iM Highlight: Mini Mall Crawler

This mash-up of Pick-n-pull and Kijiji parts started out as a bone-stock, Grandma-spec 2000 Subaru Impreza Brighton wagon. (Not joking, bought from an 80 year old woman.) From there, it turned into a Father / Son project between my Dad and I, with him doing the research, and me helping at pick-n-pull, doing simple tasks or things that require child-sized hands.

The base idea was the Subaru-part-only lift.
DSC_1403

Knowing that the Brighton was a base model bucket of simplicity, we were ecstatic that it did, in fact come with air conditioning. However, the sad, non-bolstered seats had to go, and were replaced with heated Forester seats as a bonus from pick-n-pull.
DSC_1449

DSC_1440

And in order to evade the fashion police for mismatched patterns, we modified some of the interior trim to fit the 50/50 rear folding seats out of the same Forester.

DSC_1410

All the parts for the lift were taken from Pick-n-Pull, but a few parts were simply too sad on the scrap cars and had to be bought at the dealership, (Thanks Rally Subaru!) but none were aftermarket. This includes Forester struts, springs, and other Outback/WRX/Forester suspension goodies. All wheel disc brake conversion was a must.

DSC_1432

Another must-have goodie for looking like an off-roader in ‘berta is a universal push bar. Add’s +5 HP and +5 Offroad points.  This was another awesome Kijiji find, for $50. Just had to lose the bottom portion of the bumper skin, and mod the mounts to bolt on. More function than form, but hey. Woulda’ jus’ look at it.

DSC_1427

To accompany the larger wheels and tires, we ordered “Universal” rubber fender flares from Summit Racing, in order to avoid the pain of chipping and cracking fiberglass or carbon fiber flares.

DSC_1418

The stock trim was falling off, so for ease of installation, we used external plastic clips instead of the stupidly painful Subaru clips, as well as gave the car a Monsta-liner second tone, to give it that “Outback” look, as well as protect it from rocks and hide some of the well-used-ness of the car.

DSC_1431

A couple more photos of the wagon frolicking in the snow:

DSC_1333

DSC_1357

DSC_1385

The mechanical mod’s are mainly limited to suspension and steering (column had to be lengthened because of the engine lowering), and cosmetic mods are fairly simple and inexpensive. These include the V5 USDM front bumper from my silver RS being cut in half (I broke the bottom of it, oops), and clear JDM corners from Billy’s GF8 (rip Gwen),

DSC_1405

as well as a Kijiji-bought Yakima Loadwarrior basket to hold the oversized spare tire and other goodies,

DSC_1420

with a Yakima ski rack on top, to haul boards and skis to the hill with the bro-dudes.

DSC_1443

Additional interior mods include a dash with a tach! Because the stock dash didn’t have one… It just had a nice Subaru logo to look at.

DSC_1435

Although you don’t really need it. -Sadface-

DSC_1439

A JVC single-din unit with Bluetooth to keep the drive enjoyable, as I appear to have misplaced all my cassettes.

DSC_1438

These switches (which don’t do anything yet, but will control lights and AWD in the future),

DSC_1450

Did I mention the drivers seat is fully adjustable, with lumbar support too?

DSC_1441

And even though it’s got the weird 4eat front-bias AWD system, you can still do some sweet AWDonuts.

DSC_1390

And park it places that your average Camry simply can’t.
It may not be the fastest,

DSC_1345

or the most rugged,

DSC_1368

or even the best looking;

DSC_1350

But it sure does the job and makes me happy.

All the photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/99391113@N05/sets/72157649556221027

iM Winter Crown – Now Available!

With the recent cold snap that has hit our hometown of Calgary, it is only fitting that we release something for everyone to stay warm in for what is yet to come.

Available in limited quantities is our iM Winter Crown. The iM Winter Crown beanie (or ‘toque’ as us Canadians like to call them) features an internal fleece band to keep your ears warm, and a ribbed woven mesh to save the rest of your head from the cold winds. Also, you will find our iconic “iM” crown embroidered on the center, something that is for sure to last even longer than the cold winter months ahead.

Get yours now in the online store before they sell out! Buy 2 or more and save 20% too!

iM Random Snaps: Winter Beater Beating Winter

Steve Chan had been bugging me for a while to test fit the CCW’s on his 87 Accord LX. His car isn’t just a normal winter car, he drives slammed. Since we had nothing better to do on Boxing Day, I called him and a few other homies over to do it. After rolling fenders and lunch we finally got the wheels on the car. The specs on the wheels are 16 x 8.5 +15. Anyways enjoy the pictures, we had a ton of fun doing it.


