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samo

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Posts posted by samo

  1. I'd go with the Pugs for now, since they're your original bolt pattern - no drilling out the hub or the wheel. I've got 14" Pugs on mine, and they're awesome. The stance they give the car just looks downright mean.

  2. As Qman said, learn aggressive driving. Take some courses, practice where it's safe, and attend some rally-crosses. The more practice you have driving fast in slippery conditions, the less likely you are to have a wreck.

     

    I work on Subiegal's rally team, and it's definately not as easy as it looks. Not to mention, rally is expensive. Entrance fees, fuel, and repairing damage are not cheap. I'm not trying to discourage you, just telling you the scoop from someone who knows it first-hand.

     

    As far as modifications to the car go, it depends on what rally you're running in and what class you're running. PGT is the easiest class to get in to - you're pretty much only allowed to reflash the ECU and put on a new intake pipe. Other than that, modifications can only be safety-related (cage, seats, etc.). You'd be best to check out the rule books on Rally America's site and build the car off of that.

  3. Make a set! Find somebody who has a trashed TSL and cut it out, glue it to the sole of a boot, and you're set! I used to have a pair of sandals made out of an old Firestone that had a gashed sidewall. They actually worked pretty well. I found rubber cement bonded the rubber real well, but trust me, tires are on the tough side to cut through.

  4. You know, I'm not 100% at the moment. Depends on what my Thanksgiving plans wind up being. However, if they wind up being what I think they're going to wind up being, I'll probably go.

     

    I've seen your car before, at rallies. I think I saw it at the Wild West service area and at maybe Dryad?

  5. Besides how many subie owners are crazy enough to follow me....?

     

    Me! I live at Alpental at Snoqualmie pass about 1/2 of the week. It's about 3200 feet and buried in 2' of snow at the moment :D . Fun stuff.

  6. 275Sunshine_the_Almighy.jpg

     

    Here's mine. Standard Yakima rack with two extra load bars (plain old iron pipe) heading from front to back to hold the tire. Wire is run through where the antenna used to be. I made a rectangle out of aluminum, drilled a hole for the wires to pass through, and riveted it in place where the antenna was. Works fantastic, and the lights are ultra-stable.

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