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Scotto, Nads & Mickey Rank the Most Legendary JDM Tuning Companies! FIRING ORDER 002

Scotto, Nads & Mickey Rank the Most Legendary JDM Tuning Companies! FIRING ORDER 002

Very Vehicular Mar 25, 2026 130 min
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About this episode

A three-way debate ranks the most legendary JDM tuning companies, with Brian Scotto joined by John “Nads” Naderi and Mickey Andrade. The conversation starts with how JDM lore is built—street outlaw mythology, racing series, and even cultural storytelling—and then locks in rules about “impact” (not just tech). They argue through top contenders like HKS, Top Secret, June Auto Mechanic, Trust/GReddy, Spoon, and Signal Auto, plus blind-spot swaps. The final compromise lands on Top Secret #1, HKS #2, June #3, Trust #4, Spoon #5—while everyone’s still unhappy about at least one placement.

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Technical Too Afraid to Ask
Concept

Hot Rod Power Tour

"...we patterned it super streete, patterned it after the Hot Rod power tour. Right. Which I know everyone's familiar with that one."

The Hot Rod Power Tour is a big car road trip where enthusiasts drive together and show their cars. The host is saying their event was built in a similar style.

Brand

Super Street

"...like, you know, and I'm gonna get into this more, but like, I was a Volkswagen kid, but the only real good magazine in the US was Super Street."

Super Street is a car magazine that focused on import tuning. The speaker likes it because it felt like it was part of the scene, not just reporting on cars.

Concept

breaking the fourth wall (magazine creators as characters)

"...the people who were making the content actually started to be, they were the characters become the personality there. And that was it. It was a breaking the fourth wall that a lot of magazines were not comfortable with at the time."

“Breaking the fourth wall” here means the magazine creators weren’t just behind the scenes—they were treated as part of the story and community. The speaker contrasts this with older magazine norms where writers had bylines but weren’t really presented as personalities.

Term

JDM tuners

"To our topic today is the top five JDM tuners of all time. So in all time and, and right, so we're basically starting in the early seventies, right?"

JDM tuners are companies in Japan that make performance parts and help tune cars. People follow them because they’re part of a whole car culture, not just because of the parts.

Concept

no American brands

"Correct. They're just not in the same playing field. Right. And then the other one was no American brands, because this is about the culture that creates Japanese tuning. I, if you look at Japanese culture outside of automotive..."

They’re saying they won’t include American brands in the list. The goal is to focus on what shaped Japanese tuning culture.

Brand

HKS

"...anybody remember the Goods master? Are they the, are they, would you consider HKS to be the first tuner? 100%."

HKS is a Japanese company that makes performance parts for cars. They’re famous for turbo-related upgrades and for being an early, influential name in tuning.

Company

Top Secret

"And Trust found out about it... We'll just let you do it. And then somehow the name became top secret... For me, it's super easy... I'm picking top secret and June Auto mechanic."

Top Secret is a well-known Japanese car tuning shop. They’re famous for building cool cars and also for creating their own parts, not just modifying one specific type of car.

Concept

BTS

"And they're filming a BTS of it too. So he's, so, so options there, they're filming it."

BTS stands for “behind the scenes,” meaning the crew was filming extra footage about what was happening. The hosts use it to describe the media coverage around the dare and the event.

Company

Spoon

"So I also had, um, and I'm going to pay for this later, but, um, I put spoon sports on there... And that's why I want, that's what I based my build on. That's why I chose them."

Spoon is a Japanese company that makes performance parts, especially for Honda cars. The idea they’re talking about is that Spoon focuses on practical, well-engineered upgrades rather than only extreme race stuff.

Concept

OEM plus

"Show us their oil filters. It's, it's very OM plus, right? It's, it's super OEM plus."

“OEM plus” means you upgrade the car, but you keep it feeling like a normal, well-made daily car—just better. Think “factory-like,” not “wild race car.”

Term

underglow

"...late nineties, early two thousands, you have like the over the top look going on in the Honda scene, right? You've got these, the Arab Uni kits and the like underglow and like, like the crazy colors."

Underglow is the colored lights you see under a car. It was a popular style in some car scenes because it looks flashy at night.

Term

carbon hoods

"That's what I loved about Spoon was that like their carbon hoods, the, the wings were all real actual dry carbon products."

A carbon hood is a hood made from carbon fiber. It’s usually lighter and looks more high-end than a regular hood.

Concept

rotary engine

"...I wanna build a rotary car..."

A rotary engine is a different kind of engine than the usual piston design. Instead of pistons moving up and down, it uses a spinning rotor, and it has a unique character.

Term

sunroof

"...Does he have a sunroof car? Uh, maybe. ... because like all of my cars are tin tops..."

A sunroof is the glass/roof opening option. It can make the cabin feel a bit tighter overhead, so they’re talking about which roof style lets them sit comfortably.

