AMS EVO X Wins Ultimate Street Car Challenge *Pics and Video Inside*
#1
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Former Sponsor
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Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,652
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From: Wood Dale, IL
AMS EVO X Wins Ultimate Street Car Challenge *Pics and Video Inside*
1,946 miles and 30 hours across vast plains, rocky mountains, and dry deserts. The drive from our small Chicago suburb to K&N Engineering to was a long and tedious one, but in the end it was well worth it. We accepted our first invite to the Ultimate Street Car Challenge and we came out on top.
When we arrived at K&N Engineering, only one car had arrived ahead of us, our friends at 034 Motorsports and their Audi Quattro Coupe. We settled in and watched as the other competitors starting showing up one by one. The last car, Smogrunner’s EVO VIII, made it literally minutes before the cut off time (with only a few hours notice he was called in to fill some empty spots). After seeing all the cars, we knew winning this thing would be tough, if not impossible. Our Mitsubishi Evolution X is a great platform for this event but with so little development time and being thrown together in a couple weeks we were not expecting a win. Its relative newness meant there was little aftermarket support for the car, so we had to engineer, build, and test our own products in a short period of time.
The first day’s tests included the car show, engineering panel, girlfriend test, drivability test, horsepower, emissions, and fuel mileage. We made only one dyno pull for the horsepower test which netted us 487 awhp. Martin was satisfied with that so they unstrapped the car and we moved on to the next test.
With the exception of the horsepower tests, we weren't told the results until the next morning. At the start of day two, we were told the tally from the first day. We were tied for 3rd place, some 100+ points behind the leader, Cheston's beautiful Technosquare 350Z. We knew that was a huge gap to overcome, but the real world tests were still to come and anything could happen. We were banking on what we thought would be our strong points over the 350Z, the skid pad and acceleration tests.
The California Speedway was the site for the skid pad, acceleration, and braking tests. The cars were driven by magazine staff for the skid pad and braking tests, but they allowed the car owners or drivers to run the 1/4 mile. I ran the drag race portion putting down an 11.4 @ 118 coming in second to Smogrunner who ran an 11.3 @ 124 in his EVO VIII. The car did very well in all 3 tests and we were a bit more hopeful about our chances during the long drive thru the desert to Buttonwillow raceway, the site of the final tests. Here we would battle it out on the road course and finish up the competition with the gross display of horsepower. Our hot shoe driver, Mark Daddio, had never seen this track before but he did a fantastic job learning the track quickly and posted up a very good time, just a few hundredths from first place.
Now it was my turn to get the car to make some smoke during the gross display of horsepower, but no matter what I tried to do, it ended up being a gross display of understeer. The car was just so good at being manageable that big smokey doughnuts were not in its repertoire.
At the end of it all, we were fairly certain we had finished runner up. We all hopped in the cars and took laps around the track for the magazine photography and video footage. We were then called back to the paddock to find out what the finishing order was. They called the finishers out in reverse order and to our surprise, they called someone else’s name out for second. Somehow we had managed to pull off an amazing comeback to edge out the Technosquare 350Z.
Our hats go off to Smogrunner though… he tied a new GTR for third place with no preparation for the event. He literally got the invitation by phone, left work and made it with minutes to spare. Congrats are due to Smogrunner and his sponsor Tuning Technologies for a great showing out there!
The 2008 Ultimate Street Car Challenge was an amazing event. We would like to thank our sponsors, without their help we would not have been able to do it. Thanks to Sport Compact Car for putting on such a great event and thanks to the other competitors and their amazing cars. It goes without saying that the 1,946 mile drive home was much easier!
