I'm having a bit of a crisis of faith in the Church Of Miata, and I am looking for you fellow GRM'ers to help me out (although I think I know what the answers will likely be). I've owned my Miata for the past 4 years and have fiddled with pretty much every aspect, in the process turning it into what I call a C/SP Lite car. Recently I took it out for about a 3 hour drive and came back to the house, and it wasn't until the next day that I realized that I just didn't really enjoy the drive. Didn't hate it, but it didn't put a smile on my face.
The problems:
-Power: I know that people insist that Miata's aren't a numbers car, but 115hp gets pretty tiring after a while, when you have to knock down to 3rd or 4th gear to climb hills, and you have to flog it away from every stoplight to prevent getting run over because even minivans make triple the horsepower these days. Planned on dropping in a built '00 1.8L this winter, but I'm not sure if I want to spend that time and money and still not really be satisfied. And, yes, I know Keith would be willing to sell me a turbo, or I could drop in any other number of engines, but that plays into Problem 2
-Uncompetitive: I kinda pigeonhold myeself into C/SP through a Torsen swap and an aluminum flywheel. I win our combined SP/SM class every year, but strictly because I'm the only person to show up consistently. Have yet to win an event where there is competition. And it's irritating to run fast raw times and then get bombed back to bottom of the heap overall. I could build it into true C/SP car, but that would be expensive and I wouldn't want to drive it on the street and I refuse to own a car that I have to trailer. I could go back to STR (now that the Torsen swap is legal) but I would have to change back the flywheel (ugh) and I'd be up against S2000s. I could also go to STS (switch out the flywheel and put the 1.6L VLSD in and munch through those like candy) but that'd go back to Problem 1 of still having 115hp.
Holding Me Back: I want to do Targa Southland or SCCA Nationals or even just track days but it's not really possible with this car. A lot of tracks in the area won't let you out in a roadster without a rollbar and harnesses. And harnesses mean race seats. And a lot of race seats don't fit Miatas or end up sitting higher than stock seats (not good when I'm 6'3" and 240lbs). The whole uncompetitive thing factors into Nationals (Not that I think I'll go decimate, but I'd feel dumb running C/SP at Nationals on 205-series 200TW tires and a stock 1.6L). And Targa Southland I would not want to attempt to spend a weekend and 600 miles in the car with someone and enough clothes and gear for the event.
-Minor Issues: The body is getting kinda scruffy, minor dents and dings and a really E36 M3ty repaint. I'm tired of incurable water leaks. I'm tired of rattles. I feel like if I ever got in a crash or hit a deer, I'd just straight-up die. I go on long road trips and it's kinda buzzy traveling at 70mph and 3500rpm. I dislike that I can't fit real tires under it without hacking up the body or running monster truck ride height.
What I Do Like: I have it pretty much sorted out, as far as gremlins and reliability. Parts are cheap, consumables are cheap. It's easy to work on. It's pre-OBDII, so I can go wild with mods. The underlying chassis is great. These cars are pretty well-known, if it has an issue, can likely find the solution easily.
So, do I unload it now (including the engine and swap kit and my mountains of spares) and develop a new car for a Street class for the 2018 season? Do I spend the time and money dropping the new engine in and buying R-comps and race wheels and hope that I enjoy it more, and then maybe still unload it after the '18 season. Help a brother out.