

that's quite some shopping list you have there.


Andy
Moderators: IMOC Moderators, IMOC Committee Members
PW@Woodsport wrote:One that not many people talk about is the 2zz,i think this would be a great engine for those that like the high revvy characteristics of the 4a but want more reliable power.That would probably be the way id go if i didn't already know how good the other options are.
Steve M wrote:.
.
.
.
in many ways a natural successor to the 4-AGE
JMR_AW11 wrote:What would be nice is if the range of 4AGE mods could be classed in stages.
eg many people would want simple mods for maybe a 10-15bhp increase.
then maybe mods for+20BHP to
+30BHP
(getting more complicated)
and then die hard mods for a trackday screamer.
The cost of an entire 3VZ clip is£900 and the installed cost is
£3k
(from Woodsport)
- so lets say the fitting cost is
£2100 on top on engine?
That's a not inconsiderable£3600 to get a mk1 MR2 running a 2ZZ-GE or is that somehow being unfair?
Think I could have a car with comparable performance using a tuned 4AG-E for£1800
- so half the cost?
Reasonable point?
Gersen wrote:Steve M wrote:.
.
.
.
in many ways a natural successor to the 4-AGE
Yup that's why Toyota asked Yamaha to design them a replacement for the 4AGE and called it the 2ZZ-GEthe conincidence is staggering
The only 2zz's I could find on Ebay were£1500 quid which is hardly the installed and running price in a mk1.
The cost of an entire 3VZ clip is£900 and the installed cost is
£3k
(from Woodsport)
- so lets say the fitting cost is
£2100 on top on engine?
That's a not inconsiderable£3600 to get a mk1 MR2 running a 2ZZ-GE or is that somehow being unfair?
Think I could have a car with comparable performance using a tuned 4AG-E for£1800
- so half the cost?
Reasonable point?
/exits stage left to bunker
PW@Woodsport wrote:
you have included full labour costs with the 3vz v6 swap but no labour costs when tuning the 4a,thats hardly fair is it? also a v6 mk1 is a million miles away from a tuned 4a.
.
.
.
.not even in the same league,the v6 is so much more powerful and torquey.
Gersen wrote:PW@Woodsport wrote:
you have included full labour costs with the 3vz v6 swap but no labour costs when tuning the 4a,thats hardly fair is it? also a v6 mk1 is a million miles away from a tuned 4a.
.
.
.
.not even in the same league,the v6 is so much more powerful and torquey.
I was trying to compare to a 2ZZ swap and the cost was to get fitted comparable perfomance to the 2ZZ- 160 to 189bhp.
And I reconed on labour costs£1400 on parts and
£400
(10h) on labour to hit 170bhp with the 4AGE.
Realistically the cost starts to get steep after 170bhp.
As it goes I could fit cams etc myself quite happily but not a non standard engine transplant.
I recon an afternoon of my time to get that up and running.An engine conversion would take me a hell of a long time
(2 months of weekends mebbe) given what I've read on the mk1.5, 1.6 threads and I don't have a garage to do it in
I think you're forgetting how hard these conversions are for people who are happy changing their oil but not much more.
I would love to do one myself but simply do not have the time or facilities(or the nerve to spend another
£3k on my mk1
![]()
).
£1800 is far more palettably personally given that I know I can do the labour
(-£400) and I have some of the parts already.
Realistically to hit 170bhp I recon the only bits I would need to get over what I have now would be cams(£400), bit of head work
(£350), HC HG
(£100?).
JMR_AW11 wrote:Gersen wrote:PW@Woodsport wrote:
you have included full labour costs with the 3vz v6 swap but no labour costs when tuning the 4a,thats hardly fair is it? also a v6 mk1 is a million miles away from a tuned 4a.
.
.
.
.not even in the same league,the v6 is so much more powerful and torquey.
I was trying to compare to a 2ZZ swap and the cost was to get fitted comparable perfomance to the 2ZZ- 160 to 189bhp.
And I reconed on labour costs£1400 on parts and
£400
(10h) on labour to hit 170bhp with the 4AGE.
Realistically the cost starts to get steep after 170bhp.
As it goes I could fit cams etc myself quite happily but not a non standard engine transplant.
I recon an afternoon of my time to get that up and running.An engine conversion would take me a hell of a long time
(2 months of weekends mebbe) given what I've read on the mk1.5, 1.6 threads and I don't have a garage to do it in
I think you're forgetting how hard these conversions are for people who are happy changing their oil but not much more.
I would love to do one myself but simply do not have the time or facilities(or the nerve to spend another
£3k on my mk1
![]()
).
£1800 is far more palettably personally given that I know I can do the labour
(-£400) and I have some of the parts already.
Realistically to hit 170bhp I recon the only bits I would need to get over what I have now would be cams(£400), bit of head work
(£350), HC HG
(£100?).
I agree that for many people the big engine swap is way too complicated/expensive/time consuming if you consider the alternative of simply buying a newer/faster car from autotrader.
