Het begon allemaal heel bedeesd, eerst hier en daar wat striping, ander bumper, grotere spoiler en toen ging hij helemaal los.
We hebben het over Rich Fox uit de UK, die z’n Ford Focus RS Mk2 zodanig heeft aangepast dat je bijna goed moet kijken om wat voor auto het gaat, buiten de echte Ford Focus die-hards.
Van een standaard Ford Focus RS Mk2 is in dit geval geen sprake meer, wat er allemaal aan is veranderd, dat vind je hieronder in het officiële bericht.
Hoe dan ook het zal als je de sponsors niet mee rekent, op een fiks eind bedrag uitkomen. Ook zal niet iedereen dit mooi vinden en hem meteen in de voetsporen willen treden. Toch is het een aparte, niet alledaagse & zeer brute verschijning van de Ford Focus RS Mk2.
En zou je verwachten dat de Focus RS Mk2 van Rich flink in gewicht is toegenomen, maar niets blijkt minder waar, afijn Rich Fox legt het je allemaal uit.
Fastcar (UK) ging bij Rich Fox langs en kreeg alle details te horen, je leest het hieronder:
We get under the surface of Rich Fox’s insane tuned Ford Focus RS Mk2…
Well, then – where do we start with Rich Fox’s Mk2 Focus RS? Winner of Fast Car magazine’s 2018 Car of the Year. It’s a polarising car, that’s for sure… it couldn’t be more love-it-or-hate-it if it had been carved from solidified Marmite, and that’s just what we love about it. It’s completely shameless, unselfconscious, no-f**ks-given, it exists solely to amuse its mischievous owner. What’s particularly noteworthy about this distinctive project is that it represents the zenith of the current tuning scene – or, perhaps, where the scene will be in a couple of years’ time.
You see, back in the 1990s and early-2000s, brash was best; every car in the cruise had a massive fibreglass bodykit, the biggest wheels that could physically be squeezed on, insane audio installs, the works. Through the late ’00s and early 2010s, this gave way to a cleaner, crisper, Belgian-inspired OEM+ vibe, subtlety ruled, although we’re now seeing a significant resurgence in wide-arch ostentatiousness and wheel obsession. Where do we go next? Rich Fox reckons you’re looking at it. “I wanted to hit 2020 modifying early, and I think I’ve achieved that,” he laughs.
If you’ve been to a car show in the last few years (pretty much any show at all, to be honest), you’ll have seen Rich there in his ever-evolving Focus. Or if you didn’t see him, you’ll have certainly heard his Section 18 exhaust ricocheting like artillery fire across the showground. And if you’re a reader of our sister mag, Fast Ford, you’ll have seen this black-and-green monster on the cover in January 2017.
Back then the 671bhp brute was running gold wheels and slightly less extreme aero, but under the skin it was a very different car indeed. The project’s changed so much since our chums on the other side of the office got their hands on it – Rich is a one-man modding machine, he’s addicted, obsessed, he can’t leave the damn thing alone. Sure, he had the country’s most extreme Focus, but he needed to push it further.
“Around the time of the Fast Ford cover, I was also getting a lot of exposure from the RS’s appearance on Jamie_FYD’s YouTube channel, and the car went viral very fast,” Rich explains. “By that point I had hit the limits with car parts you could get off the big companies, so I stopped modifying and enjoyed the car for a little while, showing her off at as many shows as possible. I’m a very big fan of one-off cars and extreme bodykits from back in the day, and there wasn’t really much of a scene for that any more – but I had a vision of what I wanted to do. And I really pushed this vision after Trax 2017, as the RS was getting tired from all the hard use and needed restoring. I listened to one comment on social media when someone said ‘Ain’t we bored of this car yet?’, and I thought ‘Yes, I bloody am’.”
So Rich, being Rich hightailed it back to the Isle of Wight and, the Monday after Trax, the tuned Focus RS Mk2 was stripped down and lying in bits strewn about his garage. While he pondered his next move, he got on the phone to Bola Wheels to see if they’d be willing to make him a set of B12s in a 19” diameter, which they were happy to do, and this acted as a real shot in the arm for the project.
“After that, the RS went to John Russell at Lake Autocentre for a complete engine rebuild, which was so impressive when complete,” says Rich. “Even the engine block was a beautiful lime green! And when the car was back in my garage with a fresh new engine, I started getting contacts from people that do one-off custom parts. These are guys I’d been watching all through the years and I knew they would help me make something totally stupid!”
The cast of characters included Kevin Johns at MRM Speedshop, Gary Howard of Carbon Addicts, Richard Pryce at SS-Tuning, Kuro Carbon, and Ross Parking at RP Panelling, all of whom had their part to play with bespoke craftsmanship, and when it came to the heavy-duty work Rich enlisted Martin Goddard at MJG Grits to set about cutting arches, making custom seat brackets and external oil cooler brackets, attaching the mighty front bumper, and building that huge rear diffuser which is so strong you can actually use it as a work bench!
