 1.5-litre turbo, and when did you last see one of those? But this is not a CZT; this is a Version R Turbo. Better name, and better car by all accounts, with unique dampers, a stiffened-up chassis courtesy of more spot welds, and a sports exhaust. It couldn’t quite live up to the ‘baby Evo nickname’, even with Recaros borrowed from the saloon. Still, it looks a fun little thing, and has recently come to the UK with a tonne of paperwork and is perfectly preserved. Look at that engine bay - someone has cared for it. Apparently, there’s more power to be easily gained from the 4G15 engine, too - see you at 200hp…

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Honda Civic Type R (FD2), 2010, 40k, £21,990

Nobody transforms humdrum saloons into performance icons quite like the Japanese. Think of how plain the Mitsubishi Lancer and Subaru Impreza were before their makers decided they needed a new rally car. The FD Honda Civic was most definitely another, as ordinary a Honda saloon as you could hope for; it was only sold officially in the UK in very dreary hybrid form. Yet there was a Type R, sold only in Japan, and it was anything but dreary. It was hotter than wasabi, in fact, thanks to 9,000rpm, a super sharp chassis, and a limited-slip diff. The FD2 Type R was a bona fide Honda hero, despite its humble origins, and it’s reflected in the used values: even 18 years after launch, they’re all more than £15k. This one’s dream-grade, with very few miles, very few mods, and flawless Championship White paint. Front-wheel drive never looked so flipping epic.

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Author
Discussion

quigonjay

Original Poster:

1,107 posts

238 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Would happily take any from this list but if I had to choose would be between the 86 and the FD2 but with the Civic having such a harsh ride as standard it would have to be the 86 for me

parabolica

6,890 posts

201 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The RC F seems good value for money; I was recently looking at identical models here in NL and same age/mileage would set you back €100k

Checkmate

737 posts

224 months

Saturday
quotequote all
OK, so some alright cars here.

Auctions, on half, so no defined price range.

It's just disappointing.

How do we know if it is "Affordable" if we don't ever know if it's within our budget?

I'm bored of this non descript stuff.

Konan

2,117 posts

163 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Fairly sure I only see two JDM cars here.

DanielSan

19,539 posts

184 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I wouldn't want to be 22k into an FD2 but that's the one I'd choose from this list. Might be a tad biased though


NGK210

4,066 posts

162 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Mitsubishi Colt Version R Turbo
MX-5
RC-F

sideways man

1,544 posts

154 months

Saturday
quotequote all
With regards to the lack of a price, how about adding the guide price to this list of adverts.

Its Just Adz

16,580 posts

226 months

Saturday
quotequote all
DanielSan said:
I wouldn't want to be 22k into an FD2 but that's the one I'd choose from this list. Might be a tad biased though

I like that a lot!
I didn't even realise the Civic in the list was a saloon at first glance.
I've shamefully never driven a Type R, really must try one.

blearyeyedboy

6,674 posts

196 months

Saturday
quotequote all
It'd be interesting to explore what one could buy at Japanese auctions to import here.

It's intriguing what you can get. I've found myself looking at the Mk4 Lexus IS which was never brought here, for example. Or Toyota Centuries, or Honda S660s, or later Nissan Skyline V37s (known to us as Infiniti Q60) with the 3.0 engine we never got here... the list is endless.

Also intriguing are European models sold to the Japanese Domestic Market. If Volvos are your thing, there are some very cheap ones around. Of course, getting Infotainment that works for those cars in Europe is another matter...

DanielSan

19,539 posts

184 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Its Just Adz said:
I like that a lot!
I didn't even realise the Civic in the list was a saloon at first glance.
I've shamefully never driven a Type R, really must try one.
They're a car you either instantly love or instantly hate. Mostly down to whether you enjoy revving them out or not. They might not always be the fastest in their class but they're pretty much always the most fun. I'm on my 7th Honda now, 6 Type R's and an S2000. 2x EP3's, 2xFN2's, a DC5 Integra and the FD2.

cerb4.5lee

38,332 posts

197 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I'm obviously biased because I already have a 370Z, but my goodness...I'd absolutely love a turbocharged GT86 though for sure. driving

Hardly anything has bettered my old mildly tuned S14a 200SX since I had it over 20 years ago now, so that GT86 is right up my street. cloud9

thetapeworm

12,812 posts

256 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I'd be happy enough with any of those but the GT86 is the one I'd be most likely to gravitate towards, I don't like the standard wheels and spoiler on them though, both easily changed.

The facelift holds a bit more appeal but I'll follow this one with interest.

Edited by thetapeworm on Saturday 13th September 08:58

CH80

222 posts

14 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The BBR and Civic Type R are the ones for me. Not so sure about the rest.

wolfie28

920 posts

161 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Checkmate said:
OK, so some alright cars here.

Auctions, on half, so no defined price range.

It's just disappointing.

How do we know if it is "Affordable" if we don't ever know if it's within our budget?

I'm bored of this non descript stuff.
Agreed

Glenn63

3,533 posts

101 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I saw the title and thought this thread is right up my street, then was rather disappointed. Nothing really interesting when there s some absolute gems from the JDM scene. Appreciate it s only what s on PH.
Of this list the FD2 for me.

FourRingedDonuts

126 posts

141 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I test drove a Nismo before converting an MX5 at BBR, 11 years ago.
I think if I'd have bought the 370Z Nismo I'd still own it. Sold the BBR after 2.5 years.
It was a lot of fun, but hard to live with. Even as a 3rd car.

Jader1973

4,600 posts

217 months

Saturday
quotequote all
blearyeyedboy said:
If Volvos are your thing, there are some very cheap ones around. Of course, getting Infotainment that works for those cars in Europe is another matter...
I just had a Quick Look on Goo Net Exchange. I’ve never seen so many Volvo estates for sale!

Lots of nice 240s etc where infotainment isn’t an issue smile

AnhBanhBao

280 posts

64 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Glenn63 said:
I saw the title and thought this thread is right up my street, then was rather disappointed. Nothing really interesting when there s some absolute gems from the JDM scene. Appreciate it s only what s on PH.
Of this list the FD2 for me.
Yeah, I was expecting a Stagea, Forrester, maybe a kei car too. Little bit underwhelming.

86wasagoodyear

772 posts

113 months

Saturday
quotequote all
My favourites on the list are the GT86 and the Civic.

But my guilty-pleasure JDM thing of choice would be a Subaru Legacy mark 4 estate, either a 2.0 Turbo GT or a 3.0 Spec B. Either of those would be perfectly satisfactory.

Justin-ow582

493 posts

122 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Checkmate said:
OK, so some alright cars here.

Auctions, on half, so no defined price range.

It's just disappointing.

How do we know if it is "Affordable" if we don't ever know if it's within our budget?

I'm bored of this non descript stuff.
Blimey, when someone asks you for a glass of water do you require them to specify the height and circumference of the glass and precisely how many ml of water to put in it?

It's fairly safe to assume that none of those auctions are going to result in an abnormally high record-breaking bidding war.

The MX-5 will be sub-£15k, which would be considered by many as "affordable" and "cost effective", but if you really need the author to add an asterisk to the title leading to a footnote declaring "unless bankrupt, destitute or attribute no value to driving cars" I'm sure they'd be happy to do so.