Last year when Toyota introduced the MR2 Spyder, we figured it would be a great car. It hit the market with less weight and more horsepower than its only real competitor in the United States, the Mazda Miata.
It also had its engine, and therefore the majority of its weight, between its wheels and behind its cabin giving it handling dynamics that are, on paper at least, better than the Miata.
However, being a large, conservative multi-national corporation, Toyota wasn't about to go out on a limb and put huge power to the Spyder's rear wheels, making it an outrageous performance car. Instead, Japan's largest carmaker simply gave the MR2 enough performance to best its competition and figured that would be enough. And it was. The MR2 is a success and it has shown the Miata its taillights in more than one magazine comparison test.
When all is said and done, even at a feathery 2,200 lbs., the MR2 is still a wimp when it comes to going really fast. If you listen to old-school roadster purists, you'll get line after line about how real roadsters aren't about outright speed, ridiculous acceleration and stupid grip. Real roadsters, they'll claim, are for the joy of top down motoring, escaping to the mountains and cruising along the beaches. Bah we say! Who cares? What's that worth if you can't kick some dirt on the guy next to you at every stoplight? Those folks can have their slow cars and string-back gloves. We choose real performance.
So does James Chen at Axis Sport Tuning in Santa Fe Springs, Calif. Chen owns Axis and has been known to put together some strong-running project cars in the past.
When Chen first approached us about featuring this car, we figured it would be a mild, low-boost job with perhaps slightly improved performance. The end result was quite different. Before it was over, Chen, with some help from companies like Spearco, NuFormz and APEXi, produced a fire-breathing turbo car with a trick air-to-water intercooler, custom exhaust manifold and coilover suspension.Although our time with the car was quite limited, we were able to get a feel for its performance during our testing and photography days. We quickly learned how unique the driving experience can be in a high-powered roadster. Boost response is among the best we've experienced, thanks to the long-runner, equal length NuFormz manifold and the 1ZZ-FE's relatively high 10:1 compression ratio. Not to mention the car's stock ECU is controlling its ignition map and using the same advance curve it did without a turbo. Nail the throttle in any gear at almost any engine speed and the Spyder will mash you into its driver's seat with serious authority.
It's also quite competent in the turns, although a little more ride height might be nice. Even so, Chen knows the difference between looking cool and going fast and emphasized that difference during our time with the car. For our photo shoot, he used Axis NE-O 17x7-inch wheels and Yokohama Parada 205/40-17 tires. But during testing, he swapped to much lighter Axis 15x6.5-inch VPD wheels and sticky 205/50-15 Yokohama AO32R rubber. It was a good move, as the MR2 bested our previous slalom record by more than one mile per hour and recorded the best 0-to-30 and 0-to-60 times we've seen from any two-wheel-drive car. The MR2's 1.8-second time to 30 mph lands it squarely in Lancer and Skyline territory in off-the-line acceleration. Keep banging gears and you'll be at 60 in 4.9 seconds-still on pace with all of Japan's best supercars and certainly not the performance we're accustomed to seeing from a cute little roadster.
By Josh Jacquot
Enjoyed this Post? Subscribe to our RSS Feed, or use your favorite social media to recommend us to friends and colleagues!