I am very much flattered by the comments I have read here about my car.
Just to add some clarity and answer some questions, I feel I need to share some details. I am 27 years old as stated and have a Degree in Mechanical Engineering. People often times think that having a project like this requires a massive budget and an immense amount of free time, but I’m here to dispel that notion.
The dream of a project like this dates back further than my education in Engineering or the days where I even thought about girls in “that kind of way”. Rather it’s more accurate to believe I had this type of dream if you could have seen me as a kid playing with Lego’s for hours on end or dismantling nearly everything I could just to see how it worked. An education or access to a vast amount of tools or machinery does not give anyone the ability to set goals, focus on the end product while managing the small details, the drive to learn new skill sets, or the ability to manage your time down to the minutes of a year.
I started the car my Junior Year of College (2008) as a therapeutic escape to my life as I knew it. I was working full time (35-45 hrs/week) as an Intern for an Automotive interiors supplier, taking an average of 16 credit hours, working 10-15 hours a week on our schools FSAE team, and trying to keep myself financially afloat without tuition assistance from family or FAFSA. Bottom line is I needed this escape more than I needed a big LCD TV, cable TV, internet, or a 75* house in the Michigan winters.
I was lucky to have my garage above 45 throughout most of the build, so having the house at 62 or so actually felt quite warm. I did not have an abundance of time, rather I worked 20+ hour weekends on the car and squeezed in time during the week where I could. My friends, coworkers, and family dubbed me as the “Energizer Bunny” because I could work for days on end with an average of 4-5 hours of sleep a night. Think about Christmas Eve night/Christmas morning when you were a kid who believed in Santa, how much sleep did you get? Take that and extend it over a 2 year period. In fact, now that I work an average of 50 hours a week and have a live in girlfriend, I have more free time then ever!
Most of the car was built with an angle grinder, an assortment of cutting/grinding/flap wheels, a hand drill, and a Mig (gas) welder. Contrary to common questions and thoughts, I do not have a garage full of awesome machines and tools. I spent hours working on projects with the schools machinist and eventually when he felt I knew enough to be safe, he gave me a key for access to the Bridgeport and Lathe on the weekends.
A project like this is not about a financial commitment as much as it is a mental test to see how strong your desire is. Including the rebuild I would estimate I have roughly $8000 into the car, but I would estimate that $5000 would be far more accurate if it were not for the fire requiring high dollar parts to be replaced. Break down that number over 3 years and you have about $140 per month or $35/week. How much money could you save by avoiding those weekend bar bills and lowering your monthly utility costs as mentioned before? Trust me, anyone can save $35 a week if you put your mind to it and accept some sacrifices.
Ultimately what differentiates this type of project as a dream versus a reality is not anything money can buy. It all lies within you as a person and the innate ability to focus on a dream, keep the desire alive over 4000+ hours of work, brush off 99% of the people around doubting you, and to not give up when it seems as if the finish line gets further away as you dive deeper into the insane thought of building your own car from scratch.
Now take what I have said and fast forward to 2010 with a little under 30 miles of seat time… Imagine getting a call about a fire at the University garage… Imagine the fear of that loomed during the 20 minute drive… Imagine the hurt, the anger, the frustration, the unanswered questions, and the numbness of looking at a car, like a child of your own, burnt to a crisp…
It took about a year before I really touched the car as the depression surrounding it was like a force field keeping me away from the garage. The one thought that never subsided was that I could not give up. Come April 2011 I found a complete R1 engine on craigslist for steal of a price, so I made last minute plans to drive from Chicago to Detroit to pick it up. After staying the weekend downtown with a friend of mine, I drove home Sunday with an R1 motor in my Jeep Grand Cherokee, and the phone number of a gorgeous, understanding, and supportive girl in my pocket (who is obviously still in my life). One day sometime maybe January 2012, something sparked and I worked like a madman to get it running before the end of the 2012 summer. I set a goal to rebuild it better; lighter, faster, stronger, and more visually appealing. I cut out/replaced anything and everything that could have been affected by the heat of the fire. I redesigned 80% of the suspension, the entire fuel system, the entire cooling system, entire oil cooling system, entire rear differential, and more. Fast forward an estimated 1800 hours and you have my car now… still a work in progress, but a project that I can now enjoy!
Feel free to share thoughts, comments, or questions as I welcome them all.
Blood, sweat, gears, tears, but absolutely no fears…
(Jerome.Fisher@Gmail.com)
(P.S. She is even insane enough to enjoy trackdays in the passenger seat!)