This video also sheds light on the difference in crime between Japan and the U.S. In America that place would've been robbed clean or really vandalized a long time ago.
I lived in Okinawa when I was a kid between 1996-2001 and I remember this shop and cars that would drift in the Naha Industrial district by the seawall would have their shop stickers on them.
I lived there 1990-93 and this shop seemed very lively at the time. I recall there always being a red AE86 Trueno out front with full TRD widebody and they had a "no U.S." sign on the shop door. Kind of a heyday of street racing back then where they would shut down the main highway on the island in front of Camp Lester every single weekend night for illegal drags. I mean, there had to have been a thousand people there. More than a few natives and Marines wiped out on that stretch of road, so they would put the wrecked car on a viewing platform with a flashy sign as a deterrent. Those times are long gone now as you'll lose your military career if you so much as chirp a tire, and I can't imagine the locals had it any easier.
That would explain the rust. I was thinking it is similar to rust cars get in the u.s. that are in costal areas. Seems like the salt hangs in the air and forces its way into any cracks.
That rust by the ocean is insane. Usually car's rust from the bottom up from road salt or sitting in the weeds but ocean rust happens everywhere at once
Ikr, I’ve never ever seen a car rust like that here in the fucking Midwest where it happens! Man I know I’m never buying a car in Okinawa when I move to Japan.
The fact that you mentioned those cars's previous owners may have passed away make me realize you can own the sickest sport cars out there but once you are gone, you just can't take it with you which makes the whole thing even sadder ...
@@driverkeido5 mins of happiness and probably 80 years of suffering and slavery. God must've been really busy to come up with a better plan than that.
Im a Oldscool American car guy and big hotrod enthusiast and seeing how our Japanese hotrod brothers do there Japanese cars realy makes me understand and appreciate there culture and want to see more that's saying alot coming from a big 55 Chevy gasser fan but what I am most is a car enthusiast and can appreciate and even honestly like this culture super cool guys
These are honestly my favorite kind of videos to watch. As sad as they may be I love seeing how old cars can be reclaimed by nature. Keep up the awesome videos!
They are awesome. The other guy in the video is capttwo on UA-cam and he does a lot of cool stuff like this too. Hopefully these videos with Sam will help his channel because he deserves more support in my opinion!
Go to N Factory. They’re an actual reputable tuner shop. They used to go by Speed Factory. They’re also known by bigger tuners in mainland. When I went to Active Garage in Fukuoka, the owner there immediately recognized the name Speed Factory. It’s perhaps the best shop in Okinawa. I moved to another part of Japan with no tuner nearby and the owner helped me get my car started remotely.
As someone who actually owns a 90 Honda crx seeing both of those cars made my heart very very sad. Seeing that evo III in that state also made me want to cry as I’ve wanted one of those for the longest time.
@@mikeberrios1859 exactly. Well let’s face it even if the body panels are beyond saving the car as a whole is worth saving for parts to us folks in the states.
The first crx he looked at that was last registered in 2011 honestly looked saveable. You could replace the door with the hole and repair the rust spot on the roof assuming the undercarriage isn’t rusted out.
Been here in person. Both of them are super bad, better just to part out. I tried buying the front clips but Japanese dude didn't want to deal with anybody especially me being a foreigner.
I wish you could have checked out some engine compartments to see what crazy mods they did to their machines. I bet there are some wicked performance and custom mods only seen in that city. Very cool thanks for sharing.
@@ililxaphanlili2600 For sure! For every well known speed product available to buy, there are hundreds of special one off go fast solutions we will never see.
I have an ECU out of my old s13 with a sticker on it from them, I’ve searched on google a bunch but never found anything about it. Kinda cool to know it came from Okinawa 🤙🏽
So the WRX roof scoop is to allow some fresh air to enter inside the car. Due to its location, the air enters clean, with no dust, and it contributes to keeping the temperature down, as well as to keep positive pressure inside the cockpit, preventing dust from entering by other car openings.
Okinawan pride!!!! Love seeing our little island treasures getting noticed. People don’t often realize that we were our own independent country before taken over.
I know the feeling man. As bad as I would want to try and restore them, there comes a point where the car is just too far gone. I experienced that with my old 1985 celica supra. I tried my best but had to come to terms with it. They just become death traps after a while.
I was Stationed at Kadena AFB, this place has not been open since 2005/2006 The owner lived upstairs. Speed Factory in Naha is where I had my work done on my GTR33 and JZX90s. Nago was wear we drag raced and drifted. I believe that's closed now. We used to Drag Race outside Gate 1, Light to Light in front of Kadena Marina. Good times 👍🏼 I miss it every day! I have stories for days
@@MrMojo1229 why would you move a shop and just leave all your cars and parts behind? surely it would be much cheaper to move everything over to the new place, at least the merchandise inside!
@@stephendeben1590 The store that’s abandoned was not the owned by the guy I’m taking about. He co-owned a different shop in southern Okinawa called Speed Factory. I believe in 2020/2021 he left to open up his own shop with his wife and called it N Factory.
My best guess on why those rust spots are in weird places - those spots are the locations of rock chips, dings, or scratches which made them the first/easiest spots to rust.
I'd love too see that evo III renovated with those wheels refinished with those red stripes & text or one just like it, they would look gorgeous. Lowered maybe 2 - 3 inches it would look amazing imo, no need for building it for hp or anything crazy imo. Just get it on the road & updated slightly, maybe some rare or cool tuner bits added that doesn't take away from the clean looks in general or that requires like drilling into the instrument cluster or bumpers. Slightly better brakes added like front knuckles & rotors from a later evo that are ventilated & slightly larger but still fits behind the wheels. Along with some products that might seal off the paint & metal better against the climate in the region, maybe convert front & rear lights, blinkers too LED if legally allowed & available for better visibility on the road. Sort out interior or swap it for a later gen evo interior for comfort & getting some additional safety or customization options if it's too far gone on the original one from the exposure too the elements. Converting instrument cluster too be backlit by led's & same with the interior lights. Along with some small features added in for modern comfort while not taking away the old school looks in particular. Like maybe a new more modern stereo with bluetooth, speakers upgraded/replaced with a small amp added in & small 10 - 12 inch bass speaker or two in the trunk towards the rear seats or mounted in the rear deck below the rear window, maybe an additional 12v circuit that's fused that just is there too run additional usb ports too the passengers in the rear.
