Bucket (Seat) List: 10 Must-Drive Roads of the West

State Route 12 Utah

Thereโ€™s nothing worse than being all dressed up with nowhere to go, right? Whether youโ€™re itching to try out your Mazda 6โ€™s new added power, your Miataโ€™s updated handling, or you simply need a more scenic background to snap a new photo of your Mazdaspeed 3โ€™s dope hood scoop, sometimes a trip down the road to the grocery store just doesnโ€™t cut it. If youโ€™re as passionate about the roads you drive as you are about the mods you install, or youโ€™re simply looking to vary your daily driving route, this list of some of the best roads in the West will inspire you to take your Mazda to new frontiers.

Historic Columbia River Highway, Oregon

Since the Pacific Northwest is near and dear to our hearts, weโ€™ll start with an amazing drive thatโ€™s close to home. Hop on U.S. Route 30 in Troutdale to begin the 75-mile journey to The Dalles that features a bit of everything that makes this area of the country stunning: tall trees, Columbia River views, waterfalls, and Mt. Hood. The winding, curvy road is a dream to drive, and you can stop along the way at sites like Multnomah Falls and Bridge of the Gods for photo ops with your Mazda.

Highway 101, Oregon

One of the few gorgeous natural features Oregon is known for that you canโ€™t find along the Columbia is the ocean, but this coastal drive takes care of that. Some folks may take this route to tour historic lighthouses, but we love 101 because it allows you to trace the sweeping curves of Oregonโ€™s rugged coastline from Astoria all the way to the California border. Youโ€™ll enjoy fresh salty air, great seaside driving, and loads of Oregon breweries to check out if you want to stop for the night and sample the local flavor. Remember that it takes a few days to do the drive even cruising speedily in your modded ride.

 

Three Rivers Highway, Oregon

Whether heading to or from the coast and Highway 101, the Three Rivers Highway (aka Oregon Route 22) is a twisty, curve-laden, extremely fun drive. Itโ€™s not the best when itโ€™s dark and rainy, as visibility can get bad, but this trip from Salem to the ocean is a great ride to test your handling on. Itโ€™s also located right in the heart of CorkSportโ€™s local region!

Olympic Peninsula Loop, Washington

Head north up I-5 for one of the most rustic scenic drives you can conquer without four-wheel drive. You can enjoy the great outdoors no matter which Mazda youโ€™re in! This 330-mile trip features beaches, lakes, hikes, and camping as you circle Olympic National Park and Olympic National Forest. Sometimes you just have to get away from it all. All of it, except your Mazda, of course!

State Route 1, California

One of the most iconic American roads, right up there with Route 66, is the 655-mile route that stretches most of the length of California. On this journey, youโ€™ll hit San Francisco, Los Angeles, and all the stunning coastline in between โ€” the road even goes over the Golden Gate Bridge. The Pacific Coast Highway section through Malibu is another highlight you wonโ€™t want to miss on California 1! And itโ€™s a great place to show off your ride to California girls, naturally.

State Route 12, Utah

Also known as โ€œA Journey Through Timeโ€ Scenic Byway, this meandering desert drive gets you out of those tree-lined Pacific Northwest roadways and ocean drives and into some staggeringly impressive canyons and rock faces. Crossing through Bryce Canyon National Park as well as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, this road wonโ€™t simply allow you to put your handling to the test; it offers scenery perfect for that new profile pic of you and your Mazda youโ€™ve been meaning to take.

State Route 12 Utah

Million Dollar Highway, Colorado

Though you can take U.S. Route 550 all the way from Albuquerque, New Mexico to Montrose, Colorado, itโ€™s the stretch between Silverton and Ouray in Colorado that will really wow you. The guardrail-free drive through Uncompahgre Canyon features narrow roads with steep drop-offs, so exercise caution. But hugging these mountain curves is definitely a thrilling drive. The road is often closed in winter, so check conditions before you prepare to zip through these bends. After this drive, if you feel like continuing the road trip, Route 50 through the Curecanti National Recreation Area is another great drive that winds along with the Gunnison River.

