Gazoo Racing Twin Charges the Toyota FT-86

Gazoo Racing is Toyota’s factory backed tuning company. Some of their previous projects include a supercharged 6-speed iQ and a hybrid sports MR-S. They’ve just released news of a twin charged GT-86 / Scion FR-S / Subaru BRZ. Twin charged means that the engine has both a supercharger and a turbocharger. The supercharger boosts the engine while it’s still at low rpm’s and then the turbocharger takes over once it’s spooled up at high rpm. Generally speaking, this allows the use of a larger turbocharger since you don’t have to worry about turbo lag. The Toyota engineers went with the boxer engine layout for this car because it was the only way to get the sporty look of a low hood line, but it eliminated the possibility of AWD (no room for a front diff under the engine) for Subaru and didn’t leave space for a large air to air intercooler in front of the radiator. That’s why news of this twin charged car comes as a bit of a surprise. I think there was enough complaints about low power from the media reviews of the car to warrant them breaking a few traditions to make this happen. A closer look at the engine bay reveals a few interesting things.

  1. The air enters the system through the intake box where there’s a stock style panel filter. The air moves through the black plastic pipe to the supercharger behind the engine.
  2. This looks to be a roots type supercharger that is driven by a shaft that runs across the top of the engine to the belt system at the front. The cylindrical cover directly under the number 2 hides the shaft. It looks like the pulley that drives the supercharger is peeking out from behind the blue coupling on the air box. The red pipe above the number 2 is the output of the supercharger where the air leaves after it’s been compressed.
  3. If you follow the red pipe out of the supercharger, it drops down into the corner of the engine bay where the turbocharger is hiding. The turbocharger isn’t visible, but if you look carefully you can see another red pipe behind the one that connects the supercharger and turbocharger. This is where the air leaves the turbocharger after it’s been compressed.
  4. The large aluminum box against the firewall is the air to water intercooler that cools the compressed intake air. The coolant used is piped to a radiator in the front of the car. The radiator for the air to water intercooler is smaller than an equivalent air to air intercooler making it easier to package in the front end.
  5. This is where the air enters the intake manifold for the engine. The stock intake manifold would normally go where the shaft for the supercharger is. They must have designed a new one for this application.

The press release says the car develops 320 horsepower as well as having an aero kit, staggered 18″ wheels and a rollbar. The fact that it was prototyped by Gazoo means that there may be a possibility or seeing a production version of this car. At the very least Toyota felt there was enough of a demand for a higher power version of the FT-86 to build this car and gauge the demand for it. Head over to the FT-86 Club to look at a lot more high resolution pictures, specs and the full press release.

Source: FT-86 Club

Drag Racing with the Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport: Motor Trend Head 2 Head

The folks over at Motor Trend / Automobile magazine really love to do some gratuitous drag racing. Don’t believe me? They put together this 11 car showdown with all of their “Best Driver’s Car” contenders last year. It was 1.5 million dollars worth of cars all running down an abandoned runway at one time:


They’re back at it this week in their latest YouTube Head 2 Head segment. This time they’ve collected just 4 cars that are worth 1 million dollars. The contenders are the McLaren MP4-12C, the Lexus LFA, the Lamborghini Aventador and the Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport. They’re trying to see if anybody can challenge Bugatti’s hold as the drag racing king. Check out the video for all the details and the results.


Source: Motor Trend on YouTube

Motor Trend Epic Drives: Corvette ZR-1

Motor Trend’s editor in chief, Angus Mackenzie, takes professional race driver Justin Bell on a road trip through Europe in the Corvette ZR-1. They of course hit the Autobahn and the Stelvio Pass to see what it can do. As an added bonus, Mackenzie and Bell pick up a Ferrari 458 Italia from the Ferrari factory in Maranello to do some follow the leader. It’s a nice video for showing what the essence of the cars are like beyond the dry performance stats.


Source: Motor Trend on YouTube

Porsche 551 “Baby Boxster” Project Lives

Automobile Magazine's Porsche 551 Speculative Rendering

Automobile Magazine just released this story saying that the project to make a 2 seat entry level sports car was still alive at Porsche. We first heard about this project a few years ago when Volkswagen had announced the Bluesport roadster concept. The idea was that the car would be co-developed by VW and Porsche to save on development costs while still providing each brand with their own model. The economic collapse then effectively killed everybody’s niche market sports car ideas. The word is that the project is now back on for after Porsche has finished development on all new 991 model 911 variants, the 918 Spyder and their new 960 Ferrari fighter and several other projects. Head over to Automobile Magazine to read all the specific details.

2013 Nissan GT-R vs. 2012 Porsche 911 Turbo S: Motor Trend Head 2 Head

Motor Trend pits their new 2013 Nissan GT-R Black Edition long term test car up against the 2012 Porsche 911 Turbo S. This may not seem like a natural comparison, but both of these cars have twin turbocharged 3.8 liter V6’s powering all wheel drive systems. Nissan has been incrementally upgrading the GT-R every year since its release. Starting in 2012, they really killed the car’s natural tendency to understeer and a lot of people declared that they had given the car a soul. The 911 Turbo S costs $71,000 more than the GT-R. Even though the naturally aspirated 911 moved to the new 991 chassis this year, the turbo is still on last year’s 997 chassis. Johnny Lieberman flogs both cars on Mulholland drive, then drag races them and hits the standard performance tests.


Source: Motor Trend on YouTube