It's like you wanted something that was comfortable
to take on these long distances.
You went from the M2 coupe to the big M5
but still had the sauce when you wanted it.
Do you think it's like a natural progression
for most car enthusiasts out there?
Or do you think there's some people that are like,
ah, whatever it is, I'm just gonna keep.
I think there is some people that get locked
into the same mentality and run with that
or they even, they start getting into the hobby later
and that's perfectly fine.
But for me, I think it got less and less.
Cause again, I was in automotive photography
so I just wanted to like build a car
that looked really nice and like take it to car shows
and I wanted to win awards.
Like when I first started really getting into it,
that's what I wanted to do more than anything.
Right now, I could give a fuck if I won an award.
I don't care at all.
I've done it, I have a bunch in my basement.
I keep them, I'm super proud of those.
But now I don't care about it.
So now I want something I can drive
and I can take to Gatlinburg when we go
and I don't think twice about it
or I take out to the field or I go visit my parents.
I want that more than I want to like take photos of it
or take it to a car show cause I've been to so many.
Yeah.
Would you think that, do you think you'll ever get back
into something like that again though?
Like still, like to the point where it's like,
say if you had the option of like,
hey, I'm gonna keep the forerunner, it is what it is.
It's like, do you have that itch to go back and be like,
man, I'd love to get that Cobalt SS again
or like that SRT-4.
100%, absolutely.
I think about it all the time.
I scroll marketplace every single day.
And I think that's part of the reason too,
like after I got the forerunner,
I bought a motorcycle so quickly
because I needed something to fill the void
where I can be a hooligan, I guess.
I definitely, and now it's perfect, I love that.
But still, like if I had some fuck you money right now,
I would buy a golf harlequin and I would lower it,
put it on some wheels and it would be my Sunday cruiser
and that's all it would be for.
Or I'd get like a really clean Mark 4R 32
or 20th anniversary GT.
I'd love to get one and just simple mods
make it look really nice and just a Sunday cruiser.
I would really, really like to do that.
In other sense too, I've loved to see
what you guys do, like tracking or drifting.
Again, if I had some fuck you money,
I would like get a drift car or a car to go learn time attack
and stuff like that.
Experience something new with that.
I think that would be really cool too.
So I'm always torn and I think it depends on the day
you ask me if I want one of those.
So that part of me is still there and it's active
but it's just expensive and time consuming
and there's other parts of life coming up
and it's like, do we want to upgrade our house soon?
It's like, I gotta think of that.
But I think I will.
Whenever that happens, if it ever happens,
I can get to a point where I'm like comfortable.
I would love to have a car that I don't need to worry about
driving every single day.
I can set aside and just do stuff to it
when I want to do stuff to it.
Hell yeah.
I think you already answered kind of my next question
cause this is something that I've been thinking about.
It's like, look at my, you know,
like our parents for instance, you know, my dad,
he would talk about, oh, back in the day
I had a Mercury Cougar XR7, you know, had the Cleveland in it.
He's like, I fucking love that car.
I'm like, that's so cool that like, you know,
he used to have like a dope car like that.
You know, and it's like knowing my dad,
it's like he was never really like super like into cars
but it's like, I think it was kind of the thing
where it's like, you're getting a little older.
You gotta like prioritize stuff, right?
Start a family, like doing like taking your house,
working, doing business stuff, like all that sort of stuff.
And it's like, he always talked about wanting to get
an old, he's like, I'd love to get another
Mercury Cougar XR7 green, you know?
Like that was what he always wanted.
It's like, he's kind of looking at like that generation, right?
Like, oh, those are like the boomer cars, right?
It's like, what are our boomer cars?
Like when we're 40, 50 years old and like, man,
I used to have a bagged, wide body RX-8 back in the day.
Love to get into one of them again.
And our kids are gonna be like, what the fuck?
It's gonna be funny, the concept of like a barn find
of origin, they're gonna find some like Rocket Bunny BRZ
in a part somewhere.
That's what it's gonna be.
That is really weird to think about is different.
My dad's was a, he had a Ford Mustang Mach 1.
It was the first car he ever bought.
And he brought it home, he's cheesing.
And my grandma's like, what the hell did you buy?
And she's like, let me drive it.
She got in, drove it with it, just burn out,
spun the tires, made him sell it on the spot.
And he never, he never got it back.
So I'd love to have one of those two or get him one.
That would be the coolest thing.
But do you guys think like Camaro's Mustang,
stuff like that, those muscle cars
will carry the same weight that they did back then?
