I spent some time talking to Brian from Karcepts (who has trophied at Nationals in both an S2000 and ND Miata) about spending all the money on a set of MCS shocks, to try and eek out the last few tenths, if possible... Brian was honest with me, essentially confirming that the ND2 is the faster car in CS, saying that if the S2000 was running perfectly and the ND2 driver makes a mistake or 2, it would be competitive- which is exactly what I experienced throughout the season. He also informed me that there were some fast competitors in CS S2000's at Nationals running his MCS setup.
I waited patiently for National results... the fastest S2000 at Nats (running $3000 MCS shocks) was outside of trophies, in 14th place... the 13 cars ahead of him? You guessed it, they were all ND2's. The following 2 years (2022 and 2023), no one even showed up to CS Nats in an S2000- literally, not one person- every car in the field was an ND, and for good reason.
I realized trying to win in an S2000, against a competent driver in an ND2 was a truly uphill battle. Unfortunately, my local competition was a very talented driver, in a fully prepped ND2 running, running MCS shocks and the largest bar on earth.
Knowing this was a battle I would likely never win, but unwilling to sell my S2000, I decided to branch out, getting another car. I scoured all the Internets using Autotemptest- they literally search all local CL and FB ads in the country for you... I spent many hours looking for a car that could actually compete at the highest level of an autoX class without breaking the bank... at last, I found a 1999 Mazda Miata Sport out in Tampa, FL!
To anyone that doesn't know, the 1999 Miata Sport is a rare car- no options (lightest weight possible), manual only, Torsen diff, highest spring rates on an NB, OEM strut tower bracing, etc. These cars are a nightmare to find- it seems like most of them are gobbled up by people running SCCA ES!
I did a fly and drive to get this thing and boy was it poorly maintained! The flat spots on the tires almost shook the car apart getting back to Colorado! No A/C, no cruise control. This was easily the longest drive of my life, but I got her home:
Unfortunately, when prepping the NB Sport for ES, a substantial incident happened (it's a long story), that completely threw off the geometry of the front suspension... it wasn't something that I had the skills to fix to say the least- my attempts only made the problem worse. I was beyond bummed. I ended up selling the NB Sport and couldn't find another one to replace it... so I started looking for another "car to have" for a different class, in the off-season.
Fortune smiled upon me right after selling the NB and I found a near stock 1988 Honda CRX Si!
^^^For the record, that photo was taken after I modded the car.
I then hit the wrenches pretty heavy in the off-season, building the car to run SCCA STS and Tuner 5.
I need to explain some things: the CRX was my first FWD build. I listened to WAY too many people on the Internet. I got done with prep work (I ripped that car apart and replaced everything I legally could!) just in time to start testing the car for the summer season... I've never spun a car so many times in my life! In past seasons, I don't think I've ever spun my S2000's or Miata's (minus one incident at HPR that we won't talk about lol). The FWD, short wheelbase with heavy rear spring rates and a huge rear bar game was entirely new to me! I also learned a valuable lesson: NEVER run poly trailing arm bushings in a wishbone FWD Honda!
Everything I knew from running RWD cars seemed completely backwards... with a car like this (short wheelbase, FWD, heavy rear rates) if you lift, you spin. Made exponentially worse by poly RTA bushings.
The first test and tune event? On the runs I wasn't spinning, it was fast... by end the of the event, on the last run the car made, it blew a rack and pinion... that was another long drive home... next event? The sway bar disconnected itself- long story, I figured it out, but the event was shot by that time... I started running more SCCA TT, managed to set a couple of course class records (admittedly they weren't terribly competitive), but something new broke at just about every event, lol.
People say the S2000 is sketchy at the limit... those people have never driven a CRX that was setup to rotate! Easily the most terrifying car I've ever driven! And man was it tough to get heat into the rear tires. It was a fun experiment, but I also discovered that I prefer everything about RWD lol.
Either way, with other car(s) designated for track duty, the S2000 went back to being a street-only car. Translation? I removed the giant splined Karcepts front sway bar, sold the bar and put a set of Michelin Pilot Super Sports back on.