I love/hate these old abandoned videos. It’s so crazy. I’m betting it starts rusting in places where there was a scratch, or ding, or some other imperfections in the paint.
The spots on the hood could be from someone spraying parts cleaner or drops of brake fluid. Maybe someone peeled off the foil cap and some drops flew off.
@@Sam21872 I’m thinking more like the random hole in the doors. It’s like there was a door ding, and the rust found the imperfections. I don’t know. I’m from Pennsylvania, everything just rusts from the bottoms up.
Where Okinawa is an island its literally surrounded by salt water so I would imagine where they were left abandoned and not taken care of the salt air takes a toll on them. I live about 30 miles from the Atlantic Ocean and I've seen cars from people who live closer to the ocean and the underside of the car literally rusts out
all of these cars can be saved, there is a hell of a lot of collectors and car people whom would love to save these cars and would indeed do just that they aren't as far gone as some of the ones i have personally seen and have seen been completely rebuilt afterwards as long as the frames are intact there is still hope to have these cars saved.
I dont think thats the issue here. As he said in the video likely someone died and the family that inherited it let it sit, or there was noone to inherit it.
What I find amazing is none of these cars have been vandalized or stripped for parts by thieves. In the USA, those Regamaster Evos would've been taken years ago.
4:10 nah the hood didn't fly open... When metal rusts, it "expands/grows", and if it's part of a windshield frame like that, it'll break the glass... It's not a super common thing but, it happens. Happened on my own truck (98 Ranger) I had about 15 yrs ago. It was rusting underneath the top of the windshield gasket, and I didn't even know it 'til I hopped in after work one day and had about a 30cm crack in it. Thanks for the tour, it was really enjoyable to watch!
Street racing, was a very thriving deal back in the 80s and 90s. By the early 2000s, new laws and crackdowns on spirited driving kinda put stop to it all for the most part. Local shops lost business, and the scene went back to 'underground'. Can't imagine reputable shops condone any type of street racing, So I'm sure there was a bit of a crackdown of some sorts on them aswell. Super sad to actually see, but also cool to just see the history for what it was and almost untouched since.
This certainly could be a factor but I don't think it's the whole story, the closing of these shops also coincides with the 1997 financial crisis and the lost decade (失われた十年) or Lost 3 decades as they are calling it now. The nikkei crashed in 97 and then again in 00, it's also where we see the start of the end of the great japanese sports car era. Also Sports cars and modifications are a luxury and people are less willing or able to spend their money during a crisis, so shops like these which are hard to scale and have less than ideal margins are presumably the first to fail. :(
Meanwhile in America, government corporations are trying to make it to where you can be branded as a criminal simply for having a cool car. You don’t even have to have been caught doing anything wrong. The way they see it, if you own an import tuner, you’re a street racer and you’ll be treated as such. It’s really unfair. And their excuse? “Environmental protection”. Nothing but a big lie made up by the rich, self-absorbed politicians judging other people for having passions that they deem “stupid”
Jip. Not only in Japan. Over the world. Speciale after the fast and furious movie. Thinks come to LIFE. Today nothing. A pimp up car you can not fine one easy. And not that strange . The new cars have big power. The new laws that more electro cars have to come. And audio systeem all beult in the car . Its death . Even de car audio you had in that time . Strange looking subwoofer and more. Today hummm nothing its alle gone. Now you have beult IT your self . And people around you call the Cops if the sound go to loud. Sorry today its shit place to LIFE.
Sad to see these cars abandoned for years but what's even worse is that it's located in Okinawa where rust accumulation due to the sea water is a MAJOR issue to cars over there. Even if you are able to contact the owner to sell these things, you would mainly use it for internals since the exteriors are all rusted up and they're unsalvageable at this point.
The moisture levels must be insane in Okinawa, causing the rapid deterioration. If you guys contact the owners it wouldnt be hard to get all this moved for parts.
The sticker on the R32 (min 6:44) and on the CRX (min 11:36) says "たいや屋さん" (Taiya-ya-san) which means "Tire Shop", at the start of the video I saw wheels through a window (min 1:21) so... Maybe it's a tire shop too? (I mean, there are Dunlop, Bridgestone and Falken "ads" on the main door and something written that is also about tires)... And talking about ads, there is a "Tokico" ad on the main door too (according to my little Google research they sell shock absorbers, calipers and brake pads), there's another ad in the window near the main door that says "Limit, Exhaust system by Tanabe." On the R32 I found a sticker about a magazine, but sadly I cannot find anything about it, the name is "Quick, Super Street-Magazine" and it's published by "mong project" (there is a phone number too) (min 4:42), maybe it is a way to find some info about the shop, who knows On both CRX's and the EVO is a sticker that says "W.R.7 / W.R.T" maybe it's a team or it means something? Idk Uh and the last attention to detail, the number plate on the Porsche is "• 911" (min 16:20) I really hope this helps you to find some info about it... If not... Well at least there are some cool little details!
I miss living in Oki a ton. But the sea air is no joke. Washed my Celsior every weekend, otherwise it would be oxidized to heck. A lot of great shops and a great car scene there for sure though.
A lot of these can definitely be restored. I've seen worse before that have been restored but it takes the right person for that project. I would love to own any of these.
There is history about the old tuner shops here in Okinawa. Very long story to type about it. The old man that owns the carboy shop is still around. He sometimes sells things from inside when he need cash but mainly to other locals he knows from back in the day. Very rare to see him. If you knew the history of motor sports in Okinawa then you will know why there so much abandon in Okinawa.
Kinda cool to see those all sitting there rotting actually. You could remove them and condense them into a pile of twenty useable parts OR you can leave them as a monument to the mid-90's car culture on the island, a time far more fun than our current one, fading further from memory with the fall of each rust flake.
I live in maine, so. Thomaston to be exact, literally on an isle, and I've never seen rust like that not even on cars that have sat 40 years, def wasn't salt or sea air. It didn't help, but cat piss or something else def sped it up
@@smokeybear390 remember, they get typhoons and worse rain there than you do in Maine. So I’d imagine their cars would rust faster there. And it’s all islands. So they’d have to get worse salt water effects. Even their wiper arms are rusted through!
Not surprised they just rusted out even though it’s somewhat sheltered, the 90’s Japanese mild steel frames and panels and the way they were constructed were just terrible. They would start to rot out just looking at them.
