Yes world I am removing the rotary from my 1980 RX-7, and it was planned that way from the beginning.
A little about me.
This is going to be my first "build" I have ever done. My only previous experience with a sports/muscle cars was a 1999 Camaro Z28 I had 10 years ago. The only track time the Z28 saw was down the drag strip. But I was there almost every other Wednesday night in the summers for 2-3 years. The Z28 never saw too many mods, mostly just a programmer and chassis/suspension mods that got me to the low 13's. 8 years ago life happened (AKA a pregnant wife), and the car was sold to a friend and I bought a new 4 door truck. The past five years have been good to me, a better job, improved income and an affordable house that allows me to start a project.
What I want from a car
Driving the canyons, auto-X, drag strip and occasional hot laps around Thunder Hill are all things I want to go and do with a car. I am not interested in having a purpose built track only car, but a car I can beat on a little bit and have some fun. My budget is low, time I can spend on the car is limited, and so this maybe a slow paced build done one step at a time.
I have decided to share here on the GRM forum because I feel a lot of you have similar goals and situations as I do. I have been following the board for over a year now and have envied all of your projects. So many of you are amazingly resourceful, dedicated and knowledgeable that I will find the best advice and comradery here on the great GRM forum.
After watching an episode of Drive on NBC Sports Network and watching Matt drive the so called “No Fu#@$” RX-7, I was fastened with the idea small, lightweight V8 Japanese sports car. I had always liked the Fox body Mustangs and the Ford 5.0EFI engine, and I also knew where there was an SA RX-7 rotting away in a field. I did a little research, found Granny’s Speed Shop, and I was sold on the idea of a V8 RX-7.
The Car,
The car is a 1980 RX-7 (I believe a GS) with a manual 4spd transmission. The car sat after it failed a smog test in 2009. I reinstalled the carburetor (PO thought it was the reason for failed smog) to get it running on starting fluid. I wanted to ensure the engine would run so I could sell it and recover some of the cost. The cars body is little rough, I will have to learn some body work at some point. But the chassis and frame look good. It’s a California car so there would have been no rust had the PO not left a pile of leafs on top of the cowl, but everything else is essentially rust free. With the car also came a 1985 GSL-SE LSD rear diff and disc brakes, and the famed whale tail spoiler to be installed later.
The donor
A year went by with the Mazda just sitting in my driveway as I saved money for a donor vehicle. In August I found what looks to be a good donor. A 1993 Mustang GT w/ a T5. The body and chassis are tore up, but it does drive. The PO I purchased it from sold it to me because he couldn’t get it to pass smog and did not feel like investing any more money into this car. The engine fires up good, idles smooth and doesn’t seem to have any real leaks. I think a tune up and a fresh catalytic converter and I can get it to pass smog in the RX-7. I will worry about improving the performance down the road.
This weekend I finally got to work on the project. I have located a buyer for the 12A, so I removed it and the transmission from the RX-7. I just need to double check what all need to keep for the conversion and its will be sold with no turning back on the project.
Next step, find a few minutes during the week to call Granny’s and get the conversion kit coming.