Back then they were iconic.
And now I feel, and I'm not trying to throw
anyone under the bus here, but they almost feel like
they're just so common now.
That's like, it's like traffic almost.
So do you think like in 20, 30 years
when we see a Mustang from this generation right now,
will we have that like nostalgic feeling towards it?
It's hard to tell, right?
Like I really don't know.
I think the iconic ones we will,
like I think, I'm gonna offend some people,
but like the New Edge Mustangs for example,
like I don't think those will age very well
because they haven't in my opinion.
But the iconic ones like the S650 that just came out
or maybe the S550, right, the older one.
Well the Camaro when they facelifted them
and brought them back, the Chargers,
I think the Challengers for that matter,
I think those like complete revamps of bodies entirely
when they had the big V8s again,
manual transmissions and all that.
I think those will age fairly well.
I could totally see in 15 years or now
being like, I wanna V8 in my life,
when everything's electric and all this stuff.
And so you go back and you're like,
this thing like shook the ground with it, you know.
I could rev it with the key fob.
Yeah, I think stuff like that will age well.
If you have the taste for that kind of thing.
Absolutely, I can tell you in 30 years,
if I seen a bone stock black Supra,
like a GR Supra, I would want it super bad.
I think that car will age extremely well.
And I think it'll be sought after in the future too
because like pretty much every single one now
is getting modified as it should.
But I think those stock really clean low mileage ones
in the future will be a big deal.
I always bring it back to like the FRS for me.
Oh yeah, that's another one you have.
I was cleaning out some stuff in my office the other day
and I came across a gift from something
that we used to work with when we parted ways.
They made me a really nice metal print
of a nice photo of the FRS.
I was like, damn, that was such a good fucking car.
And it's like, I look back and it was kind of thing.
I was like, man, imagine like 15 years or so,
like start like a family or something like that.
And kid comes to me and is like, dad, what is this?
I was like, oh yeah, your dad used to be cool.
I had cool cars back then.
It was like, we got to learn about the old muscle cars
and stuff growing up and go to a car show
and it was all Mustangs and Camaros and Chevelles
and stuff like that.
And my mom is like, oh yeah, I drove a charger for a while.
And I'm like, what?
That's a family and a half.
One of these, what is that?
So it's like, imagine like that reaction coming
from like a 12 year old version of me
like you used to have an FRS.
You know what those things are worth on it?
I was like, I don't want to think about it
because I sold it, you know what I'm like?
Yeah, I remember in Little Town Beaver Dam
there was a car show at the bowling alley
that they'd host, I think it was like every other Sunday.
And it was all classic cars that would show up,
muscle cars and stuff, but there was this one guy
and a 240SX old guy, bone stock,
the cleanest 240 I've ever seen in my entire life.
And I remember I talked to him like, what the hell?
Like why do you have this?
I'm so confused.
I was like, bought it brand new off the showroom floor.
And the second I bought it, I knew it was gonna be special.
So I just never drove it and I kept it nice.
And now I can't get people to stop offering to buy it.
Every time I go to the gas station,
every time I bring it out, people want to buy it.
But that just tells me how special it is.
And I'm glad.
I think he still has it.
I think he does because he had,
when I talked to him that time,
it was many years ago now,
but he had absolutely zero intent.
He's like, I want to keep this car forever.
I love it.
It's a fantastic car.
And again, it was bone tight.
There was nothing changed on that car
other than the oil and that was it.
That's crazy.
So you think that car for you,
that'll be like the Gulf Harlequin?
Mm, it's like, you know, that's the car
that you wind up with having for like a long, long time.
It's like that's your-
I would love to buy that and keep that car,
but I don't know if it's that car
that like I look back is like nostalgic on
because I've never owned it.
I don't have any memories with it.
So that's why it's like,
I think it would probably be the GR Supra.
That was a car that probably I had
like some of my most favorite memories in.
Like that's the car like I got married in.
We had in our wedding photos and stuff like that.
So like it has a lot of sentimental value with it.
And the Focus ST too, that was a car of first for me.
It was the first car like Drag Race and Auto Cross.
And I did like all the mods myself on it and all that.
So like that one is,
I just can't see myself being like 60, 70
driving a Focus ST.
Maybe, maybe I wouldn't say no,
but it was a fantastic car.
But I don't know, maybe an RS.
Lars?
Oh man, I have,
I want another M2 one day.
Yeah.
I regret, I don't say I regret it,
but I miss that car so dearly.
