So here goes... project number two. I'll be picking it up at the end of the month, and have expressed my confirmed intent to buy the car. It is a 1987 Suzuki Forsa Turbo, an exclusively Canadian marque that is all but identical to the Sprint Turbo and Firefly Turbo that you may have seen in the States despite its rarity. They come with a 1.0L all aluminum forged-internal SOHC turbocharged motor and a relatively strong five speed manual gearbox exclusively. I've been wanting one of these cars for a long time - since before I had my Festiva to tell you the truth.
As I've said elsewhere and before, I'd have probably picked this over my Festiva had both been available at the same time in the same condition. But now work and school are in a good place... and I can afford to have both to tinker around with and play with. For now, I'll be keeping the Festiva insured as my daily driver and parts runner while I tart up the Forsa in my driveway. Especially if I need to have it rebuilt for high boost play - we'll see. After all, I have my Festiva for on-ramps and highway pulls. My local neighborhood frowns upon keeping cars uninsured in driveways open to the public eye, but I'm not too concerned about that given how busy I will be with it. Why not insure both? I'm an under-25 male, that's why. I couldn't be in a worse payment bracket. Perhaps I'll swap the insurance back and forth a bit given its free and I can use the same plates once it's ready to drive.
So what are the plans for this project? I want to keep it a bit more civilized. My girlfriend and parents don't mind the Festiva too much, but it's got very firm suspension, a relatively loud exhaust, and a heck of a lot of oomph under the gas pedal. Plus it's a pricey car to maintain at the moment. I've had a few too many intercooler hoses pop off and various minor breakdowns to want to take this car anywhere on a road-trip. Plus I think I can squeeze 40-45MPG out of this one. Initially I will start with a great deal of TLC. Anything and everything you can imagine replacing every 3/6/12/24/48 months is going to happen, and every single adjustment, cleaning, and calibration is going to happen as well. Both for the car's sake and for mine... I love learning and optimizing cars.
All the fluids, plugs, wires, belts, hoses, tires, and filters are getting done essentially... and then some. I've got an alternator that needs replacing and a severe need for a proper detailing. Regardless of how this car has been maintained in the past, I'm going to give it my all in restoring its mechanical performance to just shy of the factory output before modifying it. This time I'm keeping a ridiculously tight ship with 100% of my invested cash and labour going into a central budget with all receipts in case I decide to sell it in the future and a full maintenance log of what I do to it. I might make a little website with some how-to's as well, but we shall see... the community is relatively small and inactive compared to this board unfortunately. Either way, because of the friends and colleagues I have here, I'll keep you all updated if you're interested in knowing more about the car and what I do to it. If not, you probably wouldn't have read this far into the thread. I've loaded up on parts and tools at the local auto parts store and the clearance section at Rock Auto, and I'm primed and ready to start processing the car once I pick it up at the end of the month. I've got a relatively intense (traffic, mountains, speed) drive home that will require some pre-trip inspection and maintenance... so I'll make a day of it and go to town.
Cosmetically, I'm going to keep it 100% stock and factory. People do make reproductions of decals and emblems, so I may look into that. Steelies for sure on this car... not that I don't love rims or anything... I just don't need super-wide or super-grippy tires for my goals on this project. We'll see what I find at the junkyards (13-14", 4x114, large hub bore). No intention to street/strip/autocross this one at all. I'll do my best on the rust removal and paint refinishing, though I am struggling to find touch-up paint that isn't too expensive or elaborate to track down. I know that I'll probably have to repaint the fuel door I get from the junkyard, and I plan to convert to a non-turbo grill as well once I move to a FMIC and scrap the inefficient interheater that comes from the factory.
Electronic resources aren't too bad for this car... I've got my hands on a Haynes manual, which is mediocre at times given it doesn't mention anything about the turbo motors whatsoever. A turbo supplement from the factory service manual is helping a little bit as well... but most of that is common sense given how I've had my turbo Festiva for a while now. There's also a small aftermarket... cams, head studs, pulleys, ported heads, that sort of thing. There seems to be little difference between this turbo car and any other short of there being a pop-off valve on the intercooler to maintain OEM boost pressure. Gosh what a silly little turbo and intercooler though... I'm told both can handle 15psi with ease and enough juice though compared to the factory 6-8psi out of 993cc. I thought the VJ14 and 323GT intercooler were small!
All of this over-the-top maintenance and restoration will culminate in a few deciding tests to see if the car is ready for modifications. Mk3/Mk2 Convertible brakes are upgrades to pad size, surface area, and stud size front and rear. I've seen people do full hammer stops from 70+MPH with those brakes without fade or warping. Sounds like an Aspire swap equivalent without the added sway-bar stuff. That will likely come first along with something better than 165/70-12 tires. Safety is important in the cars that I build because they don't have much in the way of crumple zones or airbags as you all know. I'll do some intake pressurization for boost leaks, a compression test to see how the rings are doing, throw a vacuum gauge on it at idle, and do some analysis under the valve cover and oil pan for sludge and gunk.
I plan to start slow and easy with a few cheap mods like polyurethane motor mounts, tightening up and shortening the throw of the shifter, rewiring and tucking the harness with a big three upgrade to the power feed and grounds, and gutting the factory pre-cat (it's basically a downpipe choker and boost killer). From there, I'll do some porting on both ends of the long-block, throw a 2.25" turbo-back exhaust on it, a larger intercooler with hard piping, a BOV, and an intake, and then a boost gauge and manual controller. Either way, thanks for reading and I hope you'll stay tuned for the exciting build to come!
