Murican trucks are pavement princess short-bed towtrucks rather than haulers and offroaders now, sadly. I'd love an affordable open-bed hauler with some modern creature comforts (good AC, heated steering wheel, defrosting windshield/rear-window, ventilated seats, android auto, relatively low bed-height for easy loading)
Depends on the model. The Colorado and Ranger are both excellent off-road vehicles. The Colorado won truck of the year last year, even beating out the Toyota Tacoma. It's a 4x4 with great off-road handling, but it still drives nice on the road, and it can pull 7000 lbs. It's a really nice all around truck, for people who want a truck to do truck stuff with.
real pity GM killed off Holden. not really in the know but the last utes should be quite recent if expensive for a Murican to get hold of in left hand drive.
One of my neighbors jacked up an old school VW bug. The thing is the same height as my sprinter van, or 96" / 8' tall. It's totally ridiculous and awesome at the same time. He normally has it parked at his shop, since he built it as an advertisement of what he can do, so I can't provide a picture right now, but I will try to remember to post a pic when I can.
There's two ways: Modify a Miata; Make something look like a Miata.
Most would think it's easier to modify a Miata. That's sorta true. One could relatively easily replace the suspension, rims, and tires to make it look like the OP. But, the first time it's off-road it'll likely bend the frame.
The frame needs to be reinforced to function off road. That's generally a huge pain in the ass. It's much easier to shorten the frame of an existing SUV or light truck then attach the Miata's body and panels to it. It's much easier to make a truck look like a Miata than make a Miata into a truck.
But, this particular vehicle is very lightweight. Frame reinforcement might be much easier. A Miata hobbyist or Mazda mechanic would know because there's likely only one way that makes good sense for this specific model. My best guess is that because the Miata frame needed very little it was chosen for this purpose. I'd guess it's a modified Miata.
Next time ask the owner anything. Everyone who owns something like this is dying to tell others all about it.
And between "my buddy cleetus PAID me to take trash off his hands and I turned it in to a sick off-road Miata" and "I have mortgaged my home twice, my wife left me, and I owe 350,000 dollars to some shady Iranians on top of that"
The "easy" way is to take a truck chassis, and swap the body. The hard way is to swap the rear axle with a live axle, put lift spindles on the front, adjust just about everything so it's remotely drivable, all the little bits and bobs associated with it
I don’t know if folks still do it, but when Miatas first came along, some people dropped v8 engines into them (the nickname for those cars was “monster Miatas”)
It's such an incredibly scuffed build, though. Matt is a madman.
He shoved a ham sandwich and a bunch of other shit in a carbon fiber mold to make a point about arbitrary it is what you put in them (and I think he was running low on chopped carbon tow), then he had to dig out the sandwich later and fix it because that one was too much.
That wasn't for the Dodge, though. That was for a custom built salt flats speeder. Fucking wild dude.
On the one hand I love battle Miatas, on the other hand I would much rather see NAs being kept as original as possible at this point. If I were going to do this I would start with an NC for sure.
Exactly, clean NAs are just gonna get rarer and rarer because of people fucking them up like that, sort of like it's been with BMW E30s or any of the Skylines.
There's a company called Exomotive that sells conversion kits to turn them into dune buggies, so I assume the drivetrain must be good for that sort of thing (or at least good enough plus cheap and common) and