As a compromised, aggregate person, I’ll admit that I’m not the greatest at posting updates on my personal vehicles here. I’ve found the coolant leak on my BMW, I’ve already been tentatively shopping around for a new daily, and well, the Porsche’s been damn near faultless, so there’s little to write about here. However, a little bit like Dave Grohl, I have another confession to make. Folks, I have a car that I’ve been keeping a secret, and it’s magnificent. Well, sort of I. Anyway, y’all like weird Miata builds?
Flashback to Spring, I was doing car things with friends, when we were offered a 1999 Mazda MX-5 Miata. The seller was asking $3,000 Canadian, it was blacked-out but in a slightly derpy way, like a goofy little tadpole, and came with a hardtop, but that’s not the best part — it was lifted on hilariously oversized all-terrain tires.
Now, would any single one of us pay $3,000 for it? Maybe one or two, but otherwise, maybe not. However, we all realized we’d each pay a few hundred bucks to own this thing. Somehow, this still sounded like a good idea in the morning, so a deal was struck. A deal that eventually gathered so much momentum, we ended up ultimately splitting a lifted Miata 12 (!) ways. A low-stakes experiment in low-forethought activity.
Days later, a small handful of us rolled up to where the bedliner-sprayed, lifted MX-5 lived, and discovered a few great things and a few not-so-great things. On the minus side, the fabric roof was a biohazard, the driver’s seat squab had worn in lopsided, the radio didn’t work, and the bull bar was a collision waiting to happen. However, did the car start? Absolutely. Did it run like a top? You bet. Did the brakes work? Well, you see…
Yes, part of the reason this NB MX-5 Miata was such a steal was because it was an outdoor car, and in a climate like Toronto, that just spells bad news, particularly to pre-2010s Japanese cars. Sure, this Miata may have received new sills and some inner wheel arch patching, but one of the brake lines, well, broke. Specifically, it rotted away to pieces, pissed out all the available fluid, and while it ran just fine and dandy, it didn’t exactly stop well. So, what do you do when you’re driving a car with no brakes out of a garage that exits on a downwards slope? Have three or four people at the bottom of the dip to, um, catch the Miata. I still have no idea how this actually worked without anyone getting horribly maimed.
Anyway, after towing it back to our secret HQ, we made a plan — flare some ni-copp brake lines — the same sort of stuff Volvo uses — to fix the brake fluid leak, re-clearance the fenders gingerly with a sledgehammer, remove the hazardously attached bull bar, and yoink out the moldy soft top. A few weeks later, we were in business, having the absolute time of our lives for about $350 Canadian each. That’s about $257.37 USD per person. Score!
Now, the thing about a lifted Mazda MX-5 Miata is that it’s inherently interesting, but not in an extravagant way, more in a commitment to the bit way. It’s provocative, it gets the people going. As a result, you tend to get asked variations of the same four questions at red lights and gas stations:
- What’s this car supposed to be?
- What does it drive like?
- Does it rub?
- Why?
The answers to those four questions go as follows:
- Stupid.
- Surprisingly, it drives like a Miata.
- Like a virgin with a bottle of Jergens.
- Because funny.
Look, aside from the comical and far too large 29-inch all-terrain tires, the Paco Motorsports strut mount relocation lift kit, a set of eBay adjustable rear upper control arms, and depowered steering, this is an NB MX-5 Miata with a genuine 59,000 miles on the clock. The roughest 59,000 miles imaginable, but still. As a result, the 1.8-liter four-cylinder engine is still a peach all the way to 7,000 rpm, the shifter is still divine, body motions are surprisingly well controlled for something with so much ground clearance, but the ride isn’t that harsh. Sure, the aged all-terrains seem to combine the squirm of bias plies with the firm-ish impact response of radials, but it’s kind of entertaining having limits this low. The open differential does need to be fixed at some point though, because that just ain’t flying this winter.
