Trek 2 Texas 2
Presented By Mazda
The Ultimate Road Trip
Rockin' The Road With SP Engineering's Supra 7
Text by E. K. Cozzene
Photos by Henry De Kuyper
The Trek 2 Texas has become an annual pilgrimage to Houston
for the World Import Challenge drag race. In the first
go-around, the caravan consisted of editorial staff from Turbo
and Sport Compact Car as well as advertising hounds from all
of Primedia's International Group. The Trek is a five-day
automotive adventure that covers about 2,000 miles in five
days; the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is a hotly
contested drag race.
The inaugural Trek was a blast, but the payoff was ruined
by hurricane Allison, an oddity of nature that drenched
Houston, floated out to sea, picked up steam and looped around
to hit Houston again. It was a disaster.
To add insult to injury, Allison moved up the East Coast
and rained out an event in the New York/New Jersey area two
weeks later.
Last year's Trek had nine cars in it; Turbo was represented
by our Lexus IS300, a car in which I pulled a Joey Chitwood
and became airborne in while in the Ft. Worth area.
This year I asked Alex Shen of SP Engineering to join the
Trek--and bring our December 2001 cover car, SP's Supra 7,
along for the odyssey. This year's adventure would include six
magazines and 11 cars.
A lot of wicked stuff can happen in 2,000 miles of open
road. Turbo, Import Tuner, SCC, Honda Tuning, Car Audio and
Auto Sound & Security made up the mags and Team Bergenholtz
tagged along too. Ron Bergenholtz joined us with the Team
Bergenholtz CRX and the A'PEXi EK Civic in his hauler. Jensen
Oda from A'PEXi also made the Trek. Falken Tires tagged along
as well with its truck and trailer combo. We had quite an
impressive fleet.
Day 1
Fleetwood RV Route
Monday, March 4
I met the crew at
SP Engineering at 7 a.m. Shen, Jason Reinholdt and Rex Kieu
were ready. (The tuning sessions conducted on the Supra 7
before and after the Trek will be chronicled in a "Dyno Cell"
article next month). The Supra 7 fires to life and the SP
dually, which is serving as a support vehicle for shakedown
passes the car will make in Houston, is primed to chase it
across the Southwest.
The 7 has a wicked grumble at idle and a mean growl as it
pulls away from a stoplight. We hit traffic en route to Irvine
Mazda and since parking is at a premium, we wait for the Trek
posse at a nearby Park and Ride lot.
Reinholdt is driving the 7 and I'm riding shotgun. Thank
goodness the stock seats were installed. Lunch is scheduled
for Blythe, Calif., right on the border. We arrive at Steaks &
Cakes right on schedule. Many noted the meals got better with
each day of the Trek. I'll say this: We started from as low as
you can go.
The Supra 7 is beastly loud, even at cruise. Part of "The
Experiment" is the 7's use of a Supra engine and tranny with a
Mazda RX-7 rear end. Problem: The Supra runs a 3.23 final
drive, while the RX-7 sports a 4.11. Result: Sixth gear, 75
mph equals 4,200 rpm.
That meant little rest for the engine and a mean drone for
the eardrums. The car has no air conditioning, no fan and no
radio. Outside, it wasn't too hot, but I found cool air vents
in through the door handle area, cooling me off nicely. I
enjoyed my discovery all the way to Phoenix.
We gathered for our first PR stop, Earnhardt Mazda in
Chandler, Ariz., and entered in formation. Two hours later, we
hit the road again to our evening layover in Flagstaff, Ariz.
As we climbed to 7,000 feet, I cursed the door handle area for
letting in frosty late night air. I lost the feeling in my
upper legs and my right leg was numb to the ankle.
The engine loved every minute--staying cool as the Supra 7
scales each peak like a champ. Arriving in Flagstaff, I
hurriedly checked in and once in my room, I stuffed the hair
dryer down my pants. My ears ring for two hours before I
finally fall asleep.
Day 2
Direct Hits Route
Tuesday, March 5
Target--Gallup, N.M. for lunch. We arrived at the Cracker
Barrel restaurant for lunch and the Supra 7, though covered
with bugs and road grime, was running like a top. After the
meal, we hung out in the parking lot with four or five locals
who have gathered around the 7.
Amazingly, they knew the car as the Supra 7--in Gallup!
After signing T-shirts and Turbo calendars, we're off to
Albuquerque.
We stopped at the Hinkle Family Fun Center where Direct
Hits reserved the go-kart track for us. After a quick detail
of the cars and an impromptu car show with some of the local
imports, it's off to the races. It becomes readily apparent
the number 17 cart has a big power advantage and the number 10
is the runt of the litter. Alex dominates in his heat taking a
first place. I get the 10 kart. 'Nuff said.