Pre-purchase pictures:
As I've said elsewhere and before, I'd have probably picked this over my Festiva had both been available at the same time in the same condition. But now work and school are in a good place... and I can afford to have both to tinker around with and play with. For now, I'll be keeping the Festiva insured as my daily driver and parts runner while I tart up the Forsa in my driveway. Especially if I need to have it rebuilt for high boost play - we'll see. After all, I have my Festiva for on-ramps and highway pulls. My local neighborhood frowns upon keeping cars uninsured in driveways open to the public eye, but I'm not too concerned about that given how busy I will be with it. Why not insure both? I'm an under-25 male, that's why. I couldn't be in a worse payment bracket. Perhaps I'll swap the insurance back and forth a bit given its free and I can use the same plates once it's ready to drive.
So what are the plans for this project? I want to keep it a bit more civilized. My girlfriend and parents don't mind the Festiva too much, but it's got very firm suspension, a relatively loud exhaust, and a heck of a lot of oomph under the gas pedal. Plus it's a pricey car to maintain at the moment. I've had a few too many intercooler hoses pop off and various minor breakdowns to want to take this car anywhere on a road-trip. Plus I think I can squeeze 40-45MPG out of this one. Initially I will start with a great deal of TLC. Anything and everything you can imagine replacing every 3/6/12/24/48 months is going to happen, and every single adjustment, cleaning, and calibration is going to happen as well. Both for the car's sake and for mine... I love learning and optimizing cars.
All the fluids, plugs, wires, belts, hoses, tires, and filters are getting done essentially... and then some. I've got an alternator that needs replacing and a severe need for a proper detailing. Regardless of how this car has been maintained in the past, I'm going to give it my all in restoring its mechanical performance to just shy of the factory output before modifying it. This time I'm keeping a ridiculously tight ship with 100% of my invested cash and labour going into a central budget with all receipts in case I decide to sell it in the future and a full maintenance log of what I do to it. I might make a little website with some how-to's as well, but we shall see... the community is relatively small and inactive compared to this board unfortunately. Either way, because of the friends and colleagues I have here, I'll keep you all updated if you're interested in knowing more about the car and what I do to it. If not, you probably wouldn't have read this far into the thread. I've loaded up on parts and tools at the local auto parts store and the clearance section at Rock Auto, and I'm primed and ready to start processing the car once I pick it up at the end of the month. I've got a relatively intense (traffic, mountains, speed) drive home that will require some pre-trip inspection and maintenance... so I'll make a day of it and go to town.
Cosmetically, I'm going to keep it 100% stock and factory. People do make reproductions of decals and emblems, so I may look into that. Steelies for sure on this car... not that I don't love rims or anything... I just don't need super-wide or super-grippy tires for my goals on this project. We'll see what I find at the junkyards (13-14", 4x114, large hub bore). No intention to street/strip/autocross this one at all. I'll do my best on the rust removal and paint refinishing, though I am struggling to find touch-up paint that isn't too expensive or elaborate to track down. I know that I'll probably have to repaint the fuel door I get from the junkyard, and I plan to convert to a non-turbo grill as well once I move to a FMIC and scrap the inefficient interheater that comes from the factory.
Electronic resources aren't too bad for this car... I've got my hands on a Haynes manual, which is mediocre at times given it doesn't mention anything about the turbo motors whatsoever. A turbo supplement from the factory service manual is helping a little bit as well... but most of that is common sense given how I've had my turbo Festiva for a while now. There's also a small aftermarket... cams, head studs, pulleys, ported heads, that sort of thing. There seems to be little difference between this turbo car and any other short of there being a pop-off valve on the intercooler to maintain OEM boost pressure. Gosh what a silly little turbo and intercooler though... I'm told both can handle 15psi with ease and enough juice though compared to the factory 6-8psi out of 993cc. I thought the VJ14 and 323GT intercooler were small!
All of this over-the-top maintenance and restoration will culminate in a few deciding tests to see if the car is ready for modifications. Mk3/Mk2 Convertible brakes are upgrades to pad size, surface area, and stud size front and rear. I've seen people do full hammer stops from 70+MPH with those brakes without fade or warping. Sounds like an Aspire swap equivalent without the added sway-bar stuff. That will likely come first along with something better than 165/70-12 tires. Safety is important in the cars that I build because they don't have much in the way of crumple zones or airbags as you all know. I'll do some intake pressurization for boost leaks, a compression test to see how the rings are doing, throw a vacuum gauge on it at idle, and do some analysis under the valve cover and oil pan for sludge and gunk.
I plan to start slow and easy with a few cheap mods like polyurethane motor mounts, tightening up and shortening the throw of the shifter, rewiring and tucking the harness with a big three upgrade to the power feed and grounds, and gutting the factory pre-cat (it's basically a downpipe choker and boost killer). From there, I'll do some porting on both ends of the long-block, throw a 2.25" turbo-back exhaust on it, a larger intercooler with hard piping, a BOV, and an intake, and then a boost gauge and manual controller. Either way, thanks for reading and I hope you'll stay tuned for the exciting build to come!
Pre-purchase pictures:
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