3:11 those are the factory gc8 wrx seats. They’re extremely hard to find in good condition in that colour combo. I just imported some from japan. Cost $700 which was a steal
An absolute sad sight to witness. To think that someone years back has spent lots of hours, passion, dedication and likely a small fortune to get these cars built and now they were just left to rot.
I think the excessive rust is from the salt air, plus being a tropical climate the humidity level is high all the time. I live in the Northeast of the States and the salt from the roads literally turns frames and bodies into corn flakes.
The restoration shop I used work at used to specialise in Porsches and Ive seen worse than that repaired. All depends on how deep your pockets are unfortunately. 😬
I don’t know how much it would cost in Japan, but it would be sick if an influencer like Sam bought a place like this, hired a well known Tuner, and brought a place back into publicity using their outlets in media. Seeing places like this is sad, I just wish it was easier to keep a business open.
Japan is slowly allowing more tourism, could work with local gov to generate business for Okinawa maybe. Would just depend on what the owner wants to do
That’s super sad, all those cars just sitting. I’m happy to see that the place hasn’t been vandalized. Difference between the U.S. and Japan. There’s more respect over there, that’s why I love Japan. If I could, I honestly would try my damndest to buy the shop and revamp it and re-open it.
imo, I think it would of been better for them to be stolen and a chance to be loved again vs just abandon and left to rust. both to me are disrespectful in there own right.
Surprised to see a Dunlop sticker on a car in Japan, figured they would have better versions of all western brands and would have no use for UK/US brands.
By the way, if you were to pull the dash from the 6 GSR for your RS. It wouldn’t be correct, RS dash is specific. If you’re interested in going your car right I’ve got a RS dash in Canada I’ll ship
That stuff has been sitting near the ocean or slightly above sea level. That's how they've rusted so bad in such odd spots...you'll find these rigs will have weakened A, B, & C pillars, crusty subframes. They are only good for parts- even the cylinder walls will look like "Moon surface," so even items you think might be usable are junk
The most surprising in this location were the little bottles of "Kleiner Feigling" from Germany 😇. It is still available here, but it had its time when it was very new and popular in the late 90s, early 2000s... So this matches very well with the car histories and sounds reasonable.
I was stationed there when they were still open.. I always wonder what has changed in the years I have been gone? Wish is had brought my car back stateside.
@@brokeblasian Trust me you could 😅 Here in Germany People buy Classic Porsche's / VW's in that condition just for the VIN and Title, basically everything else gets rebuild
Wow this is madness !! Be awesome to find the old shop owner of still around !🤘🔥 Also are you Aussie/American ? First vid for me mate, detecting a bit of Aus 🇦🇺 in there lol. Great work!!
depending on the frame on the evo 3 id take that, i love that car and would love to tear it apart and rebuild it. Also best Integra is the gen 3 integras, thats the one i have, I had a RSX (DC5 Integra Gen 4) and the gen 3 just feels so much better
I’m curious of what’s inside the abandoned shop. It would definitely be interesting to see what kind of old parts they still have and if they’re still in good condition.
@@MoreBo0st Yeah, I also wonder what the laws are regarding abandoned property in Japan. It would be cool if either Sammit or Jason could buy it somehow and show us what’s inside.
18:58 I'd most likely pass on the others but I'd give the Porsche to Ryan Kraws, he builds custom Porsches with metal bodykits and restores them. A home for the Porsche that it deserves.
Just can't belive how rusted those cars are despite spending so many years under roof. There In uk we have barn finds etc... some coming from literally Bush hedge growing around them and they look better. Is it possible that they were left covered in salt during winter and that would explain all of that rust along all panels etc.... if so its a good example and motivation video to properly wash your car after winter.
*What's weird about this video that there were perfectly fine cars such as that pink box, and a few others, but he totally ignored them as if they weren't out of place*
Wow! How on Earth did this happen? All the hours of wrench time and not to mention a small fortune spent is just mind boggling to walk away from! I just wish I could get in there and save as many as possible
These cars would only have been worth a few hundred dollars at the time even if they were still drivable, it probably cost more to strip them for parts or hire a tow truck to take them to the scrapyard than you'd get for them so they were just abandoned. It's funny how many cars I used to see in the classifieds going for pocket change that are worth tens or even hundreds of thousands these days.
@@Willppyro That's the way it goes. If I'd bought up and held onto all those silvias, E36 M3's, 944's and MX5's that I used to see for less than £500 in the back of the used car section I could have retired by now.
The weird rust spots are probably from wet cat prints. since japan is an Island country, its not impossible that the rain contains salt. thus salty rain water > cat paws > walked on the cars > rust spots. but hey, that's just my theory
Been doing body work, building and restoring cars for 20+ years now. The only time I've seen cars with rust like that were coastal or island cars that had water damage. Whether they were fixed or not the sea water just gets inside everything and rusts the whole car away all over. Some of these cars look like they've been on the deck of a battle ship for 20 years.
@@douglas2072 with enough money anything is possible. But you will never get one of these cars to stop rusting. You could replace one panel and by the time you get to the next panel the one you just got done with would already be starting to rust again. It's salt water. There's no going back with a car once it's been submerged in salt water. These cars are permanently tainted like an incurable cancer. My guess is they were probably in a flood or tsunami.
i've driven by that place so many times! i always wondered why it was never open lol, but those cars are rusted to hell bc they are right by the ocean, i left in 2017 ive seen it open once at night late though
When you mentioned car boy magazine, that brings me back in time specially late 80s early 90s. That was like our bible back then coz the articles in it are so detailed on what the parts the featured cars used for their build. When Super Street magazine came out in the mid 90s it had nothing on car boy but SS was the best folks had in the US.
@@Robvdk69 if they had been open 5 years prior to shutting down than they would have started to see the effects for certain. That’s extreme. I lived near oceans on east and west coast in the US never seen anything as gnarly as that skyline
@@fortifiedwithjamisonstagaa6636 maybe you're climate is better but Japanese cars do the same in New Zealand . It probably also depends on the history of the car . If it was driven near the sea regularly and not washed underneath as Japanese cars are odd only some have a decent underbody coating
About CARBOY , there’s a shop here in my city by that name and they have the same garage design setup when you walk in. And then outside of their shop they have a few abandoned Japanese cars, some ex-race cars.. Could they have just relocated from Japan to here? Lol
Roof scoops were designed to pressurise the cabin to stop dust or smoke entering the cabin through the seals so the force of the air entering the cabin creates a positive pressure inside of the car which keeps out any sort of dust or smoke you know it was really started in rallying to keep dust out of the cabin high-pressure in the external low pressure outside of the car dust just wont enter throughseals
Not only seals but most people dont know, your car actually has air vents in the trunk area behind the liner carpet stuff. Sometimes locatedd to vent into the inside of your rear bumper. And yes Cabin pressure ect. roof scoop keeps dirt out when off road driving.
