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MISSION MIATA WORD AND PHOTOS BY ERIC EIKENBERRY Jeff Abbott is the number-one underdog of American pro drifting, but his turbo Mazda holds its own! 86 > www.fastfours.com.au www.fastfours.com.au > 87 W hen it comes to the sport of drifting, the old AE86 Toyota Corolla has earned legendary status by carrying with its 1.6-litre engine a short wheelbase chassis and minimal weight. Drivers rave about its neutrally-balanced handling and chuck-able nature. Interestingly, these same virtues are possessed by an often overlooked front-engined, rear-wheel drive vehicle; one which was made in numbers so great that it became synonymous with the name “roadster”. We’re talking about the Mazda MX-5, or Miata as it is known in the United States. Even though the Miata has won (and is still winning) countless autocross championships and races around the world during the twenty-two years it’s been in constant production, it hasn’t been adopted by the drift clans the way the Toyota Corolla and the Nissan S-chassis models have been. All of that may change if up-and-coming Formula Drift driver Jeff Abbott has his way. He’s owned this NB MX-5 since his college days and it is the veritable epitome of “run what you brung”. In his case, he’s bringing boost! Let’s work from the outside in, shall we? This won’t take long as there’s not enough room in a Miata for more than the basics. His wheels are both large, at 17in in diameter, and wide, a hefty 9in at the rear. Around these they’ve stretched 215/40 Falken tires. To give as much steering angle as possible, he’s using 7in wide front wheels with a -5mm offset and Level 7 Tune Super Angle front knuckles. Sounds to us like the guys at Level 7 believe in the Miata’s drifting potential. Buried under the chassis are the Flyin’ Miata anti-roll bars and Energy Suspension polyurethane 88 > www.fastfours.com.au bushings. “I just put those in at the beginning of the 2010 season. That was one of the biggest changes I noticed. I don’t notice change much, I just drive! But I did have to get used to the car after the bushings. It was a great addition.” There are braided stainless steel lines hooked to OEM brakes wearing Axxis pads. “They’ve been on there for five years. I don’t even notice them. I guess I need a real front brake setup someday.” Greg Landes at Millennium Motorsports designed a stand-alone handbrake package around a Wilwood master cylinder by the driver’s seat and two small two-piston Wilwood calipers in the back. A monster piece of machined metal serves as Jeff’s armrest and e-brake handle. Custom front control arms were modified to increase tyre clearance. Rounding out the chassis is the coil-over system from STANCE and trick TC Sportline adjustable upper and lower rear control arms. Another bit of trick engineering is Jeff’s rear differential, which is built with an ATS Deftforce two-way clutch-type limited slip centre and an overdriven ring and pinion set. He’s gone the opposite way of most of his small-displacement contemporaries, jumping to a taller 3.636:1 gear set found in the 2001 and up Australian 6-speed Miatas and older 626 sedans. More rear wheel speed equals more smoke, if you’ve got the power to spin the tyres that hard. Judging from the Advanced Clutch Technologies ProLite flywheel, six-puck sprung hub clutch disc, and Extreme pressure plate, he thinks he’s got the ponies. He’s also got the close-ratio ‘99 and up gearing in the transmission so his selection of a tall final drive means fewer shifts and drifting the banking at the Irwindale Speedway in 4th gear. www.fastfours.com.au > 89 So what’s the hot setup for a turbo Miata? Well, Landes at Millennium started with Mazda’s 1.8 litre BP block and added lower compression 9:1 JE forged pistons, Eagle rods, and a V-cut crank for longevity under boost. The precision cuts, more like the shape of a wood-splitting wedge, took seven pounds of rotating mass off compared to a stock crank. They took the head out for a mild port and polish, took the valves up 1mm oversize and reused the stock cams with some taller and stronger Volvo valve springs. They’ve also set up a pair of Fidanza adjustable cam gears to reduce the overlap, which packs those four cylinders full of boost charge from the Garrett GT2871R turbocharger. There’s 27 pounds of pressure being zapped by the AEM engine management system. That’s good for 390 horsepower and 350lb.ft of torque! A set of billet oil pump gears and Torco SR5 20w50 race oil helps fight friction. The intake manifold has been ported, and wears four individual coil packs to deliver a better spark under load. The front-mounted intercooler and piping all come from Bell Engineering Group, Inc. with a 44mm wastegate from TiAL Sport dumping excess