Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Unusual leather clad car made in Russia about 5 years ago


Irkutsk customizer Evgeny Mikhlik bought a 1993 Toyota to make an original show car, a variation on the Volga GAZ-21, powered by a Toyota 2JZ-GTE, then a 1GZ-JEn (what ever those are) with fiberglas panels over a tube frame, covered in buffalo leather, with under the hood airbrushing by airbrush artist Mikhail Zolotov





http://englishrussia.com/2018/09/30/russian-oligarch-exclusive-car-for-sale/
https://www.popmech.ru/vehicles/15053-v-bizoney-shkure/#part0

the body design will seem familiar I think, as it was perfect when they did it a decade prior to this when the Holden Efigy was made


giving credit where it's due


5 comments:

  1. The 2JZ-GTE is a Toyota turbocharged three litre in line dohc six with four valves per cylinder, mostly seen in 1990s Supras. It can be made to produce a lot of horsepower. A much stronger engine than the M series that preceded it. The turbo M engine would blow head gaskets and run bearings.

    The IGZ engine is the 5 litre V12 used only in the Toyota Century. The V12 has been around since 1997 and used examples have been available for engine conversions. I know of one here in NZ fitted to a Cressida. I am not sure about the JEn suffix you quote but most are 1GZ-FE.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Two things. First, it looks like a foot ball. Second, what's up with the swastikas in the trunk? I thought the Russians hated Nazi's.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes, but leather cars are rare. Some people might want that for a show car, just to turn heads and get free publicity. The design isn't seperate, clear swastikas, so, I have to give benefit of the doubt. It's too close not to be coincidence though. Maybe it's just a design, maybe it's subtle hiding in plain sight. But the swastika was a good luck symbol for centuries before the Nazis hijacked it, and can still be found in Buddha temples, old Coca Cola advertising, etc. So, I don't get bothered unless I see skinheads tagging a church with a swastika... it doesn't even bother me to post the swastika bearing Zeppelin, or Auto Union race cars. Not many people are trying to push that Nazi crap, 75 years later, so, I think most people don't get to jumping to anti-semitic notions without some real skinhead neo nazi additional nonsense to really prove there is malevolence intended

    ReplyDelete
  4. which is to say its probably not swastikas, people who want to make a statement nev er half ass a swastika

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agreed. Yes it was a sign of good luck, in fact I believe it was used as a moniker on the Dodge brothers cars back in the 1920's?

      But, it still looks like a foot ball. ;)

      Delete