Scion Brings tC To Formula Drift

mikeyb

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From deadly boring to Amazingly Extrem, here you are the RWD D1 ready Scion tC for the US Grand prix!
The Scion tC is one of these boring 2 door coup made for the US Market and powered by a 2.4l DOHC VVT-I engine with only 161hp, Yes pretty lame both in and out, this Scion tC somehow succeed to stun us this morning with its gorgeous looking Formula Drift version which is now receive over 400hp under the bonnet thanks to a BEAMS-built 3S-GE engine as well as using the chassis of another Toyota, the Avensis/Caldina.
Also as stated earlier, our car is now a fully D1 ready thanks to its rear wheel drive. Behind the steering wheel you find Ken Gushi, a young prodigy which will have now the perfect tool for this new D1 Season starting April 12 in the US, Good luck Ken !

April 8, 2008 - Torrance, CA - Scion today announced it will drift the RS*R Scion tC in Formula Drift events this year.

Scion's drift car is based on its most popular model, the tC sports coupe. The factory built front-wheel drive tC turned into a drifting contender through a rear-wheel drive conversion performed by acclaimed exhaust and suspension manufacturer, RS*R. The tC shares its platform with Toyota's Japanese market Avensis four-wheel drive and Caldina all-wheel drive, enabling it to undergo the conversion. RS*R used its extensive performance shop experience to change the tC's stock transverse engine configuration to a longitudinal setup in order to drive power, through the transmission and drive shaft, directly to the rear wheels.

"Scion has participated in motorsports for three years and the fan support has been incredible," said Jack Hollis, Scion vice president. "Drifting is an exciting, emerging motorsport with a dedicated and intense fan base. We're looking to engage drifting enthusiasts and Scion owners just like we do in drag racing. We think the fans will be just as excited as we are about our RS*R Scion tC as it demonstrates one of Scion's primary philosophies, customization. At this time we do not have confirmed plans to produce a tC rear wheel drive, but a lot of people will want to take one home."

The RS*R Scion tC features a 3SGE Beams motor, HKS GT3037 turbo and intercooler, Blitz Dual SBC boost controller, and AEM EMS engine management system that outputs more than 400 horsepower, compared to the stock 161 horsepower. A G-Force five-speed sequential transmission, Tilton triple carbon clutch, Project Mu brakes, RS-R coilovers, Sparco Corsa seats and a custom concept wide body kit also make this vehicle unique. This tC will gracefully maneuver the track with Enkei RPF1 wheels and Toyo Proxes R1R tires.

Ken Gushi will be at the wheel of the RS*R Scion tC. Gushi learned to drift at the age of 13 when his father took him to El Mirage Off-Highway Vehicle Area in California. Gushi started his drifting career at the age of 16 and was the youngest driver to compete in D1. Now 21 years old, Gushi has further developed his skills and placed in many drift events.

"We think our first season of drift will be a knock-out," said Hollis. "We've got the talented Ken Gushi behind the wheel of one of the hottest tCs out there."

The RS*R Scion tC, also sponsored by Toyo Tires and XM Satellite Radio, will make its first appearance at Formula Drift's Round 1, Streets of Long Beach in Calif. on April 12. The event will also be broadcast nationally on ESPN2.

Gushi and the RS*R tC will also compete in subsequent Formula Drift events including Road Atlanta in Braselton, Ga. on May 10, Wall Speedway in Wall, N.J. on June 14, Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, Nev. On July 12, Evergreen Speedway in Monroe, Wash. On Aug. 9, Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, Calif. on September 13 and Irwindale Speedway in Irwindale, Calif. on Oct. 11.
 
and it begs the question: why the hell didn't they do that from the start?
 
and it begs the question: why the hell didn't they do that from the start?

egg zack ree (scratch)


The only lightweight RWD car in the U.S. is the Miata right now. Not that it is a bad thing, I just think we should have more options.
 
and it begs the question: why the hell didn't they do that from the start?

X infinity

The fact that they would fabricate a one-off RWD tC to represent a consumer market completely absent of the like makes no sense whatsoever.

I suppose you could argue that 400 bhp is not representative of the tC consumer market either. But unlike an improvement of 240 bhp over stock, a RWD tC is no longer a scion tC.
 
With how much weight cars are gaining now I just do not see it happening. They'll create electronics to make the car "faster" but it just isn't the same.

A great example is the new GTR, or concept Sylvia. The Skyline is already a pig, and if Nissan builds the new Sylvia you can be sure it will b e full of heavier materials and luxuries that the old versions didn't have. And that was the appeal to those cars.

I have a AE86 and even though it's old, "ugly", and doesn't have any creature comforts I still love the damn thing! It's lightweight, agile (for what it is), out handles many newer cars that it shouldn't, has decent get-up (for 50rwhp!, on technical backroads it's all about momentum, no HP needed really) and has a "raw" feel to it. Car's are missing that "raw" feeling.

My MSP has it. That's why I still like my MSP over my new MS6.
 
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I'm curious what engine they're running, and how much modification to the firewall and floor pan it took to get that to work
 
ditto to all thats been said. tC should have been RWD and 220 or so HP from the get go. Toyotas entire line (except for the Tacoma X Runner (awesome handling truck) and V8 tundra (Ford F150 lightning fast) is soooo lame.
 
psh they should do it to the xB, then it will look somewhat like this:

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(yea i know its not an xB for all you out there just poising to bash lol)

Box drifting FTW!
 
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