Fuji Speedway Drift Event: Part 4

Fuji Speedway Drift : Winding Down

As the day winded down crews began swapping tires, relaxing, and preparing to leave as the sun started to set over one of the best days I’ve had. The Fuji Speedway Drift event was coming to a close. I had wished that the sun remain where it was forever and that this day wouldn’t end. This wasn’t just a golden hour of the day for photos, it was one of the golden moments of my life.

Fuji Speedway Drift Event: Part 3

Seeing The Serious

Drivers make laps around the track was mesmerizing. With their driving ability, stickers, and chassis adorned with aggressive upgrades you could see the hours poured in. The jealousy bug bit me hard because I knew there were people who made a living from driving cars, meanwhile I couldn’t make money off of anything I tried. I imagined myself in the driver’s seat of one of the cars as it made its way around the small track.

Fuji Speedway Drift Event: Part 2

Arriving at the Drift Event Late

I had missed the rain and arrived to the pleasing sound of engines roaring, tires squealing, and turbos hissing. In the parking area were people relaxing, chatting, and cooling down their cars after their time on the track. The atmosphere calmed me despite the loud noises of all the cars. I’m glad Japanese Drift Events are Chill.

Fuji Speedway Drift Event

I just returned from

Tokyo Auto Salon so I was a reluctant to want to go to the drift event the following day. Money is getting to be a little tight. Low pay and my growing list of expenses made me hesitate to say yes. The continual debt that I owe my parents hung over me like a shadow as I put gas in my car. Stress stopped me dead in my tracks when I had to pay a tolls. Hungry I was hesitant to feed myself after watching the bills from my pocket drain.

I’ll be more stressed about money moving through the rest of the month. Feeling truly happy was worth it. At the same time it was also emotionally painful to be so close to a dream and constrained to the sidelines. In that way one of the most pleasurable moments in my life cut deep with a poisoned blade.

Pictures!!

Tokyo Auto Salon Part 3 And Thoughts

Wrapping Up

Some of the “highlights” of Tokyo Auto Salon, were things that didn’t excite me at all. I was immune from the hype surrounding newer modeled cars, exotic cars, and even the new Toyota Supra, but there were some things I was really happy to see. I’d never thought I’d say this in my life, but. . .

I was happy to see a Toyota Yaris

My dad actually owned a Yaris Sedan in 2008 and although it was a cute car, it’s one purpose was fuel efficiency and economy. Even with the SE trim, which came packed with a spoiler, fog lights, and 4-wheel disc brakes, there was no getting around the safe design that Toyota went with. The one exciting thing about it was that its 1.5 liter engine used the same VVT-i technology that the 20v 4AGE, although it’s numbers were well below that of the legendary 4a Engine.

When I saw that Toyota not only had gotten back into rallying(please come back subaru), but won the manufacturers’ championship I was really surprised. I was actually happy to see a Yaris in person, and it gives me hope that Toyota will go back to the ways of making cars for car people as well as continuing to sell cars that the general public can enjoy. My hope is that they will roll out a tamed down version of their rally car, as well as put an inline four cylinder in their 86.

Japan wants the WRC

To those of you who don’t know the WRC is the World Rally Championship, and they used to hold events in Japan. I was happy to see that I wasn’t the only one who wanted to go to an event(although I want to go as a driver even if I’m at the bottom of the standings tee hee). Japanese roads are perfect for rally stages, the touge is where many driving legends are born. One legend that even laymen might know is Colin McRae.

When I saw Colin McRae’s subaru and Tommi Mäkinen’s Lancer, the boy racer buried inside me had been resuscitated. I was reminded of one of the reasons I fell in love with cars when I was young. It wasn’t just because the WRX was one of the main cars in the Colin McRae rally and dirt series. It was because of what Tommi and Colin stood for as drivers as well. In the same vein as Ayrton Senna, to them it was never about driving just for points.

When in doubt flat out

Colin McRae

They drove the fastest they could all the time, because they loved cars and driving. It was weird to be standing next to the cars which were painstakingly realistically modeled in numerous games, and that I had spent countless virtual hours in the cockpit driving, crashing, and racing on roads. I wasn’t sure if life had turned into an game, or games were just getting realistic, because for me it shattered reality a slight bit.

