Street Machine

I DIDN’T WANT IT TO LOOK AUTO SALON. I WANTED TO CHANGE PEOPLE’S PERCEPTION­S OF WHAT A ROTOR SHOULD LOOK LIKE

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This level of planning has a lot to do with why FATRX3 has such good road manners.

Another factor is the 13B Cosmo under the bonnet (which incidental­ly now opens in the opposite direction to a factory RX-3 to better showcase the engine bay). Rather than go berserk and build a highstrung, squillion-horsepower banshee engine, John kept things sensible, as the Mazda was always going to be a driver – which John has proven on multiple occasions. During tuning at Pac Performanc­e, the insanely detailed 13B consistent­ly spun the needle past the 400rwhp mark – more than enough to make this pocket-rocket get up and boogie. Hauling it back to a standstill are colossal 16-inch Wilwood rotors on each corner, clamped by smoothed and polished six-piston calipers.

The engine, along with the Al’s Race Glides Ford C4 auto, have pushed attention to detail to extremes. The engine was completely assembled and bolted to the C4 and the whole package was then sculpted, smoothed and polished as one unit. This way, each piece transition­s smoothly into the next. And if that’s not enough, after final engine assembly, the edges of all the perfectly fitting gaskets were brush-touched silver, so that your eye is not drawn to them.

The lack of wiring in the engine bay is another highlight. Mark from Ontrak Auto Electrical has done such a neat wiring job, cleverly hiding much of it in billet tubing.

The cabin is yet another remarkable showcase of Chris’s metal-shaping skills. The all-metal dash, console, tunnel, intricate tub-work, rear tray, door panels and bonnet panels are all by him. Heck, he even made the custom shifter and fully fabricated seats!

There’s not a single stock panel on the car; each has been significan­tly finessed, plus most of the original panel bolts are now hidden from view. Many factory moulds were removed and smoothed over and every square edge radiused. Both front and rear bars were sucked into the body and the radiator support panel moulded in and around the Plazmaman radiator and intercoole­r. Despite all this, John was careful to ensure FATRX3 never lost its classic Mazda look.

With fabricatio­n finalised, the next stop was Custom Bodyworks, where Claude spent countless hours perfecting the gaps and panel fitment, before spending even more hours finessing all the bodywork into show-winning form. Claude reckons he spent so much time rubbing back the engine bay, undercarri­age, chassis, tubs, door jambs, dash and hundreds of other impossible-to-get-at areas, he’s got no fingerprin­ts left!

Once Claude was happy, it was time for Custom Bodyworks’ Danny to suit up and lay on the sumptuous two-tone HOK Galaxy Grey – which he and Owen Webb tweaked with extra black.

“I try to do better on every job I do,” Danny says, “but this car was next-level. It had such a high degree of difficulty, given the attention to detail

[required] and getting a very consistent finish on every surface. Also working side-by-side with Joe Webb to get the graphics to flow smoothly into the door jambs and back out onto the panels. Along with all the bodywork, painting and buffing, we’ve put thousands of hours into it.”

Mick from Sewtime Interiors is responsibl­e for adding the six-odd hides of baseball mitt-coloured Italian Nappa leather. “Everything in there’s made, nothing’s bought,” Mick says. “It was obvious the car was something special, so I went out of my way to incorporat­e a lot of innovative things that I’d never done before.”

He also admits that while the job was immensely challengin­g, the quality of the panelwork supplied by CS definitely made the job a lot easier. “It all went together like a precision-made jigsaw,” he says.

Trimming the seats called for radical, out-of-thebox thinking. The hand-formed seat bolsters were tailor-made to suit John. After shaping the highdensit­y foam, John was brought in for a ‘fitting’, trialling their shape, comfort and functional­ity before scissors went anywhere near leather.

“I had to devise a completely new way of fixing the inserts into the metal shells,” Mick says. “Other trimmers have asked how I did it. All I’ll say is they’re not glued in; the rest is a trade secret.”

“As much as I want to win, when I go to shows, I go to have fun,” John says. “Like when the alternator failed when going for Grand Champion the first year

[at Summernats 28] – sure I was disappoint­ed, but hey, I just won Top Judged; that was satisfying enough!”

It’s a given he was even more satisfied the following year at Summernats 29, when he added the much-sought-after Grand Champion sword to his bulging trophy cabinet.

John emphatical­ly credits the quality of the car to all the good people involved in the build. “If they didn’t look after me so well and didn’t put in all the extra time and effort, I wouldn’t have been able to afford to get this car to the level it is. I cannot thank them enough.”

Casting your eye over FATRX3, it’s obvious it’s not your typical rotor. It’s loaded with mountains of high-end hot rodding and street machine influences. “I didn’t want it to look Auto Salon,” John says. “I wanted it to change people’s perception­s of what a rotor should look like.”

Mission accomplish­ed mate; FATRX3 is arguably the world’s best RX-3.

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 ??  ?? GRAND MAZDA FLASH CS Engineerin­g played a huge part in FATRX3, with around 2500 hours in engineerin­g and fabricatio­n, plus another 500 in final assembly.there’s virtually no part of the car that Chris hasn’t massaged into showwinnin­g perfection
GRAND MAZDA FLASH CS Engineerin­g played a huge part in FATRX3, with around 2500 hours in engineerin­g and fabricatio­n, plus another 500 in final assembly.there’s virtually no part of the car that Chris hasn’t massaged into showwinnin­g perfection
 ??  ?? Unlike many superelite machines, FATRX3 is genuinely street-driven. “Driving it home after winning Motorex was very satisfying,” John says. “I don’t think that’s ever been seen before, and I don’t think you’ll see it again”
Unlike many superelite machines, FATRX3 is genuinely street-driven. “Driving it home after winning Motorex was very satisfying,” John says. “I don’t think that’s ever been seen before, and I don’t think you’ll see it again”
 ??  ??

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