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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

2jz in a caterham


brians25

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I would go the Hayabusa route. I have been in a Radical with single Hayabusa engine and it was absolutely amazing round the Rockingham circuit. The twin Hayabusa power Radical was something else. I would love to own one of these, it takes track racing to a completely different league.

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My two-penn'orth (all IMHO, of course.... :))

 

-- A Lotus 7 type car has to be light and simple.

-- Anything with a turbo is just wrong, naturally-aspirated power delivery would suit it best.

-- A Buick/Rover V8 is a waste of time, it costs a lot of money to get power, so you might as well just use an S2000, or even a modern Ford or GM (or VAG?) DOHC four.

-- Only use a bike engine if it really is a toy. I know someone who bought a Formula 27/Fireblade after being crocked in a bike accident. He found it too frantic for normal use and bought a Tiptronic 911.

-- Everyone wants Hayabusas, so consider the alternatives if you go for a bike engine, then you can buy two and just swap the engine if it breaks.

Edited by garethr (see edit history)
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This is also what i will be doing to my next project.

Dax owners like their cosworth engines and i will be wanting turbo power for fun and thrills. I saw a company who made some bellhousing or adaptor plates to fit a 4AGE 1.6n/a toyota unit on to ford running gear which makes me want to use the 2ltr toyota turbo 3s-gte engine like i had in my gt4 and a good reliable 300bhp.

 

Should be nothing like the wind in your hair and the sound of a screamer pipe on a nice summers day.

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2.3 SAAB Turbo, 225 bhp, reasonable weight, low height and not too expensive. You would need to make up a bellhousing and adaptor for the clutch to convert from FWD to RWD, maybe too much work if you don't have the skills.
Omega 'box. The later Saabs have the same bolt pattern. (PPC magazine are in the process of bolting a Saab turbo lump, Omega gearbox, and Volvo axle into a Mk2 Escort.)
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The Rover V8 is very very torquey..... and will pull away in 5th (with clutch slippage on a 3.9 axle). It makes the car very very easy to drive, quite relaxed, but still able to turn a circa 4.5 second 0 to 60 :D

 

One of the 4.2 or 4.6 engines would be much better than my 3.5 Vitesse engine ;)

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The Rover V8 is very very torquey..... and will pull away in 5th (with clutch slippage on a 3.9 axle). It makes the car very very easy to drive, quite relaxed, but still able to turn a circa 4.5 second 0 to 60 :D

 

One of the 4.2 or 4.6 engines would be much better than my 3.5 Vitesse engine ;)

 

 

I like rover v8's aswell, they don't make much power but the sound from them is unbelievable, it must have something to do with the alloy block or something.

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A good friend of mine has a dax quadradrive (4x4 caterham type - one of the first 4 prototypes) it came with a 3.9 v8, but he got bored with that and got a custom built 5.2 (i think) v8 with dry sump etc.. - before it went in the car it went on an engine dyno and made around the 650bhp mark, now that was a fun car to be a passenger in!

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Don't they throw rods a lot with that long stroke?

 

Never heard that before, maybe later ones but certainly not the ones before GM started moneysaving. Saab say the timing chain should be replaced at 170,000 miles so they haven't heard it either.

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