Those cars under shelter have more rust on them then cars left outside in rainy old England. Mad. It's crazy as many import cars from Japan because they often rust far less.
Honestly the subaru looks like it could be brought back to life, that R32 was SO rotted its kind of crazy, and the 911 was just really sad. I wonder if you could possibly find out a way to rent the location and possibly file for ownership of any of the abandoned property on the location. Part out the bad ones and maybe strip the 911 down to the chassis and restore it, would make excellent content for your channel. who knows whats inside could be complete car in pristine shape having been away from the elements, its like opening a treasure chest.
I think that Evo 3 is saveable, yes the roof is toast tho the rest of the panels looked a lot better than the other cars, very few rust bubbles or brown stains in the paint, I think if you sorted the roof it would be pretty good...if the floors are still in it....;D....That and the Scooby are sooo nice!!!
The best part about japan is how clean and safe it is. People there are so conservative and polite . You dont have to worry about anything . Shops closed up for years and no body breaks in or steals anything like the trash in other countries do . Japan is an amazing place !
This is the most OKINAWA thing ever. From my first time in Okinawa (late '03) to now, I've never seen ANYTHING happen at that shop. So many cars just sit and rot here.
This video also sheds light on the difference in crime between Japan and the U.S. In America that place would've been robbed clean or really vandalized a long time ago.
I was thinking the same thing, if this shop was anywhere in America… all the windows would be broken and this place stripped clean
@@midwestgoon9704 that would be assuming americans have good taste in cars
@@waynwastaken lol, some of us exist
The Japanese are wise and modest people.
Them crxs woulda been long gone over here lol
I lived in Okinawa when I was a kid between 1996-2001 and I remember this shop and cars that would drift in the Naha Industrial district by the seawall would have their shop stickers on them.
So where's the owner for that shop?
@@johnnycage27 I don't know know I left there in 2001 which is 21 years ago
I lived there 1990-93 and this shop seemed very lively at the time. I recall there always being a red AE86 Trueno out front with full TRD widebody and they had a "no U.S." sign on the shop door. Kind of a heyday of street racing back then where they would shut down the main highway on the island in front of Camp Lester every single weekend night for illegal drags. I mean, there had to have been a thousand people there. More than a few natives and Marines wiped out on that stretch of road, so they would put the wrecked car on a viewing platform with a flashy sign as a deterrent. Those times are long gone now as you'll lose your military career if you so much as chirp a tire, and I can't imagine the locals had it any easier.
That would explain the rust. I was thinking it is similar to rust cars get in the u.s. that are in costal areas. Seems like the salt hangs in the air and forces its way into any cracks.
SAME!!! I AM FROM OKINAWA JAPAN CHATAN CHOU SUNABE RIVERSIDE VIEW!!
That rust by the ocean is insane. Usually car's rust from the bottom up from road salt or sitting in the weeds but ocean rust happens everywhere at once
💯
Ikr, I’ve never ever seen a car rust like that here in the fucking Midwest where it happens! Man I know I’m never buying a car in Okinawa when I move to Japan.
@Jesus has given you all. Repent or die. shut up sheep
Its a killer
Salt air is a mf man. I live on the coast in maine and 7 year old cars/trucks here have rusted or rotted frames
The fact that you mentioned those cars's previous owners may have passed away make me realize you can own the sickest sport cars out there but once you are gone, you just can't take it with you which makes the whole thing even sadder ...
But hell you can have some fun while you’re still here and take the memories with you
@@driverkeido5 mins of happiness and probably 80 years of suffering and slavery. God must've been really busy to come up with a better plan than that.
Im a Oldscool American car guy and big hotrod enthusiast and seeing how our Japanese hotrod brothers do there Japanese cars realy makes me understand and appreciate there culture and want to see more that's saying alot coming from a big 55 Chevy gasser fan but what I am most is a car enthusiast and can appreciate and even honestly like this culture super cool guys
These are honestly my favorite kind of videos to watch. As sad as they may be I love seeing how old cars can be reclaimed by nature. Keep up the awesome videos!
Same
Agreed!
Shit makes me sick I want to join them and deteriorate with them
@@fakelego5221 Sammit clone ua-cam.com/video/lKDYQZLOVAo/v-deo.html
They are awesome. The other guy in the video is capttwo on UA-cam and he does a lot of cool stuff like this too. Hopefully these videos with Sam will help his channel because he deserves more support in my opinion!
Go to N Factory. They’re an actual reputable tuner shop. They used to go by Speed Factory. They’re also known by bigger tuners in mainland. When I went to Active Garage in Fukuoka, the owner there immediately recognized the name Speed Factory. It’s perhaps the best shop in Okinawa. I moved to another part of Japan with no tuner nearby and the owner helped me get my car started remotely.
Man I love speed factory. Nori is a true RB26 god!
As someone who actually owns a 90 Honda crx seeing both of those cars made my heart very very sad. Seeing that evo III in that state also made me want to cry as I’ve wanted one of those for the longest time.
All i could think about were those ef9 front ends lol
@@mikeberrios1859 exactly. Well let’s face it even if the body panels are beyond saving the car as a whole is worth saving for parts to us folks in the states.
The first crx he looked at that was last registered in 2011 honestly looked saveable. You could replace the door with the hole and repair the rust spot on the roof assuming the undercarriage isn’t rusted out.
Been here in person. Both of them are super bad, better just to part out. I tried buying the front clips but Japanese dude didn't want to deal with anybody especially me being a foreigner.
@@mikeberrios1859 you mean EF8?
I wish you could have checked out some engine compartments to see what crazy mods they did to their machines. I bet there are some wicked performance and custom mods only seen in that city. Very cool thanks for sharing.
I know i wanted to see what the crx had
@@ililxaphanlili2600 For sure! For every well known speed product available to buy, there are hundreds of special one off go fast solutions we will never see.