If you price up the cost of a tidy donor mk1 MR2(£1k+) and then the cost of engine and labour you end up paying more than it would cost to buy a more modern car like an Impreza.
So if we are looking at a pure numbers game for best A to B per£ the most cost effective solution would be sell the mk1 and buy the Impreza.
The mk1 would still only see the back of the£4.5k? impreza for the first few corners on real twisty country roads, especially on a less than perfect surface.
dgh.mr2 wrote:JMR_AW11 wrote:Gersen wrote:
I was trying to compare to a 2ZZ swap and the cost was to get fitted comparable perfomance to the 2ZZ- 160 to 189bhp.
And I reconed on labour costs£1400 on parts and
£400
(10h) on labour to hit 170bhp with the 4AGE.
Realistically the cost starts to get steep after 170bhp.
As it goes I could fit cams etc myself quite happily but not a non standard engine transplant.
I recon an afternoon of my time to get that up and running.An engine conversion would take me a hell of a long time
(2 months of weekends mebbe) given what I've read on the mk1.5, 1.6 threads and I don't have a garage to do it in
I think you're forgetting how hard these conversions are for people who are happy changing their oil but not much more.
I would love to do one myself but simply do not have the time or facilities(or the nerve to spend another
£3k on my mk1
![]()
).
£1800 is far more palettably personally given that I know I can do the labour
(-£400) and I have some of the parts already.
Realistically to hit 170bhp I recon the only bits I would need to get over what I have now would be cams(£400), bit of head work
(£350), HC HG
(£100?).
I agree that for many people the big engine swap is way too complicated/expensive/time consuming if you consider the alternative of simply buying a newer/faster car from autotrader.
If you price up the cost of a tidy donor mk1 MR2(£1k+) and then the cost of engine and labour you end up paying more than it would cost to buy a more modern car like an Impreza.
So if we are looking at a pure numbers game for best A to B per£ the most cost effective solution would be sell the mk1 and buy the Impreza.
The mk1 would still only see the back of the£4.5k? impreza for the first few corners on real twisty country roads, especially on a less than perfect surface.
Sorry for what's coming to whoever doesn't like the answer but I can resist no longer!
I have had 6 Mark1s from Mark 1.5 via supercharged, track spec.4AGE to a totally bog standard n.a.
which was a lovely road car
- much faster than anyone would expect a to b as it was so confidence inspiring, unless you had to overtake, then it was a different story, get the map out and plot the overtake; revvy, noisy, fun
.
![]()
.
but gutless.
It was also an entertaining track car in the wet but rubbish as a dry track car- which it shouldn't have been expected to be, point being the light standard weight didn't help handling for the track.
So on my next
- which was stripped out and put onto Konis/ uprated springs etc.
I spent silly money upgrading and got a measly 145 BHP which didn't feel fast even when the car was stripped.
Next came a mental amount of money on a fully built 4AGE with head work, cams, throttle bodies, OMEX management and(the best bit as it gained c.
15 BHP straight away and more when re-mapped) a custom made exhaust that took 3 versions to size/ tune to best effect.
For c.
![]()
£6000 I got almost 170 BHP and sleepless nights re.
having to rev it so high that i worried about the likelihood of a breakage.
Plus it still didn't feel too fast even in the track car weighing less than 900Kg.
I had/ have 2 supercharged cars and even though heavier(one un-stripped, one only semi stripped and both T Bars
+ with the heavier gearbox) both felt far faster, even the 1st which was standard bar a large pulley kit, and allow much easier/ safer overtaking on road or track.
The one I have now has a RR verified
(Noble's) 190 BHP
/190 ft/lb torque.
It is much, much faster in a straight line than any n.a.
I have had
- the current one feels very little different to the 3SGTE I had that was supposed to be at around 225+ BHP at the boost level I used and certainly accelerates from low revs/ initial pushing on the throttle as there is no lag at all.
It cost me less to do that even paying for a Pace Chargecooler, OMEX ECU etc.
than to wring the 170- out of the n.a.
which I regard as a bad mistake for me.
Handling has NOT been adversely affected but both did have uprated suspension- one on the Koni route and one with a custom LEDA coilover set-up.
Why quibble about spending a little extra to get the suspension right when talking about spending
(more) money on engine tuning? An Imprezza WRX
(set up by a race team) I had tuition in on a trackday was v.
quick but nowhere near as nice to drive in corners and I know I was braking later and going through the bends faster in the MR2 I arrived in.
So, faster probably but more fun? I'm not convinced.
Anyway, from significant wallet bashing experience I would never again bother to tune the n.a.engine but think the sc can be a very good choice
(noise excepted!) for a car that is still pretty quick and very drive-able, but am considering the 3SGTE, or 3litre V6 route for the future
- track bias only as it would be in the track prepared car
- if I feel the need for more power
(or, heresy here perhaps, a turbo, Hyabusa bike engine with sequential gearbox etc.
