This is how massive new chapters in your life can start...without you ever intending them to!
In May 2017, while looking for car parts on Yahoo Auctions Japan, we stumbled across a very specific pink Nissan Pao - for sale from the video above.
It's a typically bonkers car on a typically bonkers TV program, made more bonkers by a man who decided to make a "pretty drift car" crossing a low-powered, front wheel drive Nissan Pao with a (relatively) high-powered, rear wheel drive Nissan Silvia S13.
HMM. Well. We couldn't really afford it and certainly didn't need it, but y'know, it's a nice looking car, 'interesting' and it'd match our blue one. So we decided to 'just see how much it would cost' by asking JDM Auction Watch that 'if' they could bid on this random find on our behalf, transport it to a port and ship it to us on the other side of the world...would that be affordable? It seems that it was. Patrick at JDM broke it all down for us, each stage and the cost depending on how much we'd like to bid on it, so we put a reasonable low bid in, expecting to be outbid.
And we won.
Not sure at first whether we'd brought a curse or a blessing on ourselves, thus began months of anticipation, anxiety and investment. It's been a massively fun ride - literally and figuratively - starting in an internet auction window and ending most recently bezzing around the track at Silverstone.
So having bought a car from Japan without ever seeing it in the flesh/metal, we were prepare for both the worst and the most pleasant surprise. We got a bit of both! Below is a broad overview of the what we found when Rich at Dynodaze Customworx's took on this mammoth, 7-month job (in a small space, alongside other multiple projects). Delve in. If the minutiae of restoration and modification aren't your thing, you can just skip to @inkymolesmotors on Instagram where we'll be posting the updates and adventures of the car.
World - we present 'P'inkymole'!
Rich meeting the Pao for the first time and holding down his excitement or trepidation of what lay ahead!
What Rich found once the Pao was on the ramps:
Interior (what there was of it) stripped out to see what's what.
Under the sealant and waxoyl equivalent we found a patch work of metal bits from around a Japanese workshop holding the car together, this is the point we knew we were going to go over budget.
Rust holes. Never good to find on your new project.
A good representation of a lot of the welding/patchwork around the car.
Oh. The first injury of many to come... sorry Rich.
Rich getting stuck straight in.
The floor was so bad that most of it ended up being removed.
Cleaned up!
Repairing.
Replacing.
All shiny and new where necessary.
All new steel underneath, built to last.
A worrying amount of steel removed!
Out with the old!
In with the new. Shiny new floors from underneath.
Chassis rails and reinforcement welded in!
Cleaned up and repaired inner sills.
Both floors done.
Seat positions fixed as well as doubling up as strengthening.
Adapted seat rails.
Cleaned, reinforced/strengthened and very, very shiny chassis arms/inner arches.
Offering up new things!
Exhaust parts ready to be made (w)hole.
Exhaust mock-up.
The exhaust coming together.
Weld porn.
Mocking up the extended screamer pipe!
Sills Shutz'ed and fresh!
A test pot of pink for touch-ups, touching up the pink..
Steve of SRL, greasing the wheels of progress since 1989!
Welded up screamer pipe, ready to do its job.
Just do these bolts up...
Back in!
Starting fresh new pipework, one of Rich's favourite jobs!
Uncle Keith gets right in close for the detail.
Looking nice and shiny!
Inside the car is all done.
Quality work Uncle Keith.
So shiny!
Engine bay finished, painted by 'Uncle Keith', put back together by Rich and Steve.
Can't find coolant pipe that fits that particular space, Rich will make one.
Painted by Uncle Keith with Fuel tank and battery fitted centrally.
The noisy fuel pump bastard!
Finished exhaust!
A shiny clean diff back in to get that Paower down!
Onto the dyno to check the Paower for the first time!
It's first power run on the dyno and it spits flames!!
Not bad for a 750-800 KG car!
Stable mates with a Supra turbo conversion also done at Dynodaze Customworx.
If you want to follow P'inkymole's adventures, follow us on @inkymolesmotors

















































































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