RWD Conversion? Nah just rubbing rubber.


No such thing as too low. Could always go lower.

A Bear in a Tutu?: Rant

Winter

The mercury drops. The smell of the arctic air engulfs the roads of Canada, infused with the overwhelmingly visible cloud of exhaust fumes. After a long tease of “sorta nice” weather, winter finally makes its grim appearance on Canadian roads and for the (very, VERY lucky) readers that are enjoying plus degree weather, I envy you; frolicking in the sand, high-fiving your fellow surfers using lingo like “Hang Ten” or whatever it is you cool people say nowadays. While you enjoy the temperate weather, here we are scraping away frost from our windshields.

But no matter.

Even though people all over the world are enjoying different weather patterns right now, I think we can all agree with one thing: it’s good to be prepared.

The day before the first snowfall was predicted to hit Calgary roads, I prepped my 2004 Outlander and “winterized” it in preparation for winter driving: full tank, topped the fluids, did an oil change, checked my TripleTred tires for tread wear, pulled out the trusty ice scraper/brush combo, extension cord for those extra cold days where you need a plug-in and etc. I woke up very early the next day to add an extra half-hour to my usual commute and rather than wallowing in despair, I looked at my frost-covered window, stared Mother Nature square in the face and told her to bring it.

As I drove around Calgary streets at around 6:30AM, the roads are covered with a mix of compacted snow and fresh-fallen snow; the City cleaning crew focuses on major arteries so I pressed on and cranked that heater to red-hot. However, I did notice that while some changed to their winter tires (very distinctive with its black steel rims), most still had all-season tires on. For those of you that are unfamiliar with winter tires, they’re just normal tires that have a different compound which doesn’t turn your tires into rocks when below freezing temperatures occur. (You can also tell that they’re winter tires because there’s smaller grooves within the tread for better traction)

This prevalence of all-seasons turned a simple four-lane road into a gongshow; wheels were spinning wildly with the naïve mindset that if you put more gas into it, it will somehow grip. People were aggressively overtaking these cars, cutting my braking distance by half. Alert, I ventured on and watched as people struggled to move from the intersection, halted by the black ice while people in winter tires zoomed past; the bourgeoisie guffawing as the proletariat suffered. All in all, I actually got to my destination early, safe and sound.

However, I had all-seasons on.

Now, you probably thought this was going to be an advocacy for winter tires or to rally up support for Alberta to mimic our Eastern counterparts and make winter tires mandatory. On the contraire and I’ll tell you why in one phrase,

“A bear with a tutu on is still a bear.”

To translate, “a bad driver with winters on is still a bad driver”. You can bolt these on and be on your merry way but if you still drive like a dick, you’ll still fail. For some reason, people in winter tires think they’re invincible and everyone’s IQ drops a couple points whenever snow falls. I think it’s the cold restricting blood flow to the brain.

Whenever it’s below zero, normally civilized people become Neanderthals on the road, ignoring solid lines and just merge onto oncoming traffic while the car in front tries to, but now can’t because some a-hole took the spot and won’t let them in. Or whensomebody signals to enter your lane, that doesn’t mean you should go faster and cut them off. That’s right; I’m talking to you Mr. Pickup Truck with your winch and your high beams blinding me. WHY DO YOU NEED HIGH BEAMS?

Sorry. I got a little off-topic there. What was I talking about?

Oh right; winter tires. If you want something mandatory, the government should focus on winter driver’s education. Winter driving is a totally different ballgame than normal driving and you need to be more alert, more cautious and more aware. My belief system is that you have to know how to use to abuse it; if you know that no tire will save you from black ice, you won’t zoom through it at 80km/hr. I have driven a car with winter tires on and I did notice a difference but given my driving habit and current tires, the difference was minute.

My point is, while winter tires are great compliments to winter driving, I think the key to safe winter driving is sensible driving; keep your distance, follow roadsigns and markers even though you can’t see them through the snow, and be courteous. Winter tires are tools and not lifesavers. If you have them, use them wisely.

In short, don’t be a bear in a tutu.

============

What do you think? Do I have enough justification or am I insane in the membrane?

Comment away!

– Don