Deciding what to do with a 662 hp muscle car was hard enough. Deciding what to do with the last pristine nearly new RX-7 in the country is even is even harder — because you can't do anything with it, really. You certainly can't street park it. I left it in an open lot the first night, only to discover that someone had put out their cigarette on the decklid. That was it. I ended up paying prices that would make a Manhattanite blush just so I could leave it in a covered multi-story garage visible from the bedroom window of my condo. Night after night I would stare at the slippery yellow shape under the glow of the cheap halogen lights, like a father staring at his premature baby in the neo-natal unit, checking and re-checking despite the near zero probability of anything bad actually happening.
"We're having a kegger tonight, if you want to come." The text message is from my brother, who was born in November, 1992. The same month and year that this RX-7 was delivered to Mazda Canada. It's a weekday night and I'd have to drive 125 miles to get there, on an empty, mostly straight highway. But here's a chance for us to spend some time together, in a car as old as he is, without parents or peers around. It doesn't happen as often as it should. I throw a change of clothes and my laptop into a bag, then make a beeline for the garage. My old Miata, shod with slim tires and shaped like a bullet at both ends, lent itself well to being wheeled around parking garages. Not so with the RX-7. The air dam has the same profile and effective clearance as a bulldozer's blade, and the 255-width front tires mean lots of clenched jaws and bicep work. Exiting the angled ramp of the garage requires popping the door and angling half your body outside the car, Valentino Rossi-style, to make sure you're not scraping the front end on any curbs. All of those picayune concerns evaporate once you're out on the road. The width is still there, but the low hood and near 360 degree glass canopy offers amazing visibility when trying to change lines or dart in and out of traffic. The clutch takeup is beefier than that of the Miata, but has the same intuitive takeup point. Once I've escaped the urban hell of rush hour gridlock, the empty highway ramp beckons, and I can finally see what all the fuss is about the rotary engine. Clarkson liked the Audi R8′s performance to smearing honey inside Keira Knightley, another example of his frequently bestowed, but rarely deserved, superlatives. In the RX-7′s case, the 13B twin-rotor engine really is so smooth, so thrilling and so unlike anything else today that it could accurately be compared to twisting the adjustment knob on Bertel's favorite adult novelty while it's inside two of your favorite female celebrities at once. It really is that satisfying. There is no real perceptible noise or furious forward thrust like that found in a Boss 302 Mustang - in fact, it's about as fast as a brand new V6 Mustang. Then again a protein bar and a steak can have similar nutritional value. The cable throttle itself is a welcome change from the lifeless servo units in every other car today, and every millimeter of travel translates into a bit of forward thrust that is undeniable and tangible. From 0-4500 rpm there's a decent shove forward that feels perfectly adequate itself. Once the second, larger turbo comes in, however, there's a hellfire blast of power, more Tesla than Mazda, and the scenery starts to move very quickly. The 7000 RPM upshift is punctuated with a crisp wastegate ppsshhhtttt and before you know it, you're at the point of "I really didn't know how fast I was going, officer". The RX-7′s effortless ability to warp time and space belies the 255-horepower rating until you consider that the car weighs 2800 lbs. And yet before I can non-ironically give this old Mazda a non-ironical "greatest car in the worrrrrld" award, I'm harshly interrupted by its glaring flaws. The seats were apparently designed by the same people who ran the Hanoi Hilton and by mile 75, my lower back felt like it had an awl punched through it, repeatedly. The Bose Acoustic "WaveGuide" stero also seemed to work on its own schedule; sometimes there would be radio reception, sometimes it would play very well out of one side of the car. At mile 110, there is a bang and a clunk as the car begins to sag and thump on the driver's side. Pulling over on the busy 401 freeway isn't the life-threatening nightmare it usually is, on account of the light traffic at 10 P.M., and there is a Highway Patrolman situated on the shoulder a mere 25 yards behind me. The friendly constable shines a flashlight on the wheel, and it's apparent that I suffered a full blowout. The sidewall is still attached to the rim, but the rest of the carcass hangs limply off the rim like a badly broken limb. "Holy shit bud," he says with an almost too stereotypical Canadian accent, "I don't know how you didn't end up in the rhubarb." We are not in Toronto anymore.