I get memories popping up all the time
because I did so much with that car.
I had it for four, five years.
I put 80,000, it was nine miles.
Like literally just going to get a gas
and stuff at the dealer.
That's all it had, brand new.
On the truck for me.
And when I sold it, I had like 83,000.
Wow.
And like it was literally every first you can imagine
was with that car.
And that wasn't the car for me to keep forever.
Frankly, I abused it a lot.
Yeah, those are hard miles you put on.
Yeah, and the car was an absolute champ.
I had no problem driving.
I did drive it to Chicago to sell it,
but at the same time,
I would love another M2 competition
or an M2 CS, like the slightly better version of it.
Just bone stock, like 10,000 miles on it.
And that would be like my weekend cruiser.
I craved that car really, really bad.
It just felt so good.
I know everything about those things.
It sounded, for me, it sounded really nice.
But the other one, like you talked about earlier,
a little bit about having like a slow cruiser car,
like a something or something.
Alex and I, when we first met,
we used to talk about having like fast cars someday.
And then we'd like have the complete opposite,
which is like an old, like a 70s or 80s car.
And it was always the Mercedes,
like the 280 for him.
And I really want an old six series,
like from the late 80s.
Sharknose ones.
I just want one of those on like some nice
BBS three-piece wheels and just dump to the ground.
Oh, that would be so sick.
Like automatic transmission.
I don't care.
Like you're never going over the speed limit in it.
Just like going to get dinner.
It's a walker.
Yeah.
Dude, there's some cars, even though they're piss low,
for some reason, it is just super enjoyable to drive them.
Like the E30 was a great example.
I don't think I've driven a car slower than that,
but I love driving it.
That's another one that actually before,
I've shared the story about the E46,
and I love that car somewhere.
Before that, the very, very first car,
I was like, what is that?
Was it like a baby blue E30 convertible back in Germany?
And I've never,
I don't think I ever even drove our E30, the old one.
So I've, I really, I want one of those someday.
And it's another one of those,
like meet your hero car.
So I'm scared I won't like it,
but I feel like I have to own one at some point.
As long as, I mean, as long as you know,
it's just slow as piss and you don't mind that.
Everything else is perfect.
I love it.
Like, I don't get it.
You get in and like you feel nostalgic.
And I never had an old BMW like that, really.
My brother had like an old M3 back in the day.
And maybe that's where I got some of it.
I don't know.
I would get in that car and I'm just instantly like,
yes, I love this.
And I think a bone stock one, just minty would be.
That's the thing.
I would need to find one that's like, like,
and I know they're going to be stupid expensive.
That's how I do this.
But I would want like a,
I don't care about miles necessarily
because we know everything's going to get fixed
at some point on these, you know,
they're 35 years old now.
But I want one like that's completely clean,
like zero rust.
Like I want a new dash in there
because they all crack and all that stuff.
And I think I'd really enjoy that.
Yeah.
Another one for me would be the Honda S2000.
Cause my buddy Neff had one and I don't know,
we made a ton of memories in that car and driving around
and I'll never forget it.
Like he let me drive that car a ton.
And then also, yeah, they're fantastic.
That would be a phenomenal Sunday.
Like there's a reason the demographic is so widespread
on S2000s, like you have guys that are slamming them.
You have guys that are drifting them as we've seen.
And then you got like 60, 70 year old guys
and women guys and gals driving these.
I always see a bone stock, you know, yellow S2K
and there's an older lady driving downtown with it.
Just smiling.
Dang.
I want that to be me.
There's at least two in my area.
There's a black one and a red one.
Yeah, I see the red one here all the time.
Yeah, by two old different older gentlemen.
Like they have to be 60, 70 years old.
I love it.
I just cruise in it.
I love that.
I think that car is so perfect for that.
It's a good cruising and drop the top.
One of the only cars that pulls off a convertible well.
And it's just such a good driving experience.
And again, not fast.
They're not quick by any means.
But the feeling it gives you while you drive it,
it's hard to put a word on that.
How it makes you feel.
What about you, Gels?
I've been thinking that.
It's like, initially I was going to say like the RX8
because I always, I do want another RX8 at some point.
But now that I'm more like, I think of it,
I honestly might want to go back to like a 2G DSM.
Like finally, like I never had the GSX.
I never got the turbo version.
Like it was my first car that I learned a ton of stuff with.
But it was the GS, right?
And it's like that whole time I was like,
man, I'd love to boost this thing.
I'd love to get a GSX.
I'd love to get a GS, like even GST.