Going-to-the-Sun-Road, Montana

What better drive to take than the route along the first road built by the National Park Service specifically for automobile-using tourists? Following the Continental Divide through Glacier National Park, this strip of pavement winds its way around, and even through, the Rocky Mountains. Offering great views and engaging driving, isnโ€™t it about time to convince your lady to take that educational vacation to a National Park sheโ€™s been begging for โ€ฆ so you can drive your Mazda through these sick curves?

The High Road to Taos, New Mexico

Looking for a drive that feels like youโ€™re in a foreign land, but donโ€™t want to worry about shipping your Mazda to Spain? The High Road to Taos, aka State Road 503, needs to be on your list. A 56-mile scenic route through the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, this road features loads of great, twisty driving, but watch your speed as youโ€™ll head through villages along the way. If you want to skip the slowdowns, check out the โ€œLow Road.โ€ State Highway 68 is a quicker route, but it follows the Rio Grande and delivers some great views!

The Sea to Sky Highway, British Columbia

Letโ€™s not forget the asphalt of our neighbors in the Great White North! Picking up west of Vancouver by Horseshoe Bay, the Sea to Sky Highway follows Highway 99 all the way to Pemberton. Formerly a bit dangerous, the road has been improved so you can safely zip through the craggy Canadian coast up into the snow-capped mountains. If youโ€™re feeling more ambitious, you could always opt for Highway 1, aka the Trans-Canada Highway, which takes you all the way to the east coast. But weโ€™ll stick to recommending the easier-to-reach Sea to Sky HIghway for now!

 

This list should get you started on some exhilarating Western drives to add some fresh scenery and fresh curves to your Mazda driving. If you have other great western drives, drop your recommendations in the comments. And if you follow up on these recommendations, tag us with #CorkSport when you post to Instagram!

What’s In Our Garage: Dustin’s Custom Projects

So you may not realize this, but most of us at CorkSport are actually car guys/girls. While Iโ€™m sure most of you are at least somewhat familiar with what we have here as far as company cars, I was thinking you may be curious what some of us are working on when weโ€™re not โ€œon the clockโ€ so to speak. That being said, first Iโ€™ll give you a little bit of my background as it relates to cars.

When I first came to CS back in 2011, I was probably a bit of the odd man out when it comes to cars. While Iโ€™d owned and customized 40 to 50 (or more) cars, Iโ€™d never really been into the import scene. I was always more into lowriders, 4x4s, old school customs, minitrucks, and pretty much anything and everything that was not a tuner car. When I started, my daily driver was a fully airbagged 1976 Chevy stepside truck (see below), and I had two other old school projects at home: a 1955 Pontiac which was also bagged, and I was building a 1963 GMC big window shortbed.

This was my daily driver and that was more or less my normal ride height. Of course all of the tuner guys at CS thought it was pretty funny (which I get). A lot of people wonder โ€œwhy would you build something to drag it down the street?โ€ My answer is, โ€œbecause I can and most people canโ€™t.โ€

The Pontiac was a little bit classier and, while fully bagged, it didnโ€™t โ€œlay frame.โ€ This car was more about the custom body work that you would never notice unless you know what a stock โ€™55 Pontiac is supposed to look like, specifically the rear end.

 

Those vehicles are long gone by now, so what have I been working on since then? Immediately after those, I bought an MS6, which you may have seen in the past. We used it at CS for product development and testing on various products, so Iโ€™m pretty sure some pics made it to the old interwebs at some point. That was my first taste of a tuner car and, while it was fun to drive, it just wasnโ€™t my thing. So I sold it to another employee here.

 

Since then, Iโ€™ve played with a few 4×4 trucks, a diesel Silverado, and a โ€™97 F-150 which I still have and plan to build into a desert truck at some point (though thatโ€™s not yet in the project status). So what am I working on? Iโ€™m taking it back to the old school and building a minitruck โ€” and yes, it is a Mazda but thatโ€™s just a coincidence.