link to a video about this years competition: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w80faA96kCU
Specs:
Engine:
Stock Short Block
Stock Head
Stock Cam
Turbo:
AMS Prototype GT30R Turbo kit
Intake/Intercooler:
AMS Front Mount EVO X Intercooler
AMS Upper Intercooler Pipe
Fuel:
AMS Prototype Fuel Surge Tank System
AMS Fuel Rail
RC Engineering 750cc Injectors
Engine Management/Electronics:
AMS Ecutek Reflash
AMS Small Battery Kit
Drivetrain:
Exedy Stage II Clutch
AMS Shifter Bushings
Suspension/Rims/Tires:
Endura-Tech Prototype Monotube Coilover System
Stoptech 4 Corner Big Brake Kit
AMS Corner Weight and Alignment
Nitto Nt-01 Tires 275/35/R18
Enkei RP1 18x10.5"
Interior:
Buddy Club Seats
AEM Uego Gauge
Autometer Sport Comp II Boost Gauge
487 awhp
Special Thanks to:
Buddy Club
Enduratech
Exedy
Mitsubishi
Nitto
RC Engineering
Sticker Dude Designs
Stop Tech Brakes
Tial
Vibrant Performance
VP Racing Fuels
When we arrived at K&N Engineering, only one car had arrived ahead of us, our friends at 034 Motorsports and their Audi Quattro Coupe. We settled in and watched as the other competitors starting showing up one by one. The last car, Smogrunner’s EVO VIII, made it literally minutes before the cut off time (with only a few hours notice he was called in to fill some empty spots). After seeing all the cars, we knew winning this thing would be tough, if not impossible. Our Mitsubishi Evolution X is a great platform for this event but with so little development time and being thrown together in a couple weeks we were not expecting a win. Its relative newness meant there was little aftermarket support for the car, so we had to engineer, build, and test our own products in a short period of time.
The first day’s tests included the car show, engineering panel, girlfriend test, drivability test, horsepower, emissions, and fuel mileage. We made only one dyno pull for the horsepower test which netted us 487 awhp. Martin was satisfied with that so they unstrapped the car and we moved on to the next test.
With the exception of the horsepower tests, we weren't told the results until the next morning. At the start of day two, we were told the tally from the first day. We were tied for 3rd place, some 100+ points behind the leader, Cheston's beautiful Technosquare 350Z. We knew that was a huge gap to overcome, but the real world tests were still to come and anything could happen. We were banking on what we thought would be our strong points over the 350Z, the skid pad and acceleration tests.
The California Speedway was the site for the skid pad, acceleration, and braking tests. The cars were driven by magazine staff for the skid pad and braking tests, but they allowed the car owners or drivers to run the 1/4 mile. I ran the drag race portion putting down an 11.4 @ 118 coming in second to Smogrunner who ran an 11.3 @ 124 in his EVO VIII. The car did very well in all 3 tests and we were a bit more hopeful about our chances during the long drive thru the desert to Buttonwillow raceway, the site of the final tests. Here we would battle it out on the road course and finish up the competition with the gross display of horsepower. Our hot shoe driver, Mark Daddio, had never seen this track before but he did a fantastic job learning the track quickly and posted up a very good time, just a few hundredths from first place.
Now it was my turn to get the car to make some smoke during the gross display of horsepower, but no matter what I tried to do, it ended up being a gross display of understeer. The car was just so good at being manageable that big smokey doughnuts were not in its repertoire.
At the end of it all, we were fairly certain we had finished runner up. We all hopped in the cars and took laps around the track for the magazine photography and video footage. We were then called back to the paddock to find out what the finishing order was. They called the finishers out in reverse order and to our surprise, they called someone else’s name out for second. Somehow we had managed to pull off an amazing comeback to edge out the Technosquare 350Z.
Our hats go off to Smogrunner though… he tied a new GTR for third place with no preparation for the event. He literally got the invitation by phone, left work and made it with minutes to spare. Congrats are due to Smogrunner and his sponsor Tuning Technologies for a great showing out there!
The 2008 Ultimate Street Car Challenge was an amazing event. We would like to thank our sponsors, without their help we would not have been able to do it. Thanks to Sport Compact Car for putting on such a great event and thanks to the other competitors and their amazing cars. It goes without saying that the 1,946 mile drive home was much easier!
link to a video about this years competition: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w80faA96kCU
Specs:
Engine:
Stock Short Block
Stock Head
Stock Cam
Turbo:
AMS Prototype GT30R Turbo kit
Intake/Intercooler:
AMS Front Mount EVO X Intercooler
AMS Upper Intercooler Pipe
Fuel:
AMS Prototype Fuel Surge Tank System
AMS Fuel Rail
RC Engineering 750cc Injectors
Engine Management/Electronics:
AMS Ecutek Reflash
AMS Small Battery Kit
Drivetrain:
Exedy Stage II Clutch
AMS Shifter Bushings
Suspension/Rims/Tires:
Endura-Tech Prototype Monotube Coilover System
Stoptech 4 Corner Big Brake Kit
AMS Corner Weight and Alignment
Nitto Nt-01 Tires 275/35/R18
Enkei RP1 18x10.5"
Interior:
Buddy Club Seats
AEM Uego Gauge
Autometer Sport Comp II Boost Gauge
487 awhp
Special Thanks to:
Buddy Club
Enduratech
Exedy
Mitsubishi
Nitto
RC Engineering
Sticker Dude Designs
Stop Tech Brakes
Tial
Vibrant Performance
VP Racing Fuels
Last edited by EricJ@AMS; Nov 7, 2008 at 04:47 PM.
