
Summer is well and truly here in Okinawa, with the temperatures rising and the sun shining. Checked the weather report at 9am this morning and was told that it was 31°C but that it felt “like 36°C”. Thankfully the humidity was only 70% and a sea breeze coming through my apartment managed to keep me [...]

I got up to Nago Circuit at around 0945, and when I arrived I questioned if I’d got the date wrong for the event. There were no flags up at the entrance and only 3 cars in the parking area. My fears were soon put to bed though when I opened the car door and heard loud engine noise from beyond the circuit wall.
The lack of entries made the day go by much more quickly than usual, and proceedings ended an hour earlier than usual. The first couple of practice runs were filled with drivers trying to get traction on the launch, and then when braking after the finish line (in the fight between mountainside and car, there is only going to be one winner). There were a couple of pretty hairy moments with some cars locking up the wheels and rear-ends looking a little twitchy, but thankfully no collisions.
Rick, currently holder of the “fastest gaijin in Okinawa” mantle, was looking impressive in his GT-R. His qualifying runs included breaking out of B-class with a time of 5.429s at 164kph for the 150m. To put that in context for the non-racers, that’s a 0-100mph time of under 5.4s. In laymans terms that’s (insert expletive of your choice) fast! The other driver, Josh, was having a tough time bringing everything together in his Mark II JZX90. Traction issues, red-lighting at the start and other little problems made for a very frustrating day. It was a shame for him, as he had high hopes and was taking part in C-class for the first time. Sad to say, but I think yesterday the Alto might have had a chance against him!
Rick managed to attain the quickest qualifying time in B-class, hitting 5.6s for the 150m, which put him straight into the final. The other cars in that class would be racing for the right to race him. Rick’s problem was that he knew if everything went perfectly for him, he had a good chance of breaking out of B-class again which would result in his disqualification from the knockout part of the tournament. The solution was just delaying his launch on the startline a tenth of a second longer or so, to ensure he would remain in his class. And when it came to the final that’s what he did. Both drivers had a good launch but Rick’s GT-R was pretty much flawless and he finished again in 5.6s, 0.3s quicker than his rival.
To see all the photos I took at this event, take a look at my gallery 
November 18th, 2009 at 15:41
Dude, theres an evo 2 for sale now in okinawa, 19man
http://www.goo-net.com/usedcar/spread/goo/19/908009101909080377005.html
November 18th, 2009 at 16:24
I’ve seen it on sale before. Seriously, if I had the money to buy it and (more importantly) keep it running, I’d be all over it.