 

A little backstory on this truck and how this project came to be: Iโ€™m probably older than most of you, but when I was a kid in the late โ€˜80s, minitrucks were the thing. 15โ€ wheels were considered big wheels back then, and 195/50x15s were the standard low profile tires โ€” quite a bit different than today. So when I was 12 in 1990, my mom went and bought this โ€™89 Mazda B2200 which was already lowered and had fancy red 15โ€ wheels and a red tenneau cover. It was a pretty sweet truck by most peoplesโ€™ standards back then and IT WAS MY MOMโ€™S! Seriously, whose mom drives a sweet minitruck?

I donโ€™t really have many old pics of it, but this was when I borrowed it from her to haul a motor for my โ€™63 GMC project.

 

Even at 12, I loved cars. I would spend my time reading โ€œLowrider Magazineโ€ or โ€œMini Truckinโ€™โ€ and drawing pictures of customized cars, so of course I was in love with the truck. I dreamt of my mom giving it to me when I turned 16 and got my license (which didnโ€™t happen), and all of the cool stuff I would do to it. At some point when I was probably 14, the truck was stolen and wrecked which destroyed one of the wheels. You couldnโ€™t get them anymore, so my mom put the ugly Moderns on it, which you can see in the pic above. Then later something happened to the tonneau (donโ€™t remember what). Needless to say, time took its toll on the truck. It wasnโ€™t the same truck anymore, but it didnโ€™t change or take away all the time I spent daydreaming about all of the things I wanted to do to that truck as a teen.

 

So fast-forward 24 to 25 years. My mom was retiring and didnโ€™t need the truck anymore. At this point, it was just a 25-year-old B2200, so it wasnโ€™t worth much to anyone aside from me. She said if I wanted it, I could have it, so of course I jumped on it as Iโ€™d been thinking about this truck and what I would do to it for over half of my life. So what were my plans for it?

 

I wanted to mix keeping it how it was with doing some of the things Iโ€™d thought about over the years. So the first thing I had to do was put some red wheels on it again, as thatโ€™s how it was when I was young. However, I wanted to cross it with a bit of my preferred โ€œold schoolโ€ style, so I had to mix it up a bit. I picked up some 15โ€ steelies with chrome center caps and had the wheels powder coated red. I also wanted wide white wall tires, but I couldnโ€™t find the size I wanted, so I got other tires and added some Porta-walls for the wide white look. I then replaced all of the bushings and ball joints in the front end and added the new wheels and tires.

Anybody that knows me and my taste for vehicles would know that I wasnโ€™t done at this point, so I continued to collect components for the next step. Full air ride was on its way. I got everything needed to bag it, including a complete 4-link kit for the rear. (Sorry for the blurry pic; itโ€™s what I got.)

I then kind of lost motivation, so the truck largely just sat in my garage for the last couple of years. But a couple of months ago, I started working on it again. I started with notching the frame in the rear so when the suspension is aired out, the frame will sit on the ground (lay frame). I then welded in the 4-link rear suspension as seen below. I used the factory front leaf spring perch for the lower bars. (Theyโ€™re there; you just canโ€™t see them.)

Then I turned my attention to the front end. If you know anything about these trucks, you know they have a torsion bar front suspension. And if you know anything about bagging stuff, you know that isnโ€™t the easiest starting point for airbags. Preferably youโ€™d start with coil springs, because then you just have to remove the stock coil and put an airbag in its place (more or less). Since these are torsion bars, you have to remove most of the existing suspension and build everything you need in the front yourself. I recently finished putting the bags in the front, which is the hardest part of this project, and am now at the point where I can start making mounts and installing all of the hardware in the rear (a.k.a. the fun part).

The frame is, in fact, sitting on the ground in this pic.

 

If youโ€™re curious what my end goal is with this truck, Iโ€™ll fill you in: I donโ€™t want to go full custom show truck. I plan to leave the body, faded paint and all, just as it is. Iโ€™ll also leave the big ugly mirrors and stock rear bumper, which is the first thing most minitruckers remove. Really my plan was/is to leave everything outside stock, aside from the wheels/tires, and fully bagged. Then Iโ€™ll do a custom interior with a nice sound system. The point is not a show truck; I want the stock look of the truck my mom drove for years with the ability to drag the frame down the street and throw sparks. I also plan to see if I can get another red soft tonneau cover made, so it will be a bit closer to the truck I remember as a kid โ€” just better.

