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This Datsun Model 16 Coupe is actually a pre-war Japanese car.Jonathan Gitlin
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Hand-painted Datsun logos adorn the Model 16’s hubcaps.Jonathan Gitlin
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This oddity is the Fuji Cabin. It was powered buy a 5.5hp engine, and can seat two.Jonathan Gitlin
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With just three wheels, I imagine the Cabin’s handling can be somewhat exciting. [Edit -I am an idiot, it’s only “exciting” if the three wheeler only has a single front wheel.]Jonathan Gitlin
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A year before the Cabin came the Suminoe Flying Feather. Those tires wouldn’t look out of place on a mountain bike. They do look a bit out of place on a car.Jonathan Gitlin
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A 1962 Hino Renault PA62 sparkles under the lights at “The Roots of Monozukuri: Creative Spirit in Japanese Automaking,” an exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum.Jonathan Gitlin
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This is the Toyota 2000GT. Only 351 were made, which is a shame.Jonathan Gitlin
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No Jaguar E-Type ever looked this good!Jonathan Gitlin
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Hood louvres, wing-mounted mirrors, and an enameled badge—what else do you need?Jonathan Gitlin
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If you told me this Nissan Silvia CSP311 was really an Alfa Romeo from the early 70s I’d believe you.Jonathan Gitlin
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The Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S, which began the marque’s long relationship with the Wankel rotary engine.Jonathan Gitlin
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I’m almost done with the beige cars, I promise. This is a Honda N600.Jonathan Gitlin
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Ah, there’s a splash of color—a Can-Am inspired Nissan R382 race car, powered by the company’s first ever V12 engine.Jonathan Gitlin
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What a wonderful tangle of pipework.Jonathan Gitlin
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Upstairs from the Monozukuri exhibit is another 2000GT, this time one that featured in the Bond movie You Only Live Twice.Jonathan Gitlin
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Again, this blows any E-Type out of the water when it comes to looking good.Jonathan Gitlin
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Next door to the Monozukuri exhibit is “Fine Tuning,” which features Japanese-American customs. This is a Mazda RX-3 racer.Jonathan Gitlin
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Weird is the only way to describe a Bosozuku car.Jonathan Gitlin
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Check out that front splitter!Jonathan Gitlin
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The interior suits the outrageous exterior perfectly.Jonathan Gitlin
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Decals on a Toyota Cresta “Kaido” Racer.Jonathan Gitlin
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What car doesn’t look better with a maneki-neko on the dash?Jonathan Gitlin
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Call me a Philistine but I just don’t get the stance thing. This just seems really dangerous.Jonathan Gitlin
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I do dig the window decals though.Jonathan Gitlin
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I must have spent hundreds of hours racing Nissan R390s in Gran Turismo and Forza.Jonathan Gitlin
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I am positive I had a Matchbox version of this Dome Zero supercar as a young child.Jonathan Gitlin
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The Dome from behind.Jonathan Gitlin
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Jonathan Gitlin
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Last, and maybe least, is this Honda S2000 from 2 Fast 2 Furious.Jonathan Gitlin
LOS ANGELES—Like most nerds, I love spending time in a good museum. It doesn’t matter if it’s planes, video games, cars—even creationists. (OK, that last one wasn’t good, per se.)
When it comes to good car museums, the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles is one of my favorites—right up there with the wonderful Lane Motor Museum in Nashville. Both have quite different foci. At the Lane you’ll see more rear-engined Tatra sedans than you’d ever think possible outside of the Czech Republic or Slovakia, not to mention dozens and dozens of voiturettes and Kei cars. (Oh, and some Group B rally stuff.) Meanwhile, the Petersen often plays host to equally rarified but often much more expensive fare. At a conference I attended there last year, it was often hard to concentrate on the panelists and not the pristine Ferrari 250GTO that just sat there, a few feet away…
A recent trip to LA afforded some downtime, and how better to use it than a quick visit to this palace of vehicular delights? I caught the tail end of an exhibit called “The Roots of Monozukuri: Creative Spirit in Japanese Automaking,” which opened last summer and runs until February 10. (Monozukuri is translated as “the art, science, and craft of making things.”)
While some of the cars on display will be familiar to many of us—like the rotary-engined Mazda Cosmo or the breathtaking Toyota 2000GT—there were plenty that were completely new to me. Take the Fuji Cabin 5A, a three-wheeler from 1955 with staggered seating for two that manages to out-weird the British Peel P50. Or, the Suminoe Flying Feather was born the year before, and it rode on four tires that would look more at home on a mountain bike than a road car.
Others were more elegant. If you told me the 1966 Nissan Silvia CPS311 was actually a Lancia or Alfa Romeo of the the early 70s, I’d believe it. And my predilection for racing cars is well known, so it’s no surprise I adored the vibrant blue Nissan R382 and the complicated tangle of metal and wiring that surrounds the company’s first V12 engine. I’ve already mentioned the 2000GT—between 1967 and 1970 Toyota made just 351 of these gorgeous coupés, which nowadays command at least a six-figure price at auction. In fact, there are actually two 2000GTs on display at the Petersen—upstairs on the third floor, in an exhibit on movie cars, lives one of two 2000GT convertibles made for You Only Live Twice.
Sticking with the Japanese theme, next door to the Monozukuri exhibit is a second gallery of Japanese-American customs. “Fine Tuning” features some of the weird and wonderful vehicles specific to some of Japan’s automotive subcultures. And weird really is the only way to describe a bosozuku car, with its outrageously big front splitter and exposed, car-length, yellow exhaust pipes that emerge from the hood.
All those cars, and plenty more besides, are featured in the gallery above. Because they’re off-topic, I’ve left out the amazing collection of road and racing Porsches from the ground floor, as well as some other Petersen delights. Best to save those for another rainy day, don’t you think?
Listing image by Jonathan Gitlin
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1453503