Youichi Imamura's 2003 D1 GP Champion S15 Silvia
Youichi Imamura won the 2003 D1 Grand Prix championship in a Team Blitz Silvia S15 producing 600+ hp. The car that made the S15 the defining drift chassis.
In this article (4 sections)
Youichi Imamura's D1 GP Silvia S15: The Championship Drift Car
Youichi Imamura won the 2003 D1 Grand Prix championship in a heavily-tuned Nissan Silvia S15 Spec-R — the competition that cemented the S15 as the defining drift chassis of the 2000s. Imamura's car was prepared by the Team Blitz drift team and produced over 600 hp with a heavily-tuned SR20DET. The specific chassis, with its distinctive livery and racing modifications, became one of the most famous drift cars in Japanese motorsport.
The D1 Grand Prix Era
D1 Grand Prix was Japan's first professional drift competition, launched in 2001. Early D1 GP was dominated by AE86s and S13 Silvias, but by 2002 the S15 had become the competitive chassis of choice. Its combination of chassis rigidity, SR20DET engine, and available aftermarket parts made it the optimal drift platform.
Youichi Imamura entered D1 GP in 2001 with a modified S15 and quickly became one of the top drivers. His 2003 championship came after two seasons of progress.
The S15 Specifications
Imamura's D1 GP S15 specifications during his championship run:
- Engine: SR20DET with aftermarket internals
- Turbo: Large single turbo conversion (standard D1 GP practice)
- Output: 600+ hp
- Transmission: Dogbox sequential
- Chassis: Full roll cage, weight reduction, modified suspension geometry
- Tires: Competition D1-spec tires
- Body: Custom Team Blitz livery
Driver input was where the championship was won. Imamura's driving style combined aggressive entry angles with precise exit control, allowing him to score high on D1's twin-battle format.
The Championship Run
Imamura's 2003 D1 GP championship included:
- Multiple event wins: Including Tsukuba and Suzuka
- Consistent top-3 finishes: In every event of the season
- Best twin battles: Drifters' top-level competition
His championship was tightly contested, with other S15 drivers (Nobuteru Taniguchi, Katsuhiro Ueo) all competing for the title. Imamura's consistency and car reliability made the difference.
Legacy
Youichi Imamura's championship S15 is the car that defined the D1 Grand Prix era. When drift historians discuss the early 2000s of organized drift competition, the S15 is almost always mentioned first, and Imamura's championship car is specifically referenced as the benchmark.
The chassis itself has been preserved by Team Blitz and occasionally appears at drift heritage events in Japan. It's a reminder of when drift competition was at its peak in Japan, and when the S15 was the undisputed champion chassis.
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