“With all the stripping down, I managed to remove 255kg of weight, as the RS is a heavy old lump,” Rich grins. “I was working on panels of the interior while the engine was being rebuilt, so it was a case of putting the puzzle together; I love my sound systems and I knew I would get bad comments if I put big ICE in, but with everything I removed from the car or cut off or replaced with carbon fibre, it works out that it’s still lighter than a standard RS!
So I can enjoy ear-bashing music while being lighter and faster than it was before. I chose Vibe Audio equipment because these guys are always helpful with advice, plus their speakers are so bloody loud with top quality. It was a bit of a mission building a huge system around the Jamsport rollcage, but I managed it!”
The exterior aesthetic has been a real labour of love too. Aside from the frightening aggression of the WRC front bumper and rear spoiler, the roof scoop, the crazy aero and all the carbon, it’s the livery that provided the real head-scratcher. It took Rich four months’ worth of evenings to design it all up perfectly, before he could send all of his precise measurements to Mark Chamblin at Mark One Graphics. But that’s emblematic of the build as a whole, really – no stone has been left unturned, and Rich insists on perfection. It’s not to everyone’s taste, but it’s what he likes and that’s the only thing that matters.
“After nine months of crazy hours and crazy work – and to be honest, some of this stuff shouldn’t have worked! – me and my mad team have created something the likes of which you will never see again,” says Rich. “This car was created with so much time and passion, you can appreciate every part of it individually.” Which provides the perfect fusion of then-and-now Ford tuning: this guy wanted to create something so extreme, so out-there, that it’d set a template for the near-future of modifying.
But at the same time, he’s tapping into the desires that have made modifiers tick for generations. Rich’s car has a lot of admirers. It also has a lot of detractors – but so did Carisma’s TVR Cerbera, and Max Power’s Project Thunder, and Mattias Vöcks’s Volvo Amazon… without mould-breakers, the scene stagnates. We need cars like this Focus. The madder the better.
TECH SPEC MK2 FORD FOCUS RS
Styling:
ACR Composites WRC front bumper with Zunsport mesh, carbon fibre canards front and rear, Maxton Design skirt kit, MJG Grits custom rear diffuser, Monkeywrench gen-4 twin-projector headlights, carbon bonnet with Auto Specialists WRC vents and Mustang bonnet bulge (with huge vents and custom carbon fibre blades), retro Mustang bonnet clips, Auto Specialists Mk2 RS wide-arch bodykit, M-Sport roof scoop, Streamline carbon exterior kit, Kuro carbon exterior custom kit, WRC carbon rear spoiler, custom carbon F1 wing mirrors and base plates, carbon rods and custom splitter with fire extinguisher, Fox Styling one-off vinyl art with materials and logos from Mark One Graphics, rain light, and about 2,000 lock nuts and bolts from Screwfix!
Tuning:
2.5-litre 5-cylinder 20v turbo, Wiseco pistons, K1 rods, block mod, Stage 2 cams, GTX35 turbo on gold ceramic-coated SCC tubular manifold, Tial 45mm external wastegate, ceramic-coated v-band downpipe, Milltek decat, KMS Section 18 exhaust with 6.5” slash-cut tips, 1,000cc Bosch injectors, Bosch 044 fuel pump, swirl pot, Auto Specialists inlet manifold, 70mm throttle body, Auto Specialists Group A air filter, Auto Specialists Stage 3 100mm-core front-mount intercooler, Auto Specialists radiator, Auto Specialists oil cooler on custom MJG external bracket, Pro Alloy boost pipes, Auto Specialists dress-up kit, Auto Specialists filler tank and cap, NGK iridium HR9 spark plugs, Syvecs ECU – control mapped, aircon delete kit, custom gold heatshield, 6-speed gearbox, Xtreme carbon twin-plate clutch, Auto Specialists billet alloy and polyurethane torque mounts.
Chassis:
8.5×19? ET35 Bola B12 satin black wheels, 235/35 Yokohama ADO8R tyres, Eibach 40mm spacers all round, BC coilovers, Whiteline anti-lift kit, Summit bracing kit, K-Sport big brake kit – 8-pot calipers and 365mm discs.
Interior:
Sparco snap-off steering wheel, custom Corbeau seats with custom MJG Grits brackets, Sparco harnesses, Jamsport rollcage – powdercoated in custom blue sparkle, carbon panel trims and FYD logo, Toucan touchscreen for Syvecs, Little Devil custom vent pods, touchscreen system for in-car lighting, carbon RS Fox gearknob, Kuro fire extinguisher, flocked dash and trim, boot build comprising 3x Vibe Black Air S4 amps, 1x Vibe M4K mono class D amp, 3x Vibe Black Death component speakers, 4x Vibe 8? Black Death mid-range speakers, 6x Vibe Black Death 15? SPL subwoofers, Yellow Top secondary battery, 2x Black Art graphics, Mk2 RS plaque designs.
Meer video’s van Rich Fox’s vindt je hier
Source | Fastcar.co.uk