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Tested: Modified 2021 Toyota Supra 3.0 Proves a Great Car Can Be Made Better

Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver

There's a tiny little gas station tucked away in the California hills between Lake Elizabeth and Castaic. We know, because we nearly kissed the ground in relief when pulling up to it on fumes to refill Shiv Pathak's modified 2021 Toyota Supra. It's not that the Supra gets poor fuel economy, but rather that we enjoyed driving it so much that we didn't stop until we absolutely had to. This car turns corners into potato chips—you always want one more. Then one more again, until the quarter-tank of gas that seemed like more than enough for a quick spin around the neighborhood turns into a low fuel light miles away from where you started.

Pathak's version of the Supra is subtly spiced. It takes a sharp eye to notice any changes other than the Yokohama Advan A052 tires on 18-inch bronze wheels that replace the stock 19-inch Michelins. Look closer and you'll see front dive planes whiskering the nose, and in the rear, a delicate diffuser hanging below the exhaust. The tire change alone makes the car a delight; the cushioning effect of the taller sidewalls and flypaper stick of the Advans make bumps disappear and corners straighten. Tune up the engine to Pathak's claimed 500 horsepower and take away some of the slight resistance in the stock Supra's steering and you've got an excellent car made irresistible.

Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver

Improving the Supra is a tall order. There isn't a C/D staffer who doesn't like it straight from the factory. It looks lumpy in an exciting way, like a vehicle penned by that kid in fifth grade who drew superheroes with 12-pack abs. With a turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-six, it's a 12-second drag racer that can pull more than 1.00 g on the skidpad and still get fuel mileage in the high 20s mpg (We averaged 26 mpg with our long-term 2020 Supra 3.0.) Pathak's company, OpenFlash Performance, which specializes in tweaking ECUs for stronger horses and expanded torque ranges, felt that almost perfect wasn't good enough.

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"I didn't like the car when I got it," he says. "I didn't like the steering, I didn't like the squishy bushings. I wanted more power. (Dang, Shiv, you're hard to please—Ed.) But I also didn't want to do a typical tuner car—900 horses with none of it in the usable range, heat issues, stiff anti-roll bars and springs. I only wanted to do things that wouldn't sacrifice compliance, sound, and emissions. I wanted to make it like an OEM deal—like a stock Supra, only better."

Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver

The resulting build takes the tiniest of stutters and slop in the already-good stock Supra and bumps up the power. On a straightaway, it bounds forward with all the promise designed into its muscular haunches. Throw it into a corner and it comes out just where you expect it. Miscalculate and it forgives you. "Easily gathered" is how technical editor David Beard described it after running it through its paces on our California test track. Compared to the stock 2021 Supra 3.0's test results, Pathak's Supra picked up 0.02 g around the skidpad (1.04 versus 1.02) and half a second both to 60 mph (3.3 seconds versus 3.8) and through the quarter-mile (11.6 seconds compared to 12.1). Its sticky tires also helped it stop quickly, halting from 70 mph in just 147 feet—five fewer feet than the standard model. On the road, it feels invincible, strongly pulling high into its rev range and responding to throttle inputs like a trained dolphin—up on its tail, whistling, and ready to jump through hoops. If you can resist the draw of the Supra's high-rpm surge, it's well behaved at parking-lot speeds, too. There's none of the clashing and banging one expects of a modified car. It feels like a stock Supra, only better.

Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Jessica Lynn Walker - Car and Driver