The plan is to get the car to my brother's house on the temporary spare, and somehow get a tire sent down from Mazda HQ. It's doubtful that the small college town will have the 255/45/16 tire in stock anywhere, so Mazda's Chuck Reimer agreed to deliver one himself – apparently Mazda has a second RX-7, and they'll simply borrow a wheel and tire from it to get it there. Of course, the temporary spare has gone flat overnight as well, and a flat-bed truck is now required to get to the dealership just a few miles down the road. It wouldn't be an RX-7 if things didn't go wrong. The next day, after all impediments are removed, the drive back is less eventful. Pouring rain gives way to clear skies. My brother and I pig out on fast food, pour nearly $100 of premium gas in the tank, and stop to get parts for a beer funnel. We curse the poor seats and crappy stereo as he takes in what a car from his birth year was like. He's incredulous that the RX-7 cost $47,000 Canadian dollars in 1993, roughly $100,000 in today's money. "You've got to be kidding me. With this interior? This is so crappy. I get it on the Miata, but one hundred grand?" The quirks of the car are totally foreign to him too. "I've never been in a car that needs to be warmed up and cooled down. Or one where the exhaust gas can get too hot [there's a warning light for that on the center console]." We're in suburbia now, stopped at a long traffic light. The timing is right. "Get out of the car," I say. "Drive it. You tell me if it's great or not." "Nah, I better not. Don't want to risk it." In truth, I'm tired from the ordeal of the last 24 hours and my back is aching from the uncomfortable seats. My brother is one of the better candidates for this task. He is responsible and dispassionate enough not to test the limits of the RX-7. "It's ok. You've driven my car, you've driven the EVO, you've driven the Boss and the GT-R. You'll be fine. And you need some context." After the driver change, my brother approaches the car with a mix of joy and trepidation as if he were nervously cradling a newborn. I urge him on. "Go ahead, lay in to it, nothing's going to happen. My warnings about no traction control and double the power of my Miata may have spooked him. The smile on his face broadens in time with the sweep of the tachometer needle. "I've never felt anything like this before. I love the torque – and I always love a real cable throttle." He continues. "I's like watching sports highlights from the same period. If you watch hockey then versus now, they game is still great, but the players are so much bigger, faster and stronger. It's weird, because this car is 19 years old – but it's brand new, and I'm judging it like it's a new car." As he speaks, I'm listening to his argument while examining his technique behind the wheel. For someone who doesn't live and breathe cars, he drives well. Hands at 9 and 3, steady with his movements, eyes looking well ahead. His friends have all grown up ensconced in marshmallow-soft luxury crossovers loaded with every active safety feature known to man, but he's been in a few real cars and understands there's "sporting" doesn't just mean a trim level on the BMW X5. Somewhere in the four years that separates us, however, things changed irrevocably and the appeal of an elemental, eccentric sports car faded. At least the driving skills needed to enjoy one have been imprinted on him, should those cars ever return. Fortunately, driving adventures with your loved ones never require context. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
| |||
| |||
|
Friday, November 2, 2012
Capsule Comparison Part 2: 1993 Mazda RX-7
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archive
-
▼
2012
(7297)
-
▼
November
(680)
- Chinese Couple Found Guilty Of Stealing Crap From GM
- Canada Governments: No Sale Of GM Stock
- Memoirs Of An Independent Repair Shop Owner: Now T...
- Poor Man’s MQB: Opel’s Next Gen Insignia Will Be A...
- 2013 Lincoln MKZ Tested: Ford Luxury at Lincoln Pr...
- Batman-Themed Dark Knight Rises Nissan Juke NISMO ...
- 2013 Nissan Altima Spot: The Horn Drives You Nuts,...
- Fisker Karma Production Halted by Battery Supplier...
- 2013 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport Limited Edition La...
- Kia's UVO Texts When Teens Go Astray
- Vellum Venom: 2012 Honda Civic (Hybrid)
- Updated Car Reliability Stats: Who’s Up, Who’s Down
- Ontario Pushing To Dump GM Stock At A Significant ...
- 2012 L.A. Auto Show: Winners and Losers
- 2013 Mini Paceman Video
- 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander: Photo Gallery
- Ford To Re-Hire 400 Laid Off Workers In Canada
- 2013 Honda Civic Video
- AAA: No More Alcohol For Cars!
- Review: 2013 GMC Terrain Denali V6
- 2014 Mazda6 Video
- 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander: Up Close
- Amsterdam Car Show Canceled
- Ford And Mazda Finally End Chinese Menage A 3 – Bu...
- Are Chinese Cars Catching Up With The World? Cast ...