However, the modifications the previous owner of the Miata did to make it unique have the side effect of completely city-proofing it. Worried about door dings? Anyone who dings you will be scraping their paint against bedliner, so they lose. Worried about potholes, speed bumps, raised manhole covers, and torn-up construction zones? Not anymore, you’re not. Worried about getting your soft top slashed? Hardtop or no top, no false sense of security here. In a place where it’s a bit shit to own a sports car, like Toronto, it’s genius.
As for splitting it 12 ways, that’s also worked out. Everyone’s got something out of it, almost everyone’s actually worked on it, and the Miata hasn’t just been sitting around unused, but rather, racking up real miles. It’s been to at least one prestigious show, been locally Facebook famous, gone places, met people, had dogs in it, and has just generally been a trooper. It’s even got us out of jams, like one friend having both of his cars out of commission, and the city temporarily revoking my driveway access.
Splitting maintenance is no hardship because it’s genuinely so cheap, and although whoever wants it has to go get it rather than have it delivered, it should always come with a full tank of gas. So far, so good on that front. Even on the event anyone wants out, they contractually have to be cashed out, so some safeguards are in place. Tickets, damage, and impoundment are the responsibility of whoever was driving, and so far, that hasn’t been much of a problem either. Sure, insurance took some sorting, but once that was done? Bombs away.
So, if you find a cataclysmically dumb car on Marketplace or Craigslist or elsewhere that you and your buddies all want, why not split it if it’s low-stakes enough? Think of the benefits — lower maintenance costs, fewer HOA complaints, plausible deniability, shared knowledge. I don’t recommend it for most people, but with the right group of people, it could work. In any case, lifted sports cars rule, sometimes bad decisions work out okay, and despite accusations of David going Hollywood, Autopian authors will still continue to buy questionable shitboxes forever.
(Photo credits: Thomas Hundal)
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This reminds me of a car I shared with a couple of friends in a lot of ways. It was a 1996 Subaru Legacy Wagon we bought for $400 and used for the Rocky Mountain Rambler 500. The first year it was pretty much stock. But the second year we lifted it about 3” for $30 (bought used/almost blown out Forester shocks), built a bumper with a winch, put a ghetto skid plate on it, and straight piped it with a “custom” side exit exhaust. It served as a couple of our daily drivers and a general fuck around car. It was so much fun and actually surprisingly capable off road.
Some buddies and I almost ended up with a golf cart with a snowmobile engine. We were having some beers and hanging out and one guy found the ad on Craigslist. It is probably for the best that when we called the next day, it had been sold that morning.
It needs the soft top back, though. Gotta be able to drive that weirdo top down for maximum weird.
I’ve been tempted to do this on several occasions. Once bought a $200 Outback. It was fun in an zero-cares way. Cheap cars are stress free sometimes.
This is the best idea ever, BECAUSE its the worst idea ever.
Nice! This is awesome
I think the most shocking part is having 12 friends. Who has time for that? lol
This, for real.
Came here to make that same comment. I have like 4, and we’re scattered all across the country so I don’t think co owning a vehicle with someone in Alaska, Utah, and Virginia will really work out so well for me.
Well, he has 11 friends. Tommy boy is the 12th. Still more than I could handle though.
That’s awesome, glad you have such a great group!
If The Collective ever wants out, I’ll drive down from Ottawa and buy it.
Y’all conned yourselves into a crapcan timeshare!
But on the real, that looks like a riot. And I’m pretty sure car-timeshare-crazy is the exact brand of crazy listed as a prerequisite for working for this site.
I saw a t-shirt the other day that is perfect for this situation. It read:
That’s a terrible idea!
What time?
My son has that shirt, it was a gift from us lol.
Are those genuine Work Equips? If they are, that’s the cost of the whole car right there.
Can it auto-cross…?