exhaust overboard. An AEM boost controller and trunk-mounted water/methanol injection system work hand-in-hand to prevent the motor from grenading during hard runs. The interior remains as basic as the exterior. AEM gauges for revs, boost and AFR are mounted in a sheet of carbon fibre in place of the OEM speedometer cluster. Another expanse of CF, holding important electrical switches, fills the hole left by the jettisoned radio and air conditioning controls. Two Sparco Sprint V seats, G-Force five-point harnesses, and a Personal steering wheel fill the space inside the surprisingly non-claustrophobic roll cage. Having side impact bars which extend out into the gutted doors makes quite a difference to driver comfort; Jeff’s a big dude and we’re sure he appreciates the elbow room. Aside from some dash stickers and a bolted-down 90 > www.fastfours.com.au Jeff’s MX-5 is the veritable epitome of “run what you brung”. In his case, he’s bringing boost! www.fastfours.com.au > 91 hard top, there’s little else he needs. We do have to point out the very cool electric power steering pump though, which Greg had just finished installing minutes before our photo shoot. The OEM pump was causing trouble, spitting its belt at inopportune moments during competition so it got replaced. Jeff’s first comments were “Wonderful!” We’re sure his competition weren’t as pleased as he carved up beautiful lines through turns nine, ten, and eleven of the Long Beach Grand Prix course. Two years ago, this guy Jeff was still learning the ropes in the Formula Drift Pro-AM series. In 2010 he stepped up to the big leagues, competing but running a limited schedule. For 2011, little has changed; there’s no budget available to go nationwide. The “big guy in the little green car” is doing it on his own dime, and if we might say, doing it very well indeed. We love to root for the underdog, and you can’t go around underdogging any harder than running a 1.8 litre turbo four against V8 swapped monsters. There’s a sexy thrill in being there trackside when this charmed ride goes screaming by with its rear tyres tearing at the pavement. Just in time for the first round, Jeff went and installed a giant baller rear wing with his name cut into the aluminium uprights and “Jeff Abbott Racing” splashed across the doors. His battered body kit pieces, which have seen better days, are zip-tied firmly into place, pending the next unforeseen collision with an apex cone. He has no umbrella girls. No air-conditioned trailer in which he can rest. This is as raw as it gets professionally; the ragged edge of the big show. So why does he do it? Simply because he loves to drift. Don’t call this Miata a “girl’s car”. With the smallest engine and shortest wheelbase in the series, you need balls the size of Godzilla to pilot this baby around a concrete-lined circuit. Keep an eye on this one, ladies and gentlemen. He’s a genuine threat to take down the big boys later this season in Las Vegas. Anyone want to take that bet? 1999 MAZDA MIATA MX-5 ENGINE HARDWARE Built by Millennium Motorsports, Greg Landes, JE 9:1 Forged Pistons, Eagle rods, V-cut crank, 1mm oversized valves, mild head work, stock cams, Volvo valve springs, Fidanza adjustable cam gears, billet oil pump gears, modified intake manifold, Torco SR5 20w50 race oil, K&N oil filter, Garrett GT2871R turbo, Millennium Motorsports 3-inch down pipe, Millennium Motorsports custom intake, AEM filter, BEGI Intercooler, BEGI piping, Tial Sport 44mm waste gate to atmosphere, AEM boost controller, AEM EMS V2, AEM Water/Meth injection, Tuned by, Road Race Engineering. Santa Fe Spring, CA DRIVELINE Mazda Miata 6-speed, Advanced Clutch Technology ProLite flywheel, ACT sprung-hub 6-puck clutch disc, ACT Extreme pressure plate, Torco RGO 85w140 gear oil, 3.636:1 ring and pinion, ATS Deftforce 2-way differential, Torco RGO 85w90 gear oil, Torco Type F limited slip additive BRAKES Stock calipers, Axxis brake pads, braided stainless steel lines, Millennium Motorsports stand-alone E-Brake, Wilwood 92 > www.fastfours.com.au 2-piston calipers, Wilwood master cylinder, customized Wilwood brake lever SUSPENSION STANCE coil-over system, Energy Suspension control arm bushings, Flyin Miata sway bars, custom front control arms, TC Sportline rear upper adjustable control arms, LEVEL 7 Tune Super Angle front knuckles WHEELS & TYRES Front: 17x7 spaced to -5 offset Rear: 17x9 spaced to 0 offset, Falken Azenis 615K 215/40/17 BODYWORK By PAC body works, Long Beach CA, all custom colours made by Ozzie Pina, off-brand fibreglass body kit in need of replacement; sponsors welcome! INTERIOR AEM Serial gauge, AEM wideband O2 sensor display, Sparco Sprint seats, G-Force 5 point harnesses, Personal 330mm wheel, Miatacage.com roll cage PERFORMANCE 390whp, 27psi