What happens when kei cars take over your life? Pure joy
Oct 12, 2024•Channel
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Video Details
PublishedOct 12, 2024
Duration8:09
Video IDGvrPnk9rJrE
Languageen
CategoryAutos & Vehicles
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views14.6K
Likes683
Comments59
Engagement Rate5.08%
Likes per 100 views4.68
Comments per 1K views4.04
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Description
Collecting kei cars is more than a hobby for Nick Jimenez—it’s a full blown addiction, and he wouldn’t have it any other way.
[CARISMA is our show about the connection between enthusiasts and their cars. See the full playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHa6PXrV-yIjdroCPPYISm4OyNQOV6z4V]
“You can get people breaking their necks for a $6,000 kei car, which people try to get in a $60,000 car, or a $600,000 car, but I’m getting that in something that doesn’t even have 60 horsepower.”
A few years ago, with his streetwear business Way Before the Fame sidelined by world events, Nick needed a new creative outlet. That’s when he discovered kei cars, the tiny Japanese vehicles growing in popularity (and controversy) in America as more imports come ashore.
“I was like, oh, these are kind of cool, but what am I gonna do with a two-seater pickup truck in New York City? But the more I thought about it, I was like, you know what? I can get a right hand drive car and feel like I’m in Japan for 5 Gs.”
He bought a tiny Suzuki pickup, then a van, then a Jimny (which he heavily modified), then a Wagon R. Eventually he found this lightly modified 1991 Suzuki Cappuccino in Hawaii, had it shipped to California, and drove it across the country to his home in NYC. Then the real work began: he bought a parts car and swapped in a whole new Limited interior, added Blitz coilovers, a strut bar, an HKS blow-off valve, N1 ECU for +50 hp, new paint, and more.
Now, kei cars are his life. If he’s not at the port inspecting his latest buy—he tries to get a new one every few months to enjoy and then resell—he’s filming them, fixing them, or just thinking about them. And what he’s come to believe is that his obsession stems from the pure driving experience a kei car provides, and the reminder that life is fleeting, so we better enjoy it.
“It's kind of like we’re all like-minded in a way. We don't take life too seriously. It has no airbags, it's not safe, it's old. It just doesn't make sense to own a kei car in America at all. But the people who do, to me, I feel like we are on the same page. Like we have to both understand that we could technically pass away any day from just driving a car like this on the daily basis.”
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Previous episode → https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AO4IgPecM50
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