RX8Club.com

RX8Club.com (https://www.rx8club.com/)
-   General Automotive (https://www.rx8club.com/general-automotive-49/)
-   -   What happened to the Furai? (https://www.rx8club.com/general-automotive-49/what-happened-furai-239321/)

8 Maniac 10-18-2012 01:48 AM

What happened to the Furai?
 
I remember someone mentioning a while back that the Furai no longer exists. I forgot what the explanation was, but I believe it mentioned a fire maybe.

I'm mostly wondering if there are any sources on this or if it was something that was kept relatively quiet. That said, any exact information would definitely be appreciated! I've tried searching and there's next to no information on this.

ASH8 10-18-2012 04:32 AM

Yep, caught fire and burnt to the ground...

Not sure if it was while on loan to another country, in storage or shipping storage, or on a wharf, I know it had the wrong BP fuel put in her while in the UK (when on Top Gear UK) and would not start..

Zoom44, I think has the real answers...;)

zoom44 10-19-2012 12:04 AM

it happened at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in the UK in 2008

EdwardsB 10-19-2012 09:40 AM

A part of me just died reading that, its been my desktop for the past few years...

zoom44 09-10-2013 04:03 PM

Top Gear finally fesses up about the Furai fire

http://www.topgear.com/uk/imageresiz...615&Height=347

but you'll need the mag to read their version of the story Top Gear magazine: 20th anniversary special! - BBC Top Gear

Jedi54 09-10-2013 05:48 PM


Originally Posted by zoom44 (Post 4369608)
it happened at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in the UK in 2008

this is the version of the story I remember.
It's been known for years now that it burned to the ground, I just didn't realize TG has anything to do with it.

was it because they put the wrong gas in it and then it got run at the Festival? :scratchhe

zoom44 09-10-2013 05:59 PM

yup

lesper4 09-10-2013 06:42 PM

The rumors and now truth have been around for a while but why leak the truth so late? Between Top Gear, Racing Beat and Mazda I am sure they could built something prior to the next release of the rotary with their profits.

monchie 09-10-2013 08:10 PM

Never knew it happened till now... :(

a12chan6el 09-10-2013 08:22 PM

Yeah, didn't realize this happened a while back. I saw it in an episode of Top Gear but the didn't run it. I also found this article: http://oppositelock.jalopnik.com/10-...rai-1287732981. Not sure how much of it is true.

Mazdaspeed RX8 ver2 09-10-2013 08:58 PM

I'm leaving work now because im depressed... this sucks..

alnielsen 09-11-2013 08:44 AM


Originally Posted by a12chan6el (Post 4522504)
Yeah, didn't realize this happened a while back. I saw it in an episode of Top Gear but the didn't run it. I also found this article: 10 Things You Didn't Know About the Mazda Furai. Not sure how much of it is true.

So, instead of calling them Lambo doors (on a rotary car), we should call them Furai doors? :)

zoom44 09-11-2013 09:27 AM

oh dang. sorry. got the date wrong. i knew it had run at Goodwood festival of speed before burning and when i went looking for vids i found a bunch from 2010. but thats when they were POSTED. going back they were all of the 2008 festival and it was in 2008 when it burned during the top gear shooting. sorry for getting the date wrong. time flies ya know?

alnielsen 09-11-2013 09:41 AM

Rumor has it that Mazda is pulling out of GA GX and selling the cars to privateers. Also, that they are moving to a higher class in the new united series. Could they be building a new furai type vehicle (which was based on the Courage LMP2 car) to run in LMP2?

alnielsen 12-02-2013 11:25 AM

Top Gear's Explaination (Long)
 
Exclusive: how the Mazda Furai died - BBC Top Gear For the article and related pictures.

In early 2008, Mazda revealed its Furai concept car, a carbon-composite, race-bred masterpiece. Later that year, Top Gear magazine ran the world's only drive of the Furai. And then the car mysteriously disappeared, never to be seen again. Was it spirited away into some secret collection? Walled into a glass display case? Not... quite. But first, a bit of background.

Over a period of three years between 2005 and 2008, Mazda produced some stunning design concepts showcasing its ‘Nagare' design language. And although Mazda subsequently evolved Nagare into the ‘Kodo' theme in 2011 with the Shinari concept (translated into road-going metal like the CX-5 and Mazda6) the Nagare dynasty remains a glimpse into a world where Mazda designers were set free to push boundaries. There were no limits or restrictions. The Furai? Basically the poster boy of Nagare, the last and most eye-popping vehicle to be born of that philosophy. Created as a concept to show how a racecar for the road might look, it was the brainchild of a design department deeply proud of its motorsport heritage, the most extreme concept of its generation. It won global acclaim, but was more than that: the Furai was possibly the defining concept car of its era. Which makes what happens next all the more tragic.