- French Workers On Strike, News At 11
- Do Or Die For Australia’s Auto Industry
- Question Of The Day: Should Auto Maintenance Be Pa...
- 2014 Chevrolet Spark EV: Photo Gallery
- And Here The Latest Sales Forecasts For November
- Volkswagen Will Produce a SportWagen-Based Crossov...
- Chevrolet Continues 2014 Corvette C7 Tease, Shows ...
- Kia to Launch Higher-Performance pro_cee’d GT for ...
- 2013 Mini Paceman: Up Close
- 2013 Toyota RAV4 Video
- 2013 Honda Civic: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Mazda6: Up Close
- 2014 Porsche Cayman Video
- 2014 Ford Fiesta ST: Photo Gallery
- 2013 Honda Civic Sedan: Up Close
- 2013 Mini Paceman: Photo Gallery
- Canada Adopts CAFE 2025-Based Fuel Economy Standards
- 2014 Ford Fiesta: Up Close
- 2014 Ford Transit Connect Wagon: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Acura RLX: Up Close
- 2014 Kia Forte: Photo Gallery
- Question: What Engine/Transmission Swap Belongs In...
- 2014 Ford Transit Connect Wagon: Up Close
- 2013 Volkswagen Beetle Convertible: Up Close
- 2014 Kia Forte Video
- 2013 Honda Civic: A Big Update, Administered Quick...
- 2014 Nissan GT-R Gets Updated Engine Internals, Su...
- 2014 Honda Accord Hybrid Photos and Info: To Plug ...
- 2014 Mazda6: Photo Gallery
- 2013 Honda Civic at the 2012 L.A. Auto Show
- 2014 Mazda 6 to Get Skyactiv Diesel [2012 L.A. Aut...
- 2014 Mazda CX-5 Photos and Info: Yup, It’s Already...
- 2014 Kia Sorento: Photo Gallery
- Mazda CX-5 Gets Power Boost: 2012 Los Angeles Auto...
- 2014 Mazda CX-5: What's Changed
- 2013 Fiat 500c Abarth: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Mazda6 Gets Diesel Engine For U.S.
- 2014 Fiat 500L Video
- 2013 Volkswagen Beetle Convertible: Photo Gallery
- MINI To Begin Production At Nedcar
- 2014 Kia Forte: Up Close
- 2013 Mazda CX-9: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Ford Transit Connect Wagon Video
- Question Of The Day: Love The Car, Hate The Company
- 2014 Fiat 500L: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Kia Sorento: Up Close
- Fisker Delays Bringing Karmas To China, Should For...
- Recall Alert: 2012 Honda Civic
- Kia Forte Shows Off Its Schnoz: 2012 Los Angeles A...
- Junkyard Find: 1941 Plymouth Special Deluxe Sedan
- Death To Spoilers
- François Bruère, Artiste Officiel Des 24 Hueres Du...
- 400,000 New Jobs Or 90,000 Unemployed? A Tale Of T...
- Hyundai Veloster C3 Roll Top Concept: Photo Gallery
- 2013 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 10th Anniversary Editio...
- 2014 Subaru Forester Video
- 2014 Subaru Forester Video
- 2014 Kia Sorento at the 2012 L.A. Auto Show
- 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Kia Forte at the 2012 L.A. Auto Show
- 2014 Ford Fiesta 1.0L EcoBoost First Drive: What L...
- 2014 Kia Sorento: Yesteryear’s Looks, Today’s Tech...
- 2013 Porsche Cayman / Cayman S: Improvements to Ap...
- 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe: Up Close
- 2013 Toyota RAV4: Photo Gallery
- 2014 Acura RLX at the 2012 L.A. Auto Show
- 2013 Porsche Cayman at the 2012 L.A. Auto Show
- 2014 Jaguar XFR-S: 550-hp M5 Fighter from Britain ...
- 2014 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Black Series: Photo Gal...
- 2013 Toyota RAV4: Up Close
- 2014 Acura RLX: Still Not Quite a Legend [2012 L.A...
- Volkswagen Reveals 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s Special-E...
- 2013 Smart Forjeremy: It Gives You Wings [2012 L.A...
- 2014 Acura RLX Pictures Revealed: 2012 Los Angeles...
- 2013 Mercedes-Benz GL63 AMG at the 2012 L.A. Auto ...
-
▼
November
(680)
No comments:
Post a Comment