The year 2002 saw an automotive market saturated with cars aimed to fulfill the needs of the teen and young adult demographic; cars were produced ready for modification and marketed as "cool, independent and fun."
Though the industry was finally on the right track, giving dues to its young consumers, it was a hard sell, what with a failing economy and an all-out war. That year would've been one of the bleakest for the industry if it weren't for Subaru finally entering its WRX into the U.S. market. The idea of having a turbocharged four-door sedan powered equally on all four wheels not only put the market in general on notice, but also placed the tuning industry on its knees begging for more.
One of the many caught up in the Dub-Rex mix was young Joseph Cruz, who immediately fell in love with the four-wheel-drive monster the same way everyone who purchased it did: Through the World Rally Championship (WRC). After watching the WRX race on the banks of the most dangerous terrains in Europe, fly through the air and land on a sea of shallow mud to slide across a turn inches away from screaming fans of the WRC, Joseph went straight into the Subaru dealership and picked out an '02 WRX that suited his tastes.
The '02 Impreza WRX ran an impressive 227 hp and 217 lb-ft of torque out of the production lines, which more or less beat every competitor in its class. Its closest threat, the Acura Integra Type-R, didn't even come close to what the last generation WRX featured in almost every aspect. With the EJ20 engine powered by a Mitsubishi TD04-13T turbocharger unit-which was only on the U.S. spec versions-the WRX was boosting a healthy 13.5psi andfeatures 16-inch wheels, 2-piston/1-piston front and rear brakes and a viscous coupling type LSD. It weighed an average 3,085 pounds and boasted a 45-to-55 power ratio between the front and rear axles. All in all, the WRX was something the U.S. market had never seen before and became a mainstay in almost every list of Top 10 Cars of that year.
That's why when Joseph finally decided to modify his WRX, he made sure he did it correctly. For one, he didn't want to disappoint his teammates at Team Sadistic, and he ultimately didn't want to sully the pride behind owning a WRX. He knew the importance of properly fixing up cars; having modifying them since he was 16 years old. It began with his first car, a '62 Chevy Nova, and then moved onto putting together a Kaminari-inspired Toyota Celica GTS in later years. When he first purchased the WRX, his main goal was to build it for road racing, which is why the first parts he installed, with the help of his father, were a set of Cusco Zero-1 coilovers and camber plates for alignment adjusting.