Bentwaters Parks, 19 August 2008. 11.52am. Time for one last shot. The Mazda Furai growls threateningly on the runway. No trailer-queen concept car, this is a living, fire-breathing breath of fresh air. Under its carbon-fibre bodywork lurks an LMP2 Courage chassis and a 460bhp rotary race engine. Running pure ethanol. The Furai is very noisy. It is very fast. And right now, Top Gear is the only magazine in the world to have driven it. It will remain so.

This morning saw The Stig arrive from nowhere, drive very fast down Bentwaters' 1.3-mile runway, nod with apparent approval to writer Bill Thomas and then disappear in the direction of Great Yarmouth. Following Stig's exit, Thomas has spent the last hour firing the car up and down the tarmac under the watchful eye of the Furai support team, works driver Mark Ticehurst and the local fire crew. With the story in the bag, Bill departs to file his copy, and I'm left with photographer Lee Brimble to ensure we do justice to what surely must be one of the most stunning concept cars ever created.

As we've been shooting, I've spotted the Furai's central exhaust spitting a thin cone of blue flame on downshifts. It's this I want to capture on our last run. Ticehurst, duly instructed, heads off at pace, and Lee and I jump into the tracking vehicle and barrel after him, leaving the fire and support crews at the end of the runway. We catch the Furai over the crest of the runway (the tarmac at Bentwaters rises in the middle, something that's about to take on significance) and track it down towards the far end, Brimble snapping furiously. As Ticehurst begins to slow for the turn and drops down through the gears, things start to go wrong. The Furai is making a noise less Le Mans racer and more... fatally wounded elephant. "That doesn't sound good," mutters Lee, face pressed to camera as we track the Furai around its turn.

Then, as the Mazda straightens, Lee and I spot the same small lick of fire deep within the engine bay at the base of the bulkhead. Priceless concept. Flames. Ah.
"FIRE! OH GOD, IT'S ON FIRE!" I state calmly, resisting the urge to panic. Ticehurst, of course, can't hear me, so I bury the throttle to try to catch him and warn him of the danger. Unsurprisingly, even a wounded, smoking Furai is faster than a people carrier. It takes a few seconds or so of furious gearshifting and horn honking for us to draw alongside the now-smouldering Furai.

"MARK! FIRE! FIRE! GET THE HELL OUT! MARK, IT'S ON FIRE!" I bellow, still entirely keeping my panic under control.

Ticehurst kills the engine and jumps out before the car has even reached a halt. He starts running. He keeps running. The lick of flame has taken hold, and now the engine bay is engulfed. Where are the fire crew? I realise that, because of the natural rise in the middle of the runway, we're out of sight. As Brimble scrambles from the tracking car, I thrash towards the horizon with horn blaring and lights flashing, desperate to draw the fire crew's attention to the unfolding situation, which, though shrinking in my mirror, is clearly worsening by the second.

Eventually alerted, Suffolk's finest leap into their truck and set off towards the plume of smoke, siren and lights blaring. I turn back to the Furai, where the scene is even grimmer. Ticehurst is crouched, head in hands, 200 yards from the car, watching the fire take hold. As the ethanol burns, it's clear the game is up. With the wind blowing from directly behind the Furai (the name aptly translates as sound of wind), the fire is being fanned inexorably towards the nose of the car.

The fire crew arrive with a traffic cone wedged under their truck. Hoses out, they douse the flames, the force of the water blasting the bodywork from the Furai's carcass, revealing the bones of its substructure. One of the fire crew rips at a door to get better access to the bulkhead. Still burning, it comes off in his hand. At first, I'm annoyed at the disrespect he's showing this priceless, irreplaceable car. Then I realise that's like worrying the Titanic's deckchairs are getting damp. As the crew hose the Furai, its Mazda badge gets blasted off and onto the tarmac, where it comes to rest surrounded by charred carbon fibre.
From spotting the first flame to staring at the soggy, scorched carcass of one of history's most beautiful concept cars has taken less than eight minutes. The Furai is dead. Dead with shocking speed, savagery and finality.

Disposal of the body is swift. The remains of the Furai are gathered up and repatriated to Mazda's Advanced Design Studio in Irvine, California; where it now lies is anyone's guess.

But a piece of charred Furai still sits on my desk, a reminder of how quickly and how badly things can go wrong. I look at it daily. Understandably, Mazda didn't want the Furai's demise made public at the time, but their decision to allow us to publish this story hopefully marks the start of the next chapter in the Furai's history. If ever a concept car deserved to rise from the ashes, surely it is this one.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:03 PM.


© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands