I think I may know the answer to my own question, but I figured I'd bounce it off you guys to see if I'm missing anything. So, my supercharged Miata weighed 2250lbs (without me) when it hit the scales out to the SCCA Champ Tour. That was great because at the time I was running SSM, and my weight minimum was calculated to be 2240lbs. But now along comes this Xtreme Street B class and my minimum weight can be 2100lbs. That is a not insignificant weight difference. So, how do I take 150lbs out of an already light car.
As the car sits, it has a Rotrex-supercharged 2000 1.8L, 6-speed, '96 Torsen rearend. It still has power steering, but I'd like to keep that because turning at lower speeds with 245-width tires without power steering seems unenjoyable, unless you're Popeye. Air conditioning compressor and lines and condenser are all gone (Evaporator core is still there because I didn't want to yank the dash out). Full interior. All stock body panels. It does have a Blackbird Fabworx GT3 rollbar. Wheels are 15x9 Konigs, which aren't the absolute lightest wheel out there, but at 13lbs are pretty dang close.
Talking to my autocross friends (none of whom are Miata people) netted a few suggestions:
- Ditch the rollbar. It's fairly heavy and it's weight in a pretty terrible spot. I do like the safety factor though, and if I want to run it at the local private racetrack, they want a rollbar. There was talk about how to make it quick-release, no clue what that would do for safety though.
- Cut the crash bars and webbing out of the doors. As my friend Scott put it "With all the SUVs on the road, you'd probably die in a T-bone even with them."
- Carbon fiber body panels. I had my doubts on this one. The stock fenders and hood are pretty dang light, and Carbonmiata stuff tends to fit terrible and be a fiberglass frame with a carbon skin unless you pay a fortune. I suppose I could skin the hood and go to hood pins, like a real racecar.
- Tubular subframe and control arms. Not a huge weight difference, but I know V8Roadsters sells them. I remember Keith saying that stuff tends to crack though (not V8R, but tubular parts in general)
- Start gutting the interior. This moves it a bit away from being a street car, but the stock seats I'm sure can be replaced with something lighter, and the carpet has to be worth a pound or two. As well as ditching that now-useless evaporator core
- Different engine. My friend Randy brought this one up and said it was probably the spot for one of the biggest gains (or losses, I guess). The BP-4W is a cast-iron beast with thick bore walls. I'm pretty sure a Honda K-series has to weigh less.
Am I missing something? I don't think I am. I did have a lightweight battery in it at one point, but it didn't have the capacity my engine needs to crank now. The standalone ECU means its grumpy when starting, and that results in a fair bit of cranking.