So I've never really done a build thread before, but this seems as good a place as any to have one. I've spent a good bit of time over on a particular cat-related boosted Miata message board and while very knowledgeable, you lot seem a bit less serious and that's something I can get behind.
The story starts with some background on myself. I grew up a car guy in California's central valley. Hot wheels, model cars, Gran Turismo - for whatever reason, I was hooked from an early age. In high school I saved up my pennies and bought a 96 Mustang GT. Like any kid with a V8 "muscle car," I thought I was pretty hot E36 M3. But, it was slower than my buddy's LT1 Camaro. Unlike some of my friends, my dad wasn't particularly interested in wrenching anymore, so armed with nothing more than early message board tutorials and a Haynes manual I set about performing the "PI" head/cam/intake swap. My parents thought I was crazy (the car ran, and now it's in a million pieces?!), but the car modification bug had bit me. Soon after followed some Eibach lowering springs and cheapo Tokico shocks. I brought the car with me to Clemson for college, where I discovered autocross, and so did the Mustang.
It didn't help that the course was designed by a guy who drove a Miata: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4q0oHvvMRv4
I laughed at all the so-called "sports cars" in our sports car club (a Civic? Miata? those are for commuting and hairdressing), but was quickly humbled. My car was destroyed in the turns and, let's be real, it wasn't that fast in a straight line.
An internship brought me back to California for the summer, and I needed a commute car. I found a bone stock 1995 Miata for $2200 on Craigslist, sold by an old man because his wife didn't want to drive a standard transmission anymore. It was a little dirty, but it could chirp the tires in 2nd gear, had cold air conditioning and the price was right. Once again my parents questioned my sanity (or maybe my sexual orientation) but I loved it. I later discovered the tan top indicated the Popular Equipment package - which meant my car had the coveted Torsen limited slip differential, and (more important for my daily commute) cruise control.
Of course, the flimsy stock suspension wouldn't do, so I scored a set of coil-overs from a friend at college for $450 shipped across the country. They were a set of spec Miata take-offs - Bilstein shocks, ground control coilover sleeves, ISC racing top hats, and stiff-as-hell Eibach springs. Also included was the SM-spec adjustable rear sway bar. I wrapped the stock 14" wheels in the stickiest rubber my college-strapped wallet could afford (some Falken RT615's) and joined the SFR SCCA for some autocross fun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2RpB2sLaRw - SFR SCCA Autocross
This was summer 2010 - and yes, I spent 2 hours a day in a Miata with 200tw tires and SM suspension. In California. If I have back trouble in my old age, it will be the thousands of miles I spent driving over potholes on I-580 in this car. It was around this point that I added a set of FM frame rail braces to try and quell some of the shimmying.
The next year at school, I discovered track days. My roommate had a Miata with which he participated in SCCA time trials. One weekend co-driving at the Talledega Grand Prix course and suddenly autocross seemed pretty... tame. Why stand around in a parking lot all day for 2 minutes of seat time when you could spend a bit (well, a lot) more and get more seat time than you could handle? Here's a video from my very first track weekend... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdA--mLemJI
I had also joined our student ASME chapter, which was building a 240sx for the 24 Hours of LeMons. Talk about jumping into the deep end!
I believe this video is from our second year: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-hCfsGkzAU
Once again summer came and that meant going back to California to work. With my mind on driving some of California's amazing race tracks, I bought an old Hard Dog roll bar from another college buddy. Life pro tip - if you need to ship something bulky, check out Greyhound. If it'll fit under the bus, they'll ship it for far less than any of your more traditional options. However, I was in a bit of a pickle. At 6'3" I barely fit in the Miata to begin with, and I still needed the car to commute in. With a healthy fear of being rear-ended, and in the interest of being secure on track I scored a Kirkey aluminum racing seat off Craigslist and bolted it straight to the floor. With this setup I cleared the broomstick test, with a helmet, by 2 inches.
This did have the added side effect (benefit) of making the car very difficult for shorter people to drive. My mother is 5'8".
With the addition of some free EBC Yellowstuff brakes (thanks to a promotion on Miata.net), and required safety equipment squared away, I signed up for my first track weekend in the Miata.
While the car survived the track day, the radiator end tank cracked about 1 mile from the gate on the way to dinner with some friends I had made that day. Thankfully, one of the guys had a trailer which allowed me to tow the car back to the track, where we could figure out what to do with it the next day. After riding in some awesome cars driven by very good drivers (GTR, Cayman R, modified Evo X) one of the guys called AAA to get me to Sacramento. After dumping me in a Walmart parking lot, I then used one of my AAA calls to get the rest of the way home. A Koyo stock-replacement radiator was installed, along with a new timing belt and water pump, because the car had 140k miles at this point and no documentation from the prior owner on when that might have been done.
The car remained dead-nuts reliable and in this state of build for the remainder of its time in California. It made a couple trips to Laguna Seca Raceway, one more to Thunderhill and many drives over Mt Hamilton. I still did a few autocrosses every now and then - Sacramento, Stockton, and San Francisco - but I preferred the flow of track driving to the violence of autocross.
After finishing grad school in 2013, I scored a job with Michelin in South Carolina and had the car shipped out. I guess we'll call this "Chapter 1 - California" of the build. I'll write up what's happened since moving to South Carolina soon.