But like, I think like, if it was like, yep, I made it,
is when I have a minty clean GSX in my garage.
That's when you'll know.
It's a great choice.
I've, you know, it was kind of,
you brought it back to like,
oh, it was a car we had in our wedding.
It was a car we did.
Dude, that was the car that,
like I had in high school and, you know,
I got to know Maggie like with that car.
Like she had her lights,
she was riding before me because she was a year older than me.
So it was like, she saw me like go through
and like kind of like fall in love with cars
at the same time and like see that transition.
And it was like, and the journey with like the Eclipse
and like, you know, the places that we would go
like on dates all the time with that car.
We went to homecoming or like prom in that car.
Right, right.
Like that kind of stuff.
I love to get back into one of those.
And it's like, I've always tried to keep an eye out for,
you know, just like a stupid clean second gen Eclipse.
They're out there.
I know they are.
They are few and far between.
They're climbing.
They're either climbing in price
because they're staying nice or they're just rotting away.
Yeah.
So many of them rotted away.
Even the ones that weren't like abused.
It's just like, they were prone.
Yeah.
So it's like sitting and rotting.
Cause that's essentially what killed mine
was just the rot and the rust.
It was just like, I don't feel like I hated working on it
because anything I touched just disintegrated.
And it felt like any, anytime I worked on it just made it worse.
And then eventually it was just like,
I don't know if this thing's structurally set.
Like the subframe feels like it's rotting away.
It's like the strut towers on those are known
to rust out and it like was.
And it's like, I had already cut out stuff
and like welded plates and shit in there.
And it's like, it's only a matter of time
before the whole thing just fucking, you know?
So it's kind of like a sad end to that car.
And it's like, I think that's why, like I think about now.
It's like, I'd love to redeem it in a way.
I'll be like, this is a car that I always wanted
when I was in high school.
And it's cool to have like, cause you know,
when we were younger, you know, didn't have,
don't have any money yet or anything.
You get like, you get what you think is cool.
Yeah.
Knowing that, you know, you have to explain
all your friends why you didn't get the better one.
Yeah.
That's fine.
But so like, I think going back and getting like,
same thing with me and the M2, right?
The M2 comp was an amazing car,
but the CS came out six months after I bought the competition.
And I was like, damn, if I just waited.
Yeah.
And those are way more expensive.
So I still wouldn't have done it.
But now going back, getting a CS would be such like a,
it would like close that chapter.
Yeah.
Yeah. 100%.
Cause it was like, I kind of fell into the car
cause it was like, I wanted the clip so bad.
I want a second gen of clips.
I want a second gen clips.
I wouldn't shut up about it.
My mom was like, finally, she was a school teacher.
She was like, well, I taught a kid
that had one of those damn things at some point.
She's like, I'll message him on Facebook
and see if it's still, I'm like, yeah, that's not going to.
Sure shit, he still had it, the timing chain snapped.
Oh.
And so, or the timing belt snapped, sorry.
And he just parked it and he's been sitting in the garage.
He's like, yeah, he's like, I was just going to junk it
if you want it, you can have it.
And I was like, I'm not going to pet.
Like I want this car so goddamn bad.
I don't care what it takes to fix it up.
I want it to free clips.
What are you talking about?
I'm going to take it.
Not even realizing that there were different versions of it,
you know, that the GS was a front wheel drive,
naturally aspirated, basically glorified neon.
But, you know, it was what it was.
And it was like, I was always chasing that like,
man, the GSX would be so cool.
And it's like, I know that they're not.
It's kind of like a Mark IV super, right?
It's like, they're not crazy out of the gate, factory wise.
I got a chance to drive in a maculet,
like probably like the one that I would have kept forever.
It was stupid.
GSX got to drive it and experience it.
And it's like, it wasn't fast.
It wasn't, it wasn't like groundbreaking
in the terms of performance,
but it felt so fucking right.
Like it made the sounds that I always wanted.
Like it felt the way that I always wanted it to,
the, this sounds stupid,
but like the dash on the turbo versions,
it was like, I always wanted the fucking two gauges
right there because that meant that you had a GSX.
And it was like, I was like, this just feels so right.
And it's like, I'd love to get,
I'd love to chase that
and eventually have that to my own one day.
It's a little stuff like that that matters so much
because I always want it.
And this is, I thought I was getting it in the M2,
but I didn't.
All the M3s always have this thing
where the around the tachometer,
there's little lights like red and orange lights
that tell you basically don't rev it past
where the lights are when it's cold.
