fastoldfart said:
I have owned and loved a couple of Miatas but have never driven or even sat in a first gen MR2.
How do they compare for spirited street driving, interior room for a 6 footer, reliability?
There is a fine looking 86 MR2 for sale locally 120,000 mile and I can believe what my beater NA is currently worth.
I've been driving an '85 MR2 for something like eighteen years. I love driving it. It is so choice. If you have the means, I highly recommend picking one up.
I would not trade my AW11 for a similar Miata. It's not that I dislike the Miata; I don't have enough experience in one to dislike it. But the AW11 (Toyota's chassis code for first-gen MR2s, 1985-1989 model year) speaks to me in ways the Miata does not.
The '85 and '86 are generally referred to as Mk1a by the community. '87-'89 are Mk1b. The '85 got a rear sway bar, removed for '86, as Jim said. Hardly a deal-breaker. The Mk1b cars had revised rear suspension that numbed the handling somewhat. Brake rotors also got larger on the Mk1b, and the interior (door panels and center console, primarily) were revised as well. My preference is for the Mk1a with larger Mk1b brakes. I like the sharp handling, and the interior has more character.
Most of these cars have sunroofs. They eat into headroom a little. Mk1b also offered a T-top version (mandatory on supercharged cars in the US) that is good on headroom but a little heavier and more prone to leaking if not looked after. Hardtops are harder to find and are sought after by some people.
Reliability is astonishing. They're Toyotas, built in a time of legendary QDR. My car is on its original cooling system - hoses, radiator, and all are the same parts the car left the factory with. Same for the fuel pump and hoses. Care for them and they will care for you.
Keith Tanner said:
Other than the engine being in the wrong place, they're remarkably similar in specification from what I remember. I don't know much about them other than that the handling was maybe not as flattering to drivers as the Miata, and they ate rear tires.
"Handling not as flattering to drivers" is a fair description. The handling is a thing of beauty in spirited street driving, but it is possible to find and exceed the limits. Slow in, fast out, and all that. Just be prudent, work your way up until you and the car get to know each other.
The term "snap oversteer" is inapplicable to an AW11 unless you are an absolute savage. In that case, turn in your license and take the bus.
An AW11 will not eat rear tires unless something is very wrong or you're making unlikely amounts of power. The SW20 is another story - and a very different car from both the Miata and the AW11.
JG Pasterjak said:
AW11 MR2s are cavernous inside compared to an NA Miata. Steering is a bit more numb and slow, but the motors feel similar. The early MR2s had some of the best ergonomics for the widest variety of drivers of any car of the era as far as I'm concerned.
I do love the ergos. These cars fit like the proverbial glove. Outward visibility is outstanding.
Steering can also be improved with a Quaife quick rack. Adding caster to the front end improves handling significantly. Steering effort is increased at parking lot speeds. Handling gets better with a good alignment. Nothing aggressive - about 1° negative camber all the way around, about 1/16" toe in at both ends, and all the caster you can get up front. Ball joint wear is hard to detect on these cars, so replacing ball joints before the alignment is prudent. OEM parts are advised whenever possible, with some exceptions for improvements like better rear tie rods and Koni inserts.
grafmiata said:
I also hated the mr2 shifter. Felt like stirring a bag of antlers compared to the Miata.
Shifter feel often suffers due to a variety of factors. The shifter assembly in the car and the linkage at the transmission both have multiple bushings and pivot points that wear out and make everything worse if not corrected. Transmission gear oil may want to be replaced with Redline MTL or similar. These cars are also cheap enough to own that maintenance is often neglected, so there's every chance that any AW11 will not have had a gear oil change in at least ten years.
Jim Pettengill said:
As a street car the MR2 is great. As a track car, it's heavy compared to a Miata. My 89 has a listed weight of about 2350 with sunroof. Also, the 87 - 89 cars had "improvements" for the street that make them less desirable as track cars. These were mostly brakes. Because of the tendency to get "snap oversteer" in the 85s (mostly dumb drivers getting in over their heads and lifting suddenly mid corner, or hitting the brakes), Toyota dropped the rear sway bar that continued for the rest of the world, went to larger brake discs (that helped stop rotor warping), and added a rear brake proportioning valve that drastically reduced rear brake pressure during "heavy braking". In actuality, this happens in mild braking and results in front wheel lockup that really kills times.
Agreed, although I believe the front brake bias was there from day one. It's tolerable on a bone-stock street car on soft OEM suspension, where lots of weight transfer happens under braking. Once you stiffen the suspension, it's conspicuous.
burdickjp said:
I've spent time and money in both and would take an AW11 any day of the week over a Miata.
I think my criticisms of the Miata are nearly 1:1 Chris Harris' in this video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=36whvegFIqg
The cockpit in the AW11 is very forward and visibility is excellent. You don't have to sit on the floor to clear a helmet. The OEM steering wheel in the zenki AW11 is also absolutely perfect in diameter and rim thickness.
The 4A-GE is an amazingly lively powerplant compared to the B6 or BP. It sounds so good and is so rev happy and makes great power. The C series gearbox is a cornucopia of available ratios, final drives, and LSDs. It does suck to shift, though. Really.
The steering in the AW11 is light and direct and the front end response is instant. It doesn't feel like the chassis shifts first and then changes direction.
Yeah, what he said.
Driving an AW11 feels like being in on a secret that nobody else knows. It really does feel like I am getting away with something by driving mine.
Cheeky comparisons to proper exotics are inevitable, but the phrase "pocket Ferrari" is not inappropriate. Maybe also "trailer park Testarossa". Regardless, it's a hoot.