A not-so-gentle reminder for the class that the $2000 Challenge is less than 30 days away.
Photography Credit: Mark Langello
Entrant: Tom Caimano
Event year: 2004
Budget spent: $1840.93
Once upon a time–before Radwood, before Bring a Trailer, before the ravages of the day’s import tuner scene–you could buy a turbo Starion or Conquest at a fair price. Box flares for all.
Tom Caimano, of Rochester, New York, brought this 1988 Mitsubishi Starion ESI-R to the $2000 Challenge back in 2004. He paid $800 for the car–no one cried foul–and then spent another grand adding a custom intake, two-stage boost controller and a “big-ass exhaust” while also porting the turbo housing and exhaust manifold. It ran a respectable 14.3 down the strip.
Make your own low-buck memories at the Grassroots Motorsports $2000 Challenge Presented by Tire Rack, which returns to Gainesville, Florida, April 6-7, 2024. Visit 2000challenge.com for details.
The Grassroots Motorsports $2000 Challenge is presented by Tire Rack, in association with CRC, Miller and BendPak.
It's interesting how things have evolved. I was just reading the recent CM, and noting how many times CM sees cars that have been Challenge competitors as good investments now. Crazy.
I've not seen an Alfa less than $5 for years, Corvettes are less easy to find that cheap, will an 2002 ever be seen as a challenge car? Or even a CRX?
Time does crazy things.
In reply to alfadriver :
Good call about CRX and 2002 donor prices. How much of each can you even get for $2000? A rusty shell?
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