#5
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Former Sponsor
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Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,652
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From: Wood Dale, IL
The shop owns one. The grey X (the one we ran the Fireball Run with) belongs to the shop and is being turned into a Time Attack car. The white one Arne originally bought for his wife but it got comendeered by the shop to prototype parts. One thing led to another and then we got the invite to the SCC USCC... Needless to say she still has not driven the car. LOL
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#8
The shop owns one. The grey X (the one we ran the Fireball Run with) belongs to the shop and is being turned into a Time Attack car. The white one Arne originally bought for his wife but it got comendeered by the shop to prototype parts. One thing led to another and then we got the invite to the SCC USCC... Needless to say she still has not driven the car. LOL
#9
Remember the purpose behind all of this effort.
First of all, a huge congratulations to Martin, Eric, and their team that prepped that car. It is a beautiful car that did everything well. I was on cloud 9 just to get a lucky chance to enter this Challenge.
I'm still stoked about getting to sit down with Martin, Eric, and other competitors at a Mexican Food restaurant after it was all over. I just plain peppered Eric with questions about how to launch Evo's: tire pressure, coilover settings, aero, rake, squat. Martin's headache went away enough to enjoy a beer or two as well. At one table, we had Martin, Eric, Alfred of TTech, Robi, Mark Daddio, all the editors of SCC, and several other hotshoes and experts. Man, that was AWESOME.
But remember the purpose of this huge effort and expense: To test and develop better go fast parts for our cars. Consumers need to reward these companies, like AMS, with their business. These are tough times and we all need to take care of the companies that have stood by us for all these years. People often think that in tough economic times, it is ok to save a buck by absolutely any means necessary. I personally feel differently: I'm more likely to spend an extra ten or twenty bucks on this or that bit, but make sure the people/companies I care about are getting my money.
So, support AMS (nationally/internationally) and your local shops (TTech for me) for installs and tuning!
I have or had had the following AMS parts on my Evo:
2.3 stroker motor
35R turbo kit
VSR Intake Manifold
Intercooler
lower IC piping
Brake Cooling kit
Fuel rail
Not to mention the long list of non AMS parts I've ordered from them: two piece rotors, brake pads, wheel studs, srf brake fluid, plugs, bushings, Whiteline products, fuel injectors, etc...
I love Tuning Technologies too, but I've always found AMS to be a great compliment to them.
I'm still stoked about getting to sit down with Martin, Eric, and other competitors at a Mexican Food restaurant after it was all over. I just plain peppered Eric with questions about how to launch Evo's: tire pressure, coilover settings, aero, rake, squat. Martin's headache went away enough to enjoy a beer or two as well. At one table, we had Martin, Eric, Alfred of TTech, Robi, Mark Daddio, all the editors of SCC, and several other hotshoes and experts. Man, that was AWESOME.
But remember the purpose of this huge effort and expense: To test and develop better go fast parts for our cars. Consumers need to reward these companies, like AMS, with their business. These are tough times and we all need to take care of the companies that have stood by us for all these years. People often think that in tough economic times, it is ok to save a buck by absolutely any means necessary. I personally feel differently: I'm more likely to spend an extra ten or twenty bucks on this or that bit, but make sure the people/companies I care about are getting my money.
So, support AMS (nationally/internationally) and your local shops (TTech for me) for installs and tuning!
I have or had had the following AMS parts on my Evo:
2.3 stroker motor
35R turbo kit
VSR Intake Manifold
Intercooler
lower IC piping
Brake Cooling kit
Fuel rail
Not to mention the long list of non AMS parts I've ordered from them: two piece rotors, brake pads, wheel studs, srf brake fluid, plugs, bushings, Whiteline products, fuel injectors, etc...
I love Tuning Technologies too, but I've always found AMS to be a great compliment to them.
Last edited by Smogrunner; Nov 9, 2008 at 07:30 PM.
#12
The shop owns one. The grey X (the one we ran the Fireball Run with) belongs to the shop and is being turned into a Time Attack car. The white one Arne originally bought for his wife but it got comendeered by the shop to prototype parts. One thing led to another and then we got the invite to the SCC USCC... Needless to say she still has not driven the car. LOL