Day 3
Wednesday, March 6
Destination--Amarillo, Texas. The Supra 7, fitted with a
silencer in the exhaust system, was as quiet as a normal
862-hp Supra. I took the controls of the Supra 7 and got the
triple-disc clutch to engage properly on the fourth try. About
15 minutes later, the car's lack of front or rear anti-roll
bars and its tendency to wander got the better of me and I
handed the wheel to Jason--after a righteous full throttle
(straight-line) blast, of course. The GT3037S turbos sounded
like a squadron of jet fighters during a full afterburner
takeoff. Absolutely surreal.
On this leg of the Trek, we got to stop at the famed
Cadillac Ranch where a bunch of classic Cadillacs have been
buried in the ground with their fins sticking in the air. This
place is a slice of automotive Americana. They stand in all
their glory about an eighth mile from the frontage road in
plain sight of the highway. Our timing was ideal; the sun was
setting and the light was great.
Dinner was cool too. Ever hear of the 72-ounce steak you
can have for free if you can eat it in an hour? There are
signs from Arizona to Alabama touting the place--The Big Texan
in Amarillo. That's where we dined Wednesday evening. You have
to eat the entire meal, not just the 4.5 lbs of beef. Talk
about artery cloggers. It is an intimidating place to eat; the
dining room walls are decorated withhides and stuffed animal
heads. Made me feel guilty. A 30-ounce boot o' beer helped
calm the nerves. For kicks, we watched a rattlesnake eat a
mouse in the gift shop.
Day 4
Nitrous Express Route
Thursday, March 7
This was a busy day with stops at Nitrous Express in
Wichita Falls and a Mazda dealership in Irving. Like a
well-oiled machine, the Trek caravan pulled into Nitrous
Express in unison--and on time. The Texas barbeque Nitrous
Express put on was awesome and we had some good-looking cars
lined up outside for dessert. We made good time to the
dealership--lucky for us because the SP truck and the Supra 7
had the wrong maps and we pulled up to a dealership in Ft.
Worth.
We arrived at Freeman Mazda at the right time but with 90
additional miles on the clock. At a gas stop, we took off the
silencer to make a proper entrance. Again, the 7 drew a crowd
big time. This was by far the best dealership stop; the place
was jumping. There was a cool Protege 5 that had been
turbocharged by Rotary Performance. We gave away a bunch of
prizes and got some righteous radio coverage.
Day 5
Audiovox Route
Friday, March 8
My anxiety level concerning the Supra 7 had been elevated
since Monday. The car had no plate. It was properly registered
and insured, but Alex had not driven the Mazda in eight years,
so when he got the proper stickers he couldn't find the plate
to put them on. We had run the gauntlet successfully so far
and we only had one leg left. I got a big scare when a state
trooper passed by the convoy. I was flush in the face.
Luckily, he exited and drove off into the wilderness; perhaps
there was a Krispy Kreme in the sticks.
One problem. Our map directions were for Baytown, the city,
not the track. When all else fails, ask the locals. A guy
named Henry got us there in 10 minutes. As we approached the
Houston Raceway Park gates, a tremendous weight lifted from my
shoulders. The 862-hp Supra 7 proved once and for all that
stratospheric power and 2,100-mile reliability can go
hand-in-hand. Major props to SP Engineering for proving it in
front of the editors of three of the four major import titles.
We parked the car and trailer and I cracked what had to be
the best beer of the Trek. Alex, Jason and Rex planned to play
with the car, making some half-track passes on Saturday and
while that scared me, I knew my Trek story was complete.
The Holy Grail of our Trek was getting a cowboy hat for
Rex. Once situated in our hotel we moseyed down to nearby
Cavender's Boot City. The results of that fateful odyssey can
be gleaned from the photos on page 52. There was a late night
party at Club Hyperia in downtown Houston. It was wild, but
unfortunately no cameras were present when our fearless
leader, Larry Saavedra, busted some moves on the bar with the
go-go dancers. Oh, the extortion money we lost that night.
Day 6
Saturday, March 9
The Supra 7 was tech'd for 12.00 seconds and I borrowed a
driving suit from the guys at HP Racing. Thanks guys. The suit
even matched the car. Team Bergenholtz supplied the air for
the slicks and I scared up a container for the oil we changed
in the 7. I was scavenging so much I felt like a hyena. But
would I be able to laugh at the end of the day? The car's
first half-track run ended with a big tail wiggle and I hoped
the driving suit was not "soiled."
The second pass was an improvement but the wind and the car's
pre-existing instability brought the show to a halt. I thought
it was really cool the Supra 7 did more than commute to
Houston, which is a feat in itself. It also took part in the
action at the strip. SP Engineering learned a lot in the two
runs, especially in the context of launching a triple-plate
clutch. The team plans to add some anti-roll bars to the car,
finish the tuning and apply these lessons at a Southern
California. We will be there every step of the way.
Text and photos courtesy of Turbo
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