![]()
-
how would that go!!!)
JMR_AW11 wrote:
Did I misread what you said about the light standard weight being a disadvantage on track? IMO the mk1 is too heavy unless driven at silly speeds on bumpy sweepers where it can feel lively(but as long as the throttle is nailed this skittishness can be ignored in my experience)
dgh.mr2 wrote:Yes JMR I was thinking mainly of your posts.I accept what you say but without wanting to offend have to say that I think your argument rather redundant as explained below.
My 1st point was that the sc engine does not in my experience spoil the handling, even on the standard(albeit JDM spec and imported MR2) though it was improved by each of the Koni
/ 30% uprated springs and
(much more so) the LEDA suspension modifications.
The 2nd was that, given the discussion was about getting as much power as possible(sane?) from the na, it would be silly to spend lots on the engine and still run on the standard 20 year old tired suspension and 1980s vintage wheels and tyres which to be honest makes me think your point is largely
irrelevant
- i.e.
why would anyone go that route
? Surely if money is set aside to improve the engine then some should also be earmarked
(1st
?!) to sort the handling and braking.
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My track car was fully stripped out, seam welded, caged, big-braked(310mm x 28 mm 4 pots) and dropped to c.850 Kg, corner weighted etc.
before I even touched the engine.
In my opinion the money was much better spent there than if I'd just had the engine tuned/ replaced first.
To me that was the basics done and then the engine could/will follow in what ever stages money allows.
Even at that weight it wasn't that fast in a straight line but a joy to handle(and even then quicker than most Elises and VX 220s I spent time on track with
- including the two VX220 owners/mates who had both had their turbo 220s upgraded by the same company to supposedly 290 ft/lb and came running up to me in the paddock at Cadwell imploring me to tell them the car wasn't standard but had a turbo on.
![]()
"Sorry, no.
" was the answer and finding out I had about half their power rather depressed them!)
I.E.an MR2 with or without a heavier engine/ box can be made to handle very, very well
- ask Jonny at Book a Track or see his posts on Piston Heads.
Admittedly my mind set is now more towards track use than road but the sc I bought from Alex and Anna, with new Konis, springs, uprated ARBs, polybushes and tyres- at 1/6 of the engine bill I met
- was a fantastic, safe, exploitable road car during the time
(mostly wet/ cold) that I kept it and the one I have now with LEDAs is better still even though more stiffly sprung it handles bumps, potholes etc.
better as the damping quality is so good.
Ask Alex and Anna
(who also sold this back to me) just what sort of cars they've p1**ed all over on track in it!
Luther I knew as soon as the bill- at nearly twice the estimate
- hit that I'd been done over but didn't find any estimate of a c.170 BHP
4 age build coming in at a decent estimated cost despite contacting the likes of RM, BJP and Raw Engineering.
At that time the 20V wasn't a well signposted alternative and conversions were pretty new too so
- the reason for quoting the cost was just to back up my opinion that I was stupid and wouldn't bother trying to push a n.a.
engine that far again but would go for a sc or transplant.
It might be interesting for folk to contact well known engine builders/ Toyota specialists and see just how expensive a decent power hike sounds like it would come in at once all the extras are taken into account.
Bet it won't be cheap.
Im all for engine tuning but high power 4age's are as mythical as unicorns as far as im concerned,either that or the people that own them never tell anyone about them.![]()
Raw specialise in importing low mileage, high performance Toyota 16v 4AGE engines from Japan.The Toyota 4AGE engine's legacy is that of the MK1 Toyota MR2 and Corolla Gti.
These 16V 1600cc engines can produce a power band from 135-175 BHP.They will rev to 8500RPM.
They are modern, smooth, efficient and reliable.
They are small in size but robust in nature, and above all they look magnificent
JMR_AW11 wrote:Im all for engine tuning but high power 4age's are as mythical as unicorns as far as im concerned,either that or the people that own them never tell anyone about them.![]()
There is a firm near me called Raw Engineering that tunes the 4AGE.
http://www.rawengineering.co.uk/RAW_engines.html
They offer a tuning package
4AGE 16v Trac Pac Performance Upgrade Prices
Cams(L480)
£360
Steel head gasket(L481)
£60
Vernier wheels(L482)
£120
Labour to fit£200
TOTAL£740
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Dunno what power this will get though..
.
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Raw specialise in importing low mileage, high performance Toyota 16v 4AGE engines from Japan.The Toyota 4AGE engine's legacy is that of the MK1 Toyota MR2 and Corolla Gti.
These 16V 1600cc engines can produce a power band from 135-175 BHP.They will rev to 8500RPM.
They are modern, smooth, efficient and reliable.
They are small in size but robust in nature, and above all they look magnificent
I did visit them a few years ago and I was very impressed with what I saw.I have a vague recollection that they offered me a similar mod list for 150BHP at a similar price.