 

Other things Iโ€™ve considered are an NA 20b swap with a turbo 2 trans, cuz why not? Or maybe a boosted 302 swap, although that may be a bit overkill for such a small truck. It does have an automatic trans, so I donโ€™t love that, but it works fine for low and slow. Anyhow, thanks for reading, and I hope youโ€™ve enjoyed getting a little look at what I play with when Iโ€™m not at CS. Maybe youโ€™ll see some updates in the future, maybe not, or maybe youโ€™ll get a look at some of the other guysโ€™ projects around here. Let us know what youโ€™d like to see and weโ€™ll see if we can accommodate.

The Death of the Mazdaspeed

Masahiro Moro, president of Mazda USA, recently called the Mazdaspeed 3 โ€œchildishโ€ in execution. Most press took this as a kiss of death for the car and speculated that we might never see the model in the market again. I tend to agree. The โ€œMazdaspeedโ€ brand looks like itโ€™s on the way out the door, but not the performance model itself. Iโ€™ll explain.

Mazdaspeed | CorkSport
Mazdaspeed 3 is dead

Continue reading “The Death of the Mazdaspeed”

The New RX Unveiled

Mazda announced their latest concept car, the new RX-VISION. The new car will feature a rotary engine.

Letโ€™s talk rotary!!! Itโ€™s no big surprise to any Mazda enthusiast, or car enthusiast for that matter, that Mazda released the first full concept look at the new Mazda RX. If youโ€™re anything like us at the CorkSport office, you were giddy with joy talking about all the things the car may or may not have. I can say personally I was like a kid on Christmas morning as I saw the silk piece of fabric come rolling off the sleek sexy body line of the new car. I was thrilled. So like any true enthusiast, I want to share my thoughts on what I think we will and will not see when it comes to a production model a few years down the road.

Mazda rotary dreams have come true. Mazda announced their latest concept car, the new RX-VISION.

Mazda unveiled their latest concept car, the new RX-VISION with a rotary engine.

Let me first start by making it clear that none of what Iโ€™m about to say is confirmed. Itโ€™s my personal opinion on the car and what I think we will see in a true production model. SO here we go.

The first things to go will be the wheels and tires along with the side view mirrors. Iโ€™d say right now, with much confidence, that none of that will show up on a production model for various DOT regulation purposes. On that note, I think the A-pillar will move forward a lot and the roof line will be raised. I just donโ€™t think that nice low profile will actually hit the streets. I think itโ€™ll be a much more person-friendly entry for the average guy (or gal). Next, I donโ€™t think the turn signals will stay unless they either get larger or are very bright. Once again, I base this off the fact that in order for this car to be legal to sell in the U.S., it will have to pass all DOT and NHTSA standards and they have quite a few in regards to glass, lights, crash test ratings, and much more.

Now for what I think we will see. We were all pretty much told that it will get a rotary engine but no details about the engine itself were released. On that note, I think we can say with confidence itโ€™ll be a rotary engine under the SKYACTIV nameplate. It will have to be much cleaner and more fuel efficient than the outgoing Renesis engine to meet current EPA standards. I personally think it will be a naturally aspirated 3 rotor. I come to this conclusion because it will need the third rotor to make power — that really long hood profile tells me they need the room for something. Also, I think it will rev out real nice, as they all do, and be mated to a nice 6 speed manual of some sort.

The new Mazda RX has been revealed!

Like I said, this is all educated guesses of what I think will happen, but there’re still tons of maybes and what ifs out there. I think weโ€™ll see the car around late 2018 or early 2019, with a price tag in the mid 50k range. Regardless, I think Mazda will deliver a great car that will live up to its legend and Iโ€™ll definitely want to drive it.

If you build it, they will come.

Cheers,

Vincent