And as the car warms up, the lights turn off.
And I was like, I want that.
I want that because the 92s have it and the E46s
and the M2 didn't have it.
So I still was craving it
after I was daily driving in an M car.
I was like, I want that.
I want that so bad.
And then the M3 had it.
I was like, yes, there it is.
I made it.
Those little quirks that just like make the car remember,
the grass is always greener.
You can always find something better.
But even like, I had a 2009 Cobalt SS in the 2010s.
Well, one, mine didn't come with that like classic
Cobalt SS high rise spoiler.
I always thought that was the coolest thing
when I was younger, mine had the low rise.
So I went wingless.
I always wanted that high rise spoiler.
But the 2010 Cobalt, the turbo ones,
I made the turbo charge ones.
I had a factory boost gauge in the A pillar, which is sick.
That's cool.
Yeah, but the 2010 ones had a digital display,
like a rectangle that came out of the A pillar
and you could go between like different settings
and it would showcase different stuff.
It was like, man, I wish I would have got a 2010
because that's so sick.
But it's so funny how like those little things
stick with you and you're like, damn,
I just wanted that one.
It's like what I hyper fixated on so much.
It doesn't change anything.
But it's what you wanted.
That's what you like.
And that's right too.
It's like the 20th anniversary GTIs.
I fucking, I love the lip kits on them.
I love the Ricardo seats.
And it's like, do those change anything
from any other GTI?
Not at all, but I just, I love them.
And I need those.
It just completes the picture in your mind.
And that's how you end up at a car show
in 40 years with a board out front
of your basically stock car.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So guys, down below, I want to hear all of your
like one cars that you need to get one day.
I want to hear what they are.
If they have a weird quirk or feature,
make sure to include that too
or something that's got to be with that car.
I'd love to hear it.
I'll go through it.
I'll make sure to read these
because I find it so interesting and fascinating how
everyone's is a little bit different
and they all have a story behind it.
So thank you guys so much for listening.
If you need coilovers, Fortune Auto
is the final sponsor of Martini Works podcast.
And they've been phenomenal
through the many, many years.
I've had them on all of my vehicles
and I've just enjoyed the hell out of them.
So huge shout out and thank you to Fortune Auto
for sponsoring Martini Works podcast.
You can head on over to martiniworks.com,
select the ones you want.
And if you have any questions
or you want to work on maybe customizing them,
we can help you do that
because Fortune Auto hand builds,
hand assembles all of them here in the USA.
So that way they can customize them
to any spec you want.
And if you want to upgrade to Swift Springs
or anything like that,
you're more than welcome to do that.
Otherwise they have them off the shelf
ready to go to for you.
And we can ship them out nice and quick for you.
So, Jels, you got anything else?
No, I'm looking forward to a future now, man.
Yeah, I want to eclipse again.
I started out of another savings
at Columbia, get that car.
Lars, thank you for coming on.
Do you have anything else?
Yeah, no problem.
It just reminded me the next thing I want
is like the car,
like one of those little quirky things.
This one may sound really stupid,
but the the CS cars
and a lot of the Porsche GT3 cars
have the little cloth that you guys use
to pull the door shut.
Oh, yeah.
Little pull tabs.
That's the next thing for me.
I really want one of those.
Those are cool.
Absolutely.
Well, thanks again, guys.
I hope you have a fantastic weekend
and we'll see you guys on the next podcast.
Absolutely.
About this episode
A lively discussion unfolds as Dakota, Gels, and Lars dive into their automotive journeys, sharing stories of their past cars and the nostalgia tied to them. They explore the evolution of their car preferences, from performance-focused vehicles to practical daily drivers, highlighting the significance of memorable experiences. The conversation touches on the challenges of car ownership, the thrill of modifying vehicles, and the unique quirks that make certain cars special. Listeners will enjoy the camaraderie and insights as the hosts reflect on their automotive passions and future aspirations.
Support the podcast by modding your car at https://martiniworks.com/Would you sell a Supra to drive a 4Runner? Today we talk about some of the pros and cons going from a sports car to an off road style vehicle. #cars #rotary #podcast A HUGE thank you to Continental, Fortune Auto, and Malco for being the official tire, suspension, & detailing product of the MartiniWorks Podcast! 🏎️Check out the main channel!🏎️: @MartiniWorksOfficial 📦We also have an unboxing channel 📦: @MartiniWorksUnboxed Follow Lars @lars.martiniworksFollow Dakota @dakotastoneFollow Gels @akagels