The Last Thing That I Enjoyed

Was seeing the D1 drivers talking on stage with their cars proudly displayed in the same room. Another codemasters game, in GRID I had gotten pretty good at drifting the C-West Silvia virtually, but what these guys were here doing it in real life. I resisted the urge to want to ask them how to be a driver in my bad Japanese, not like I understood much anyway, but what I did understand was the massive ability they wielded. I was a little jealous that they had gotten to live a life that people like me can only dream about as I studied their cars, which resembled fighter jets with all the switches inside of them.

The weird thing is I don’t even really like competition drifting, but the fact you can make a living from drifting makes me a little less cynical about life.

As always Much Love <3 LaidbackMarco

Tokyo Auto Salon 2019: Part 2

Here’s The Second Round Of Photos at Tokyo Auto Salon!

Now that you’ve seen the shots, here are the mistakes I make.

The First Giant Mistake I Made

Shooting In JPEG vs RAW

The dynamic lighting indoors with the various lighting conditions really lends itself to the uncompressed data in the darks and lights that the RAW image format captures. When making adjustments in Lightroom adjusting the sliders too far on JPEG images leads to some artifacting where the loss information occured.

I thought that I would be using the burst function more than I actually did, so I ended up shooting compressed shots for the faster in camera processing, but that ended up being a really bad mistake!.

The Second Mistake

Was not having a wide angle lens, which made it very difficult to get the kind of shots I wanted with the limited space. Being broke, it’s not like I could afford a wide angle lens, but I really hope to be able to bring one in the future.

The Last Mistake

was bringing my tripod! The camera, extra lens, and my backpack were already a burden in itself. I thought that I might be able to take some cool shots with the combination of the phone app, tripod, and camera. The wireless connection doesn’t work nearly as smoothly as it should so I was left feeling a little encumbered. Especially when I had to do things like pay for my ticket, recieve a map, or the free goodies handed out.

Stumbling On A Drift Shop

When My Dad Came To Town

We explored town far more than I usually do on my own. As typical I take pictures of all the cool cars I see as we made our way around town. We even visited the famous UP Garage in Matsumoto where I spotted a clean Z32 Fairlady Z, which it looked like it had been a one owner car.

Azumino

is a small city located just fifteen minutes north of my house. Having never been there, it was fun to have a shared experience of exploring with my old man. On our way to the Thrift Shop(Cue Macklemore Song), we made our way by a Go Kart track where there were more sweet whips to add to the collection. This particular track also had Drift Karts outfitted with pvc on the rear wheels allowing for oversteer. I wanted to try it out, but the Drift Karts are a member only activity!

Down The Road A Little Further

Was a small drift shop which made me pull a U-Turn and park. There was a small group of people sitting on plastic chairs and chatting as they saw us pull up. After introducing both my father and myself as Americans. In broken Japanese I told them the story of how Japanese cars were one of the reasons I was currently in Japan. 

I thought of my cousin and some of my friends back home who had introduced me to car tuning, drifting, and Japanese cars and it was hard for me to hold back my excitement as I oogled at all the unique cars in front of me. The strange thing was I couldn’t find the shop on the internet and it was only twenty minutes from my house.  I was really glad to meet some car people and it seems that they had welcomed me with open arms.


“We’ll teach you how to drift when you get a car” they said laughing.

Getting UP

One of the mechanics started to point out the different cars. He smiled as he opened up hoods, proclaimed mods and paint jobs, and told the stories of different cars. One car in particular made me feel like a sixteen year old kid again. 

The Yellow Toyota Chaser

Not only was a cool car that was unavailable in America, but also belonged to a sponsored Professional Sponsored D1GP driver. The 530 HP beast reminded me of the days when my friend Nick and I would sit and watch D1GP or best motoring videos for hours in his “Virgin Den”. I daydreamed about being able to be a professional driver for a small second, I often imagine driving a car as I’m walking around, heel toe downshifting and skidding a car as I turn. A fun thing you can do in a supermarket with carts is pickup the rear and give angle to the turns. 

After having exhausted my Japanese skills I said thank you bowed and parted ways with the small shop owners. The opportunist inside of me wanted to offer my services to build a website for their shop, but not being able to get traffic to my own site, I didn’t feel confident in providing any value for them. Wanting to start my own car importation business and learn to work on cars myself I thought of maybe offering to wrench on cars for free perhaps shooting videos so I could learn about cars and help them out.

I’m hoping that I’ll be able to keep hanging out with them in the future, but we will see!.

Until next time <3 LaidbackMarco