@@ililxaphanlili2600 man those og rotas are beautiful, theyre in just as good or better condition than the c8s on my car
I currently live in an apartment about a block away from this shop. I walk by it everyday when going to the gym. All of these cars are still there.
I have an ECU out of my old s13 with a sticker on it from them, I’ve searched on google a bunch but never found anything about it. Kinda cool to know it came from Okinawa 🤙🏽
Sammit about to buy the whole shop and car lot😂 I bet there’s some good parts inside, would be such an amazing reveal
facts
Imagine if he buys the shop it'll be the japan lz compound😭
@@vancinhoplays lol this idiot can't afford shit like that 😂😂😂😂
Courteous to see abandon workshops like this never get vandalised or broken into. Japanese have a huge respect for peoples property 😭🙏🏻
@@unfknknown9678 why you watching his videos then?
So the WRX roof scoop is to allow some fresh air to enter inside the car. Due to its location, the air enters clean, with no dust, and it contributes to keeping the temperature down, as well as to keep positive pressure inside the cockpit, preventing dust from entering by other car openings.
thats sick, thank you
@@encryptedaqua it’s also a top of the line model if it’s real
Know this an old comment but time stamp if u remember ?
@@R4MIREZ. 27:14
You really realise the benefits when off-road
Okinawan pride!!!! Love seeing our little island treasures getting noticed. People don’t often realize that we were our own independent country before taken over.
I know the feeling man. As bad as I would want to try and restore them, there comes a point where the car is just too far gone.
I experienced that with my old 1985 celica supra. I tried my best but had to come to terms with it. They just become death traps after a while.
Awe damn really? Rust damage or what happened? I'd die to have an old celica supra dude.
I was Stationed at Kadena AFB, this place has not been open since 2005/2006
The owner lived upstairs.
Speed Factory in Naha is where I had my work done on my GTR33 and JZX90s.
Nago was wear we drag raced and drifted.
I believe that's closed now.
We used to Drag Race outside Gate 1, Light to Light in front of Kadena Marina. Good times 👍🏼 I miss it every day!
I have stories for days
I would love to hear more, let me know if you ever write out your stories or something like that
Dude tell your stories on UA-cam. I know I’d watch 🤙
Nori moved his shop and is now called N Factory. A bit smaller shop but still has plenty of business!
@@MrMojo1229 why would you move a shop and just leave all your cars and parts behind? surely it would be much cheaper to move everything over to the new place, at least the merchandise inside!
@@stephendeben1590 The store that’s abandoned was not the owned by the guy I’m taking about. He co-owned a different shop in southern Okinawa called Speed Factory. I believe in 2020/2021 he left to open up his own shop with his wife and called it N Factory.
Just imagine what's still inside that shop too. 😔
Who know there is a full turbo kit that's still intact.
mostly wheels but man does this hurt
Why just why would that be like that???
@@TheycalllmeLeroi wheels could be worth a fortune tbh
@@nfsfreak98 yeah to steal but hes wondering what cars could be in the shop :)
My best guess on why those rust spots are in weird places - those spots are the locations of rock chips, dings, or scratches which made them the first/easiest spots to rust.
That Porsche is 100% a save. Even if it it’s repaired, the value is astronomical with a clean title!
I'd love too see that evo III renovated with those wheels refinished with those red stripes & text or one just like it, they would look gorgeous.
Lowered maybe 2 - 3 inches it would look amazing imo, no need for building it for hp or anything crazy imo.
Just get it on the road & updated slightly, maybe some rare or cool tuner bits added that doesn't take away from the clean looks in general or that requires like drilling into the instrument cluster or bumpers.
Slightly better brakes added like front knuckles & rotors from a later evo that are ventilated & slightly larger but still fits behind the wheels.
Along with some products that might seal off the paint & metal better against the climate in the region, maybe convert front & rear lights, blinkers too LED if legally allowed & available for better visibility on the road.
Sort out interior or swap it for a later gen evo interior for comfort & getting some additional safety or customization options if it's too far gone on the original one from the exposure too the elements.
Converting instrument cluster too be backlit by led's & same with the interior lights.
Along with some small features added in for modern comfort while not taking away the old school looks in particular.
Like maybe a new more modern stereo with bluetooth, speakers upgraded/replaced with a small amp added in & small 10 - 12 inch bass speaker or two in the trunk towards the rear seats or mounted in the rear deck below the rear window, maybe an additional 12v circuit that's fused that just is there too run additional usb ports too the passengers in the rear.
I love these type of videos but it hurts so much to see these cars rust to death
Okinawans wash their cars weekly due to the salty air.... island life.
I love/hate these old abandoned videos. It’s so crazy. I’m betting it starts rusting in places where there was a scratch, or ding, or some other imperfections in the paint.
The spots on the hood could be from someone spraying parts cleaner or drops of brake fluid. Maybe someone peeled off the foil cap and some drops flew off.
@@Sam21872 I’m thinking more like the random hole in the doors. It’s like there was a door ding, and the rust found the imperfections. I don’t know. I’m from Pennsylvania, everything just rusts from the bottoms up.
Where Okinawa is an island its literally surrounded by salt water so I would imagine where they were left abandoned and not taken care of the salt air takes a toll on them. I live about 30 miles from the Atlantic Ocean and I've seen cars from people who live closer to the ocean and the underside of the car literally rusts out
Would that tsunami have anything to do with the crazy rust? I don't know if that area was hit.
Car's rust like that in florida too
It's videos like these that Jason used to post, that just makes me want to visit Japan at some point in my life. So so much to see and appreciate!
all of these cars can be saved, there is a hell of a lot of collectors and car people whom would love to save these cars and would indeed do just that they aren't as far gone as some of the ones i have personally seen and have seen been completely rebuilt afterwards as long as the frames are intact there is still hope to have these cars saved.
dang- it really shows you what happens to older shops that just don’t make enough to keep it open. It’s a shame…
I dont think thats the issue here. As he said in the video likely someone died and the family that inherited it let it sit, or there was noone to inherit it.
What I find amazing is none of these cars have been vandalized or stripped for parts by thieves. In the USA, those Regamaster Evos would've been taken years ago.
