Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Mercury Rising



As I sit in front of my computer, putting a playlist together to listen to while I write this article, I realize just how long its taken for us to share this feature with the rest of you. Its not because we havent had time to edit the pictures or the video, those have been done since September. Ive just had a mental block of sorts when it came to putting together something worth reading to go along with the media that accompanies it, which is strange seeing as I just got out of my bed at 01:45am on a Monday morning with a burning desire to put pen to paper.




Browsing through these pictures, thinking back to the windy afternoon in September when we did this shoot, only one thing comes to mind speed.





Wikipedia defines it as the rate at which an object covers distance, coincidentally above this definition they have a picture of a car on a drag strip to illustrate this and that got me thinking. Why are we as humans so obsessed with speed? Whether its the speed of our bandwidth or the amount of time it takes for the red light to turn green doesnt matter, we instinctively just hate waiting.





While we all share that primal instinct, most car enthusiasts share another, we want to go as fast as we possibly can and once weve reached that point, we want to go even faster. Sounds the same as what everybody else wants doesnt it? But I believe the reason for going faster differs. For the true speed demon its not necessarily about getting from point a to b as quickly as possible, its about that rush of adrenaline we get when we depress the accelerator pedal firmly against the metal floor panel, see the rev counter come alive all the way to that forbidden redline, and hear the dizzying combustion fury of the engine coupled with a hardening exhaust note. Its about pushing a machine to its limits, coming to a halt, turning around, and trying to push it beyond that limit.





Its a rush that the Mk5 GTi you see before you provides in spades, so naturally when we were presented with the opportunity to get up close and personal with this beast we wasted no time getting it in front of our lenses




An opportunity that was provided by Amish Raga, owner at Euro-Worx, and probably the most well-known VW enthusiast in the Nelson Mandela Bay area. Amish is a hard-core VW guy, and I dont mean that in the sense that he has Volkswagen badges tattooed all over his body, but rather hes hard-core because hes only owned and built VAG cars for as long as I can remember and not only that, his family, friends and girlfriend all drive modified cars from the same German automotive giant. Coincidence? I think not.




However this is not the reason he is well known in the car community, Amish has built a reputation for turning out some of the best builds to ever come from Port Elizabeth, builds that are often ahead of the trends at the time. To give you an idea of the kind of builds Im speaking about, in 2007/2008 he built an Mk2 GTi (pictured below) which ran stretched tyres, split wheels and coilovers, a time when those things were unheard of by the average enthusiast in PE.





This build is perhaps not as ground-breaking for the scene today as the Mk2 was, but its of the same standard weve come to expect from the Euro-Worx stable and its packing something just as special, the infamous Ko4 turbo. The Ko4 conversion is popular for its ability to turn a seemingly average GTi into a giant killer, with the right supporting mods, mods which this GTi possesses.




But the road to a successful conversion wasnt an easy one for this particular Mk5, it started its modified life with a simple REVO stage1 software upgrade, after which the previous owner decided to go for the larger turbo. Round about this time the car started to develop a seemingly bottomless pit of problems; it managed to make power once and never again. Having visited 3 other tuning companies the owner gave up and traded the car in, this ended up being the turning point for a car that was crying to have its potential fulfilled. Enter Euro-Worx and a plan to turn a build that had gone completely wrong into what it was always meant to be, a giant killer.




The motor had to be built right this time around, from the ground up, and to ensure this Amish added a set of Arias pistons to the sub-assembly to handle the extra boost which was being provided by the Ko4 turbo from an OEM Audi s3. To make sure there wouldnt be any problems with the cooling system and fueling, an s3 intercooler and injectors, along with an Autotech high pressure fuel pump were installed. To provide sufficient spark and keep the oil in check, the coil packs and oil cap from an Audi R8 found a new home in the Mk5 engine bay as well.


Cold air now enters the turbo through a REVO intake and the resulting hot gasses are expelled through a 76mm downpipe and full 63mm exhaust system. Having bolted everything up with stainless steel nuts and bolts, a REVO stage3 software upgrade was reigned in to make sure it all worked in harmony. And work in harmony it did, the once problematic GTi managed a respectable 254.8kW on its first dyno night after the rebuild and even managed to take the honors for the highest reading of the night.




To go with its impressive new found power the car needed some exterior enhancements to further separate it from other Mk5s. Subtle enhancements in the form of a colour-coded Vortex lip and rear apron quad pipe conversion, R32 taillights and polished 19 inch HRE replica wheels, with black inserts, wrapped in 225/35/19 Yokohama S Drives, all flow seamlessly together to give the car a more aggressive look. The car also had to possess the ability to stop well ahead of any obstacles and corner whenever the need arose and for this Powerbrake disks with a set of Endless pads are employed, while Vmaxx coilovers take care of the cornering and lowering aspects of the build.




What Amish has managed to do is build a well modified car with both function and form in mind, a true street sleeper that gives very little away with its exterior mods. Weve dubbed this one Mercury Rising, because it goes to show that no matter how many obstacles one encounters or what state a project is in when you start out, if you stick to a plan and never throw in the towel you can still achieve the goals you set for it and rise to the top of your game.