Sadly, I stopped reading the magazine quite a while ago.
The Berzerkely project was the last thing I found really interesting.
The focus seemed to shift away from buying old, cheap cars and making them go faster for as little cash outlay as possible to buying a new mini and bolting off-the-shelf stuff to it.
I liked GRM because every other car magazine except one seemed to praise the free products from their advertisers rather than do any real-world testing.
I can see the staff at Chevy Craft bolt air suspension to a camaro and claim it handles better because the advertisers paid them to say that or I can watch GRM do a real-world, unbiased comparison.
Unfortunately, GRM seems to have left the 60's ,70's and 80's cars to the biased magazines (unless it's a british car, then CM can play with it) and focused on the newer stuff.
Anything with a computer in it is of no interest to me and I'm not the only one.
How about an article on how to rebuild a junkyard carb, how to upgrade the handling on your second-gen F-body with cheap / free junkyard parts.
The "Cars and Crafts", "Chevy craft" and "slow Fords" magazines cant do articles like that because it's easier and makes more money for them to simply show how to order the stuff from Summit and Jegs.
I've dropped my subscription to Rod & Custom and Hemmings Muscle Machines because all they are is advertising. Hot Rod won't be getting renewed, at $20.00 for three years, I'm being overcharged. Motor Trend Classic this month had awesome articles and I don't mind paying the nearly $20.00 price for it UNTIL I found the the bloody Harbor Freight ad!!!.
The Rodders Journal and Motor Trend Classic are about the only thing I bother with anymore.
You guys at GRM have the HUGE advantage of being about the only unbiased car magazine out there, keep it up and expand the focus a bit, you might win some more customers and subscribers.
I loved the magazine 5 years ago but there is more in the grassroots racing world than 10 year old Honda Civics, BMW's, Miatas and MINIS.
Shawn