As they should. Finders keepers
Yeah honestly I wish they were stolen
Yeah, it would've been better. I wonder if they could be bought. I wonder how that process would be
No one steals in Japan... you can leave your wallet on a park bench and come back the next day it would still be there, and that's not an exaggeration
America just sucks
The nostalgic vibes hit hard with these type of videos. Damn. Like a time lost, when things were better.
Arigato Sam . Great to see Okinawa. Awesome content. ✌️ 🇦🇺
OMG if you go to Okinawa again, DO AN UP GARAGE VIDEO. That shop got me through so many kinks - such a good car store for tuners.
4:10 nah the hood didn't fly open... When metal rusts, it "expands/grows", and if it's part of a windshield frame like that, it'll break the glass... It's not a super common thing but, it happens. Happened on my own truck (98 Ranger) I had about 15 yrs ago. It was rusting underneath the top of the windshield gasket, and I didn't even know it 'til I hopped in after work one day and had about a 30cm crack in it.
Thanks for the tour, it was really enjoyable to watch!
Street racing, was a very thriving deal back in the 80s and 90s. By the early 2000s, new laws and crackdowns on spirited driving kinda put stop to it all for the most part. Local shops lost business, and the scene went back to 'underground'. Can't imagine reputable shops condone any type of street racing, So I'm sure there was a bit of a crackdown of some sorts on them aswell. Super sad to actually see, but also cool to just see the history for what it was and almost untouched since.
This certainly could be a factor but I don't think it's the whole story, the closing of these shops also coincides with the 1997 financial crisis and the lost decade (失われた十年) or Lost 3 decades as they are calling it now.
The nikkei crashed in 97 and then again in 00, it's also where we see the start of the end of the great japanese sports car era.
Also Sports cars and modifications are a luxury and people are less willing or able to spend their money during a crisis, so shops like these which are hard to scale and have less than ideal margins are presumably the first to fail. :(
@@Kiwjtastic I appreciate the write up. Didnt even think of general economy honestly. That too likely played a Big part in the scheme of things.
Meanwhile in America, government corporations are trying to make it to where you can be branded as a criminal simply for having a cool car. You don’t even have to have been caught doing anything wrong. The way they see it, if you own an import tuner, you’re a street racer and you’ll be treated as such. It’s really unfair. And their excuse? “Environmental protection”. Nothing but a big lie made up by the rich, self-absorbed politicians judging other people for having passions that they deem “stupid”
Jip. Not only in Japan. Over the world.
Speciale after the fast and furious movie.
Thinks come to LIFE. Today nothing. A pimp up car you can not fine one easy.
And not that strange .
The new cars have big power.
The new laws that more electro cars have to come.
And audio systeem all beult in the car .
Its death .
Even de car audio you had in that time .
Strange looking subwoofer and more.
Today hummm nothing its alle gone.
Now you have beult IT your self .
And people around you call the Cops if the sound go to loud.
Sorry today its shit place to LIFE.
Anything the evil government hand touch suffers and perishes.
Sad to see these cars abandoned for years but what's even worse is that it's located in Okinawa where rust accumulation due to the sea water is a MAJOR issue to cars over there. Even if you are able to contact the owner to sell these things, you would mainly use it for internals since the exteriors are all rusted up and they're unsalvageable at this point.
another 30 mins of golden content!!!
Thanks for the tour. ✌
The moisture levels must be insane in Okinawa, causing the rapid deterioration. If you guys contact the owners it wouldnt be hard to get all this moved for parts.
The sticker on the R32 (min 6:44) and on the CRX (min 11:36) says "たいや屋さん" (Taiya-ya-san) which means "Tire Shop", at the start of the video I saw wheels through a window (min 1:21) so... Maybe it's a tire shop too? (I mean, there are Dunlop, Bridgestone and Falken "ads" on the main door and something written that is also about tires)... And talking about ads, there is a "Tokico" ad on the main door too (according to my little Google research they sell shock absorbers, calipers and brake pads), there's another ad in the window near the main door that says "Limit, Exhaust system by Tanabe."
On the R32 I found a sticker about a magazine, but sadly I cannot find anything about it, the name is "Quick, Super Street-Magazine" and it's published by "mong project" (there is a phone number too) (min 4:42), maybe it is a way to find some info about the shop, who knows
On both CRX's and the EVO is a sticker that says "W.R.7 / W.R.T" maybe it's a team or it means something? Idk
Uh and the last attention to detail, the number plate on the Porsche is "• 911" (min 16:20)
I really hope this helps you to find some info about it... If not... Well at least there are some cool little details!
he needs to see this forsure
i really really hope there’s an update about this place and all these cars eventually
You sound like the owner
Loving these videos man! Not the cars falling apart. But the videos are great.
I miss living in Oki a ton. But the sea air is no joke. Washed my Celsior every weekend, otherwise it would be oxidized to heck. A lot of great shops and a great car scene there for sure though.
Cool!!! I used to be stationed at Kadena Air Force Base in 1985/86.
A lot of these can definitely be restored. I've seen worse before that have been restored but it takes the right person for that project. I would love to own any of these.
There is history about the old tuner shops here in Okinawa. Very long story to type about it. The old man that owns the carboy shop is still around. He sometimes sells things from inside when he need cash but mainly to other locals he knows from back in the day. Very rare to see him. If you knew the history of motor sports in Okinawa then you will know why there so much abandon in Okinawa.
So what is the history behind motorsports in Okinawa?
can't leave us hanging like that, can you maybe give a little bit of a reason as to why they would leave such amazing cars out there to die?
Tell it pls or link 2 story ?
Could you please share it out with us?
I'm coing back to this comment and expecting the rest of the story to appear from you
Kinda cool to see those all sitting there rotting actually. You could remove them and condense them into a pile of twenty useable parts OR you can leave them as a monument to the mid-90's car culture on the island, a time far more fun than our current one, fading further from memory with the fall of each rust flake.
16:00 salt gets to the cars quickly and speeds up the rust
Salt in the air, too close to the sea. cars in USA too close to the sea rust from the outside in.
I live in maine, so. Thomaston to be exact, literally on an isle, and I've never seen rust like that not even on cars that have sat 40 years, def wasn't salt or sea air.
It didn't help, but cat piss or something else def sped it up
@@smokeybear390 remember, they get typhoons and worse rain there than you do in Maine. So I’d imagine their cars would rust faster there.
And it’s all islands. So they’d have to get worse salt water effects. Even their wiper arms are rusted through!
