PH Fleet Update: Mazda Eunos Roadster
Slammed ride height, loud exhaust. Oh dear - has Dan's inner chav finally been let loose on the Eunos?
Bloke logic, meet financial reality. Nope, you never were going to get along were you? Let's stick with bloke logic then, the same that dictates I always boast of my Eunos as being brilliant for a £1200 car.
Yes, my Eunos was a brilliant £1,200 car. But it's now a considerably better one and, I think, still a bargain even with the investment of its purchase price over and again on a few tweaks. (Tell yourself something often enough and you start to believe it, eh? - Ed)
Last time I left you the car was with Phil at Performance 5 for its SportDrive suspension kit. But Phil's something of a perfectionist and I was soon staring at some fairly extensive work. The SportDrive dampers use different top mounts to allow more travel and Phil replaced the worn rear anti-roll bar bushes too. Once installed it was off for a full geo set-up to Phil's preferred settings.
And while he was at it he fitted a set of his chassis reinforcement rails too, these bolt-on stainless box sections stiffening the body considerably. £120 very well spent on any MX-5 or Eunos and thoroughly recommended.
I got the car back 24 hours ahead of an appointment in Anglesey to drive the MX-5 GT race car but, never one for an easy life, decided now was the time to pair the suspension with a loud exhaust for the full effect. A Moss stainless system rejected by my brother for being too loud had been knocking about in the garage and, for a few quid at the local fitters, it was on.
A family engagement meant forgoing the hotel the evening before the MX-5 drive and doing the trip to Anglesey in one hit. The 8:30am track briefing meant hitting the road at 4am and as I droned bleary-eyed up the M6 I kept telling myself it'd be worth it for a crack of dawn rendezvous with the Welsh roads. One thing was clear, with the new exhaust nobody in North Wales was going to be getting a lie-in.
Even on the motorway it was clear the Eunos had been the recipient of some serious work. The ride was noticeably firmer, as you'd expect with a near doubling of spring rates, and perhaps a little harsher at lower speeds than I'd been expecting. Not unpleasantly so - firm but fair would be an accurate description. Clearly the chassis rails were making a big difference too, the improved bump absorption and stiffness meaning even big expansion joints were shrugged off without even a trace of the previous judder.
The succession of roundabouts on the A5 past Shrewsbury and Oswestry were a good transition from the motorway to the 'proper' roads beyond Llangollen and by now the 4am start was forgotten and I was really starting to enjoy myself. No longer was the front end flopping down onto the outside wheel on turn-in, there was now the bite I'd been craving from the front axle, combined with a more settled rear-end.
As Phil promised, the SportDrive doesn't isolate you from what's going on but nor do the shocks punch through. Over rapid bumps it was clear the dampers were moving very quickly but the body control was night and day better, dips and compressions seeing the body move as a whole, all four dampers working in unison with no trace of the floating or porpoising that had been present before.
By the time I'd reached Betws-y-Coed the grin was even bigger. I'd driven these same roads in it just a few months before and enjoyed it but now I was really able to attack them properly. Fabulous stuff.
At the track I twisted a few arms to see if I could put in a couple of cheeky laps, this being where I'd taken the Eunos pre suspension mods and therefore an ideal before-and-after test. The infamous Tigars limited the outright speed but the more neutral stance and significant reduction in roll brought about by the dampers' firm low-speed damping meant a ton more confidence on turn-in.
Bona fide driving god/top bloke Mark Hales was also there to drive the GT but I couldn't resist asking him for his tuppence worth on my Eunos too. "It's stiffer at the front," he spotted after a couple of corners.
He reckoned it might not be quite as pointy as the current-shape MX-5 he'd arrived in so we did a couple of back-to-back laps to test the theory. In the end the two behaved in a pretty similar manner, my Tigars perhaps at the heart of the issue but the Eunos still showing a lovely neutral balance and smooth transition into oversteer when required.
On the way home I couldn't resist a slight diversion off the A5 to take in two of the three sides of a certain triangular collection of roads...
By now my confidence was sky-high, the Eunos rewarding a serious increase in commitment with utter composure. P5 seems to have really hit the sweet spot here - grip and balance doesn't come at the cost of feedback and seat-of-the-pants fun. Later excursions have revealed a slight issue of increased NVH from the passenger seat, but I think this is more down to the chavvy overtones of my rude 'zorst. Irritating background noise is, on the whole, successfully drowned out, though.
True, doubling the original expenditure on any car is a big step. One that I haven't regretted for a moment, though. Cheap thrills? Perhaps less of the former but plenty of the latter.
I find it's best just to accept it and enjoy the drive!
Some people prefer to do the mod's and work once they own the car just to be sure the work has been done properly and in the way they want it to.
six of one half a dozen of the other.................
I wouldn't mind an mx-5 with a supercharger/turbo and wide arch kit.............
Picked up one with great engine and bodywork, with no rust but very tired suspension. It was dropped off with Phil, and the suspension (earlier system, Puredrive) totally transformed the car. 3 years on it still drives brilliantly. One or two small issues, as ever, but I suspect a trip back to Phil may have them diagnosed properly, which my local garages seem unable to do.
For sale now, in fact. (sorry, had to mention it!) Either with issues at the current price, or with them fixed for more!
Picked up one with great engine and bodywork, with no rust but very tired suspension. It was dropped off with Phil, and the suspension (earlier system, Puredrive) totally transformed the car. 3 years on it still drives brilliantly. One or two small issues, as ever, but I suspect a trip back to Phil may have them diagnosed properly, which my local garages seem unable to do.
For sale now, in fact. (sorry, had to mention it!) Either with issues at the current price, or with them fixed for more!
- ETA Booked in, hopefully solved tomorrow.
I picked up my UK 94' 5 about a month ago, body wise it needs new front wings but the rear sills have been done already, it was as if it had never been cleaned and I could hardly see out of the windows!
I was going to walk away without driving it, until I saw the service history... never in my life have I seen such a comprehensive history with a car, even having the full service ticket for the previous week. Reading through I found the car had been cared for beyond all else ensuring the engine was spot on and the underside running gear was in top notch condition.
I took it for a spin and bought it on the spot, I paid £870 for it..
Adding up the money the previous owner spent on servicing they spent well over the value of the car, I myself will be spending more money it too....
I guess it doesn't matter what type you buy... there will always be money spent whatever the car is... If you love cars then there is no getting away with it.
The reason you'll see people pay more for older models is because the Mk1 cars have a bit more of a following especially the Limited Edition and the like. Theres nothing wrong the later mk2/2.5 cars (i've had one) but the Mk1 is the original and retains the root ideology that later and later cars seem to have lost more and more as the car grew up.
I applaud those that bring a modern classic back to life a bit, paying sub-£1k for a car is pefectly acceptable and as already said, it means you're having the work done to your own spec and by people you trust. At the end of the day the MX-5 is cheap fun.
No but then not all good condition mark 1 examples are that much money, a friend of mine picked one up last week with 50 odd thousand in the clock, great condition, genuine hard top, FSH and 2 owners from new for about £1800 - mine cost less than that, and my brother paid even less than me for his, all in the last 6 months.
The trouble with '5s is they vary greatly in price, its down to the prospective buyer to know what is and isn't worh the money really.
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