Term

SR20

"It yes, it does have the SR 20. It is. So I, I say, you know, they do have this like. Fervent, like underground following, but I'd regard Tommy Kyra as more of an outlier than Did it really"

SR20 is a Nissan engine family. It’s popular in the JDM world because it’s a common swap and can be tuned to make serious power.

Company

Top Fuel

"...I would also include top fuel. No one's even really mentioned Top Fuel. Wow. Forgot about them."

Top Fuel is a drag-racing category where cars are built to go as fast as possible in a straight line. The hosts are saying it doesn’t get talked about enough compared to other tuning stories.

Car

Integra

"...I was there when Tarzan ran the Integra, I was there when Steph ran his, uh, civic First in the night."

They’re talking about a Honda Integra that was racing. The Integra is a popular Honda model that many people tune for performance.

Part

cage

"So I'm redoing the cage. Same R 32. Yeah."

A “cage” is a roll cage—metal bars inside the car. It helps keep the driver safer in racing and can also make the car feel more solid.

Brand

FCP Euro

"Start in this story time interruption. Brought to you by my good friends at FCP Euro... I headed over to fcp euro.com, opened up the cart and just started filling it."

FCP Euro is an online parts retailer that sponsors the show. The host says they use it to buy replacement parts and upgrades for their cars.

Term

noise, vibration, and harshness

"He's all about noise, vibration, and harshness. And he's all about ride quality and the completeness of a car."

NVH is how smooth a car feels. It’s about how much rattling, vibration, and loudness you notice while driving. A car with good NVH feels calmer and more comfortable.

Term

camshafts

"...showed us the, some of the, some of the inventory and inside the inventory were camshafts. All those Camshafts were labeled with the top four brands."

Camshafts are part of the engine that control when the valves open and close. Tuning camshafts can change how the car feels—like more power at certain RPMs.

Term

slicks

"...it was a GT 300 shell cantilever suspension. It ran on slicks. It was unlike anything else..."

Slicks are race tires made for dry tracks. They have no tread, so they can grip the road better when conditions are right.

Concept

paved the way

"...it paved the way for a lot of other lookalike type concepts to take a car and basically do what Roof was doing to nine 11."

They mean that even if a project didn’t fully win, it still influenced what came next. Later builders learned from it and followed similar ideas.

Concept

dyno

"Smokey would be there on the dyno building a car, something..."

A dyno (dynamometer) is a machine used to measure engine power and tuning results under controlled conditions. The segment describes Smokey being on the dyno building or working on a car, highlighting how tuning companies validate changes.

Term

drifting

"because drifting was already there. But like pre drifting in the US was not, I was not aware of it."

Drifting is when a driver intentionally makes the car slide sideways while still steering through the turn. The hosts are saying it was more established in Japan earlier than in the US.

Term

USDM

"He did an an S 14, A two 40 SX USDM car."

USDM just means a car that was meant for the US market. It’s a way to say the build started with a car you could buy in the States.

Term

engine swap

"motor swaps outside of automakers was like not commonplace, which is like now the, like if you build a car and you put an engine in from the same automaker, no one's watching you on YouTube."

An engine swap is replacing a car’s original engine with a different engine, often from another model or even a different manufacturer. The episode emphasizes that swaps were once unusual outside of factory offerings, making early swap pioneers stand out.

Concept

Bonneville salt flat

"yeah. Drifting time attack, drag racing, top speed, um, Bonneville salt flat."

Bonneville Salt Flats is a well-known place where people try to set speed records. The hosts mention it because it’s a serious test of how well a car can handle very high speeds.

Concept

street cred

"That's that for me. Oh, wow. So you're still putting top secret above you if you take away the street cred of going and getting arrested, doing 200 miles an hour."

“Street cred” means how respected or believable someone is in the car community. Here they’re saying Top Secret gets points for reputation, not just parts.

Concept

David versus Goliath

"It's David, it's David versus Goliath conversation. Exactly. So it's really hard to compare, but it's okay to say that in a David and Goliath situation, top secret beats out HKS"

It’s a way to say one smaller player is fighting a bigger one. They’re using it to explain why a smaller tuner might still be more impressive depending on the criteria.

Brand

Vyper Industrial

"Vyper Industrial makes the best damn shop stools ever. Go buy 'em. Okay, now that we've got that outta the way, I wanna take a moment to really thank Vyper."

Vyper Industrial is the episode’s title sponsor, selling shop stools for working in garages. For listeners, it’s a reminder that the car community often supports practical workshop gear, not just performance parts.

Brand

Wera

"My obsession might even dwarf my addiction to cars. I love collecting unique and specialty tools, which is how I initially fell in love with Wera."

Wera makes tools like ratchets and wrenches. The host likes them because they feel well-made and hold up over time.

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