Yeah , when I lived in okinawa I would see rust on tons of cars. It is just the weather and being close to the ocean.
Not surprised they just rusted out even though it’s somewhat sheltered, the 90’s Japanese mild steel frames and panels and the way they were constructed were just terrible. They would start to rot out just looking at them.
3:11 those are the factory gc8 wrx seats. They’re extremely hard to find in good condition in that colour combo. I just imported some from japan. Cost $700 which was a steal
That shop looks so cool sad to see it like that. Wherever the car boy is he is a legend
An absolute sad sight to witness.
To think that someone years back has spent lots of hours, passion, dedication and likely a small fortune to get these cars built and now they were just left to rot.
that's my Roadster!! 25:18
I was getting all of my suspension bushings replaced with a stiffer rubber compound
Why is your car still there then?? What's the story!!
@@rockstarbmf9595 exactly
@@rockstarbmf9595 pretty sure that's a different shop
That is one beautiful NA.
I think the excessive rust is from the salt air, plus being a tropical climate the humidity level is high all the time. I live in the Northeast of the States and the salt from the roads literally turns frames and bodies into corn flakes.
16:34..
He figures out the rust problem 👍👍👍
20:49 I’ve been wanting to get those wheels for my r32 but was scared about the crappy fitment. I might end up getting some watanabe wheels instead
The restoration shop I used work at used to specialise in Porsches and Ive seen worse than that repaired. All depends on how deep your pockets are unfortunately. 😬
I don’t know how much it would cost in Japan, but it would be sick if an influencer like Sam bought a place like this, hired a well known Tuner, and brought a place back into publicity using their outlets in media.
Seeing places like this is sad, I just wish it was easier to keep a business open.
Japan is slowly allowing more tourism, could work with local gov to generate business for Okinawa maybe. Would just depend on what the owner wants to do
That’s super sad, all those cars just sitting. I’m happy to see that the place hasn’t been vandalized. Difference between the U.S. and Japan. There’s more respect over there, that’s why I love Japan. If I could, I honestly would try my damndest to buy the shop and revamp it and re-open it.
imo, I think it would of been better for them to be stolen and a chance to be loved again vs just abandon and left to rust. both to me are disrespectful in there own right.
Surprised to see a Dunlop sticker on a car in Japan, figured they would have better versions of all western brands and would have no use for UK/US brands.
By the way, if you were to pull the dash from the 6 GSR for your RS. It wouldn’t be correct, RS dash is specific. If you’re interested in going your car right I’ve got a RS dash in Canada I’ll ship
It's depressing to see two crx's and one skyline go to waste along with that EVO 3
That stuff has been sitting near the ocean or slightly above sea level. That's how they've rusted so bad in such odd spots...you'll find these rigs will have weakened A, B, & C pillars, crusty subframes. They are only good for parts- even the cylinder walls will look like "Moon surface," so even items you think might be usable are junk
@off spec they'll start from the inside to the outside really bad as well.
Nice to actually see something like this that hasn't been broken into and destroyed.
Captain 2 6..
Good to see you in the video with Sammit
Big fan
damn imagine the history of this place, different time and era lot of lost memories
“Everything that isn’t saved is forgotten”-someone I think
The history behind the shop is prolly is insane
@@bruhpopoppoop2759 thats from nintendo quit screen message lol
This was a cool video. As much as I hate seeing abandoned cars, I do love it. Makes me appreciate the surviving ones
What an sad ending to car boy. From what I've heard car boy was one of the first drift events holder.
The most surprising in this location were the little bottles of "Kleiner Feigling" from Germany 😇. It is still available here, but it had its time when it was very new and popular in the late 90s, early 2000s... So this matches very well with the car histories and sounds reasonable.
I was stationed there when they were still open.. I always wonder what has changed in the years I have been gone? Wish is had brought my car back stateside.
I saw these cars on Jason’s video. Sad to see these cars rot away. Those 911’s restored are worth a fortune now.
Don’t even think you could bring that Porsche back sadly which hurts the most
@@brokeblasian Sammit clone ua-cam.com/video/lKDYQZLOVAo/v-deo.html
its not the wasted value, its the wasted smiles per gallon that really hurts
@@brokeblasian Trust me you could 😅 Here in Germany People buy Classic Porsche's / VW's in that condition just for the VIN and Title, basically everything else gets rebuild
@@mechanic_tobi Exactly. Anything can be either retrieved or manufactured from scratch. It's the money that is the limit, though.
As a CRX owner, it broke my heart to see that Honda in that shape. Along the other cars :(
Honestly I would LOVE to have that CG8 -- Would be a good resto-project!
Wow this is madness !! Be awesome to find the old shop owner of still around !🤘🔥
Also are you Aussie/American ?
First vid for me mate, detecting a bit of Aus 🇦🇺 in there lol. Great work!!
@@AArmijo-jd6mj Cheers mate, can completely hear those Aussie undertones ....😉
Not easy to pull off if not from here 🤘
depending on the frame on the evo 3 id take that, i love that car and would love to tear it apart and rebuild it. Also best Integra is the gen 3 integras, thats the one i have, I had a RSX (DC5 Integra Gen 4) and the gen 3 just feels so much better
I’m curious of what’s inside the abandoned shop. It would definitely be interesting to see what kind of old parts they still have and if they’re still in good condition.
exactly can you imagine what's on the inside if the stuff's on the outside
@@MoreBo0st Yeah, I also wonder what the laws are regarding abandoned property in Japan. It would be cool if either Sammit or Jason could buy it somehow and show us what’s inside.
18:58 I'd most likely pass on the others but I'd give the Porsche to Ryan Kraws, he builds custom Porsches with metal bodykits and restores them. A home for the Porsche that it deserves.
Really enjoying the abandoned cars videos ,such an insight into how honest Japanese people are.
Dude the cars are rotting…. No money to be made…
Just can't belive how rusted those cars are despite spending so many years under roof. There In uk we have barn finds etc... some coming from literally Bush hedge growing around them and they look better. Is it possible that they were left covered in salt during winter and that would explain all of that rust along all panels etc.... if so its a good example and motivation video to properly wash your car after winter.