Leave the differential open and get two handbrake handles, one for each rear brake. The fly off handles if available. They are cheaper and more fun than a locking diff. It’ll get you unstuck, but better yet it’s really fun to lock one rear wheel and make a turn pivoting around it. And you can’t do that with a locking diff
I’ve wanted to put off-road trail brakes on a vehicle for a long time. I guess I never thought about those being just for use with open diffs and maybe a limited slip.
I learned to drive on a tractor, with one brake pedal for the left brake and one for the right. Super fun. Especially in reverse.
At the local Costco there were two employees, I believe that worked in the tire dept who owned Miatas. One was lifted about as far as you can go while the other was lowered as far as possible. Of course when the drove them on the same day they tried to park next to each other. Too bad there wasn’t someone who worked there with a stock one to park between them.
Speaking of sharing a vehicle it was just yesterday that I was talking with my friend who mentioned that the auction he frequents has a Fire Truck in the next auto auction. He said, I don’t have a Fire Truck to which I responded I don’t have a Fire Truck. He replied want to go halfsies on a Fire Truck? Unfortunately I don’t have a place to park it at my house and while he does we do live ~75 miles apart so I feel like I wouldn’t do more than the occasional visit though it isn’t something I imagine I’d want to drive that much. So highly unlikely we will make it happen. Heck I still haven’t even made it out there to check out the Unimog that he bought in spring.
This is exactly how I came to own half a drift BMW E30.
And, later, half a V8 RX7.
I’m currently in for a third of a race prepped Ford Ka in search of an actual car to buy, and half a Renault Sport Clio 200 when a suitably cheap one comes up locally. If neither of these things happen it’s still been fun looking.
Man 12 people sharing a car is wild.
In college I went 50/50 on a 30 year old F250 highboy with a buddy as a fun cheap offroad beater. Other than a couple uncomfortable standoffs about what to fix or not fix on it, generally worked out great.
But in that case, it was super easy to share because it could literally transport all of it’s owners at once. Both want to hit a trail the same day? No problem, just take turns who is in driver or passenger seat and enjoy it together. And in our case it worked especially well since we were going to the same college and lived walking distance from each other so we didn’t have to worry much about logistics of getting possession when we wanted it. We just both had a copy of the key and it was always either outside your house or a ten minute walk away at the other guys house.
But 12 people splitting a 2 seater seems like you’re just asking to start fights and ruin friendships. Unless you have some agreed upon central storage place equidistant from all owners, just the logistics of exchanging possession sound like a nightmare.
A great idea in theory. Between flexible laws allowing everyone to be sued and the fact I don’t know 2 people I would trust with my financial wherewithal let alone 11 I applaud you for being braver than I.
1. Can everybody be sued? I would assume that this is not legally the joint property of 12 people but rather there is only 1 name on the title
2. Financial wherewithal? At worst, he’s out $300. Low stakes gamble, you don’t have to trust the other 11 people *that much.*
You can have a written contract indicating joint ownership (which sounds like what they did) but you are correct that only one name can be on the registration (“title”). As far as The Man is concerned, one person is responsible for it.
I know it’s a long way away, but a warning from Canyonlands NP for taking this thing on their 4×4 roads would be great
Can I listen in when you eventually call the “Timeshare Exit Team?”
Brilliant! Cheap enough that no one’s into any real money, fun enough for anyone with a modest sense of humor. Good job!
We (3 friends) did the same thing with a 70s Chriscaft look a like with an inboard flat 6. We had 4 great summers with it.
I feel like a boat is much more conducive to 3+ people sharing it. If all three want to use it the same day, then all three just go boating together and have a great time. With 12 people and a 2 seater, those logistics get a little more hairy
I used to work for a guy who was 1/3 owner of a ski boat. Definitely the best way to own a boat.
I hope fender flares are on the to-do list. Those tires look like they would throw stones at every other car within a block.
Yosemite Sam “Back Off!” mud flaps would be a perfect addition.
And they make snide comments about my NC2’s 4×4 ride height.
When’s the baby due?