So all this rust is from Salt Air or what? That 911 Carrera broke my heart lol... Great vid Boys Subbed 👍👍🤙
*What's weird about this video that there were perfectly fine cars such as that pink box, and a few others, but he totally ignored them as if they weren't out of place*
Wow! How on Earth did this happen? All the hours of wrench time and not to mention a small fortune spent is just mind boggling to walk away from! I just wish I could get in there and save as many as possible
These cars would only have been worth a few hundred dollars at the time even if they were still drivable, it probably cost more to strip them for parts or hire a tow truck to take them to the scrapyard than you'd get for them so they were just abandoned. It's funny how many cars I used to see in the classifieds going for pocket change that are worth tens or even hundreds of thousands these days.
@@DjDolHaus86 yea and now they would be worth 30k each if they were taken care of lol
@@Willppyro That's the way it goes. If I'd bought up and held onto all those silvias, E36 M3's, 944's and MX5's that I used to see for less than £500 in the back of the used car section I could have retired by now.
I’m just curious on why is there a lot of abandoned shops and cars in Okinawa
A lot of tracks got shut down and turned into solar panel parks and other buildings. No tracks meant no need for shops. And a lot of people moved.
The vehicles are resting away however the tires on most of them seem to still hold air very strange occurrence. A gem of a find
The weird rust spots are probably from wet cat prints.
since japan is an Island country, its not impossible that the rain contains salt.
thus salty rain water > cat paws > walked on the cars > rust spots.
but hey, that's just my theory
Been doing body work, building and restoring cars for 20+ years now. The only time I've seen cars with rust like that were coastal or island cars that had water damage. Whether they were fixed or not the sea water just gets inside everything and rusts the whole car away all over. Some of these cars look like they've been on the deck of a battle ship for 20 years.
is it possible to restore a car like that?
@@douglas2072 with enough money anything is possible. But you will never get one of these cars to stop rusting. You could replace one panel and by the time you get to the next panel the one you just got done with would already be starting to rust again. It's salt water. There's no going back with a car once it's been submerged in salt water. These cars are permanently tainted like an incurable cancer. My guess is they were probably in a flood or tsunami.
@@worldssickestmedia2713 thank you for dedicating your time answering my question.
i've driven by that place so many times! i always wondered why it was never open lol, but those cars are rusted to hell bc they are right by the ocean, i left in 2017 ive seen it open once at night late though
hrmm..possibly a private owned garage, and owners past cars Im assuming
Was this in the city Okinawa or just in a city on the Island of Okinawa. I've been trying to find this place on Google Maps
@@codylee5703 it's between American villiage ( I know they are tearing it down) and hamby town
When you mentioned car boy magazine, that brings me back in time specially late 80s early 90s. That was like our bible back then coz the articles in it are so detailed on what the parts the featured cars used for their build. When Super Street magazine came out in the mid 90s it had nothing on car boy but SS was the best folks had in the US.
just moved to okinawa :) my first real taste of jdm culture. im excited for what’s to come
From my time here in oki the 2 stories i hear the most about that place is, "gate keepy tuner shop that failed", or that is was used as yakuza front.
It breaks my heart seeing these abandoned cars.
Dude! That 1st CRX you looked at has a full Mugen aero kit on it. Mega $!!! Dang.
💔💔💔
@@zorkimonyamamura3271 Sammit clone ua-cam.com/video/lKDYQZLOVAo/v-deo.html
I’d quit and leave too if everything started rusting like that! Unreal amazing thing to see.
Most of that rust would have happened between when they shut and now 5 years close ish to the sea will do that.
@@Robvdk69 if they had been open 5 years prior to shutting down than they would have started to see the effects for certain. That’s extreme. I lived near oceans on east and west coast in the US never seen anything as gnarly as that skyline
@@fortifiedwithjamisonstagaa6636 unfortunately the Japanese cars are more susceptible to rust . The steel is much thinner than us cars
@@Robvdk69 I collect 80’s hondas. Been since 2001, this is unusual rust even for JDM
@@fortifiedwithjamisonstagaa6636 maybe you're climate is better but Japanese cars do the same in New Zealand . It probably also depends on the history of the car . If it was driven near the sea regularly and not washed underneath as Japanese cars are odd only some have a decent underbody coating
Okinawa must have some next level oxidation properties. Never seen things rust so fast and so much!
That rusting patterns is consistent with cat piss. Cat piss is acidic.
About CARBOY , there’s a shop here in my city by that name and they have the same garage design setup when you walk in. And then outside of their shop they have a few abandoned Japanese cars, some ex-race cars..
Could they have just relocated from Japan to here? Lol
What country?
Roof scoops were designed to pressurise the cabin to stop dust or smoke entering the cabin through the seals so the force of the air entering the cabin creates a positive pressure inside of the car which keeps out any sort of dust or smoke you know it was really started in rallying to keep dust out of the cabin high-pressure in the external low pressure outside of the car dust just wont enter throughseals
Not only seals but most people dont know, your car actually has air vents in the trunk area behind the liner carpet stuff. Sometimes locatedd to vent into the inside of your rear bumper. And yes Cabin pressure ect. roof scoop keeps dirt out when off road driving.
I had a carboy steering wheel on my first fc3s I imported to Australia in 94 and a few other goodies still have the horn button
Those cars under shelter have more rust on them then cars left outside in rainy old England. Mad. It's crazy as many import cars from Japan because they often rust far less.
you guys should try to restore some of these cars, It might be hard but I hope you do!
Honestly the subaru looks like it could be brought back to life, that R32 was SO rotted its kind of crazy, and the 911 was just really sad. I wonder if you could possibly find out a way to rent the location and possibly file for ownership of any of the abandoned property on the location. Part out the bad ones and maybe strip the 911 down to the chassis and restore it, would make excellent content for your channel.
who knows whats inside could be complete car in pristine shape having been away from the elements, its like opening a treasure chest.
I think that Evo 3 is saveable, yes the roof is toast tho the rest of the panels looked a lot better than the other cars, very few rust bubbles or brown stains in the paint, I think if you sorted the roof it would be pretty good...if the floors are still in it....;D....That and the Scooby are sooo nice!!!
The best part about japan is how clean and safe it is. People there are so conservative and polite . You dont have to worry about anything . Shops closed up for years and no body breaks in or steals anything like the trash in other countries do . Japan is an amazing place !
Nice one Dude that evo 3 in that first place was criminal to just rot like that 🇬🇧✌️
This is the most OKINAWA thing ever. From my first time in Okinawa (late '03) to now, I've never seen ANYTHING happen at that shop. So many cars just sit and rot here.