Mugen Motorsports Explained

M-TEC Co., Ltd.
Type:Private
Industry:Automotive
Genre:Car tuning
Trade Name:Mugen Motorsports
Founded:1973
Location:Asaka, Saitama, Japan

M-TEC Company, Ltd., doing business as Mugen Motorsports (無限), is a Japanese company formed in 1973 by Hirotoshi Honda, the son of Honda Motor Company founder Soichiro Honda, and Masao Kimura.[1] Mugen, meaning "without limit", "unlimited" or "vast",[2] (hence the commonly placed word "power" after, denoting "unlimited power") is an engine tuner and parts manufacturer that manufactures OEM parts such as body kits and sports exhausts for Honda. Despite the family relationship, Mugen is not and has never been owned by Honda Motor Company; however, Mugen owner Hirotoshi Honda has been the biggest shareholder in Honda since his father's death in 1991.[3]

The company tunes and races Honda vehicles in the Super GT championship, and, additionally, sells aftermarket parts to amateur enthusiasts. It was part of partnerships that won the Formula 3000 championship in 1990 and 1991, and that eventually led to Mugen's involvement in Formula One, from 1992 to 2000, and up to 2005 was the exclusive supplier of Formula Nippon engines.

Corporate history

The company has a strong racing heritage, as Hirotoshi Honda began building his own racing car in a workshop at his father's house, shortly before he graduated from Nihon University in 1965. Masao Kimura is a veteran racer with more than 50 victories in Honda sports cars and single-seaters and worked for Honda R&D and then Honda Racing Service before helping Hirotoshi Honda establish Mugen.

In 1973, Mugen started its operations and initially offered special parts of motocross bikes. As Honda expanded its vehicle lineup, Mugen's product range also expanded. The company started specializing in tuning Honda engines. Beginning with the 1200cc Honda Civic engine, it went on to develop, and now designs and builds, both two-stroke and four-stroke engines, manufacturing many of the major components itself.

Mugen ultimately intends to build its own road cars and the first step towards this was the creation of bodykits for the Honda Ballade CR-X in 1984. Since then, the company has produced a number of body kits for Honda machinery, culminating with the Mugen NSX prototype in 1992.[4]

Following Hirotoshi Honda's tax evasion allegation in late 2003, Mugen was restructured in early 2004 with the establishment of M-TEC. The new company retained the right to use the Mugen trademark and its headquarters in Asaka, Saitama, in the northern suburbs of Tokyo close to the Honda R&D facility at Wako. Although it is a legally separate entity, M-TEC kept Mugen's existing staff and is headed by former Mugen board member Shin Nagaosa, who was the engineering division manager at Mugen and been involved with running Mugen's NSX racing program.

Mugen Racing

Single-seaters

Working with Honda, Mugen has gradually expanded its sporting involvement to all levels of the sport. In 1986, Formula 3000 was introduced into Japan and Mugen joined forces with Honda to build an F3000 engine. It was introduced in the 1987 season and leased to 14 teams. The following year, Mugen won four of the top five places in the Japanese F3000 championship. In 1989, Mugen entered European F3000 with the MF308 engine and won the championship with Jean Alesi, driving an Eddie Jordan Racing Reynard. The same year the company produced its own prototype 3.5L  V8 Formula One engine, codenamed MF350.

In 1988, Mugen started tuning Honda engines for use in Formula Three, winning the Japanese series with Akihiko Nakaya, and in 1990 expanded their business to Europe. The same year, Mugen won its first Formula Three championships in Europe, taking the French title with Éric Hélary, and the British crown with Mika Häkkinen at the wheel of a West Surrey Racing Ralt, which repeated the title in 1991 with Rubens Barrichello.

As F3000 became a spec-series in Europe starting in 1996 with the Lola-Judd combo, the Japanese series responded by making Mugen the sole supplier to the Japanese championship, now redubbed Formula Nippon. M-TEC lost the supply contract for the 2006 season, with the rules changing to allow Toyota associate TOM'S to join Mugen as engine supplier.

Mugen continues to enjoy success in the Formula Three circuit with its tuned 2.0 L Honda engines, having won 9 titles in Asia (8 of which in Japan) since 1988, as well as 19 titles in Europe (15 of them in Britain), and 13 in Latin America.

As of 2017, Mugen Formula engines still enjoy use and success across the various European hillclimb championships, employed in former Formula chassis and dedicated hillclimb prototypes.

Formula One

Mugen-Honda
Debut:1992 South African Grand Prix
Final Race:2000 Malaysian Grand Prix
Races:147
Chassis:Footwork, Lotus, Ligier, Prost, Jordan
Cons Champ:0
Drivers Champ:0
Wins:4
Podiums:16
Points:182
Poles:1
Fastest Laps:0

In 1991 Mugen prepared Honda V10 engines for Tyrrell (based on engines used by McLaren in and), but the following year these engines were renamed Mugen MF351H and were transferred to the Footwork team, with drivers Aguri Suzuki and Michele Alboreto. Although Honda withdrew from the sport at the end of 1992 season, Mugen remained affiliated with Footwork in 1993 and created a B version of the MF351H, used by Aguri Suzuki and Derek Warwick.

At the end of the year, Mugen switched to Team Lotus with plans for a new Lotus 109. The team—with drivers Johnny Herbert and Pedro Lamy (later replaced by Alessandro Zanardi)—was underfunded and the 109 chassis was late arriving. The Mugen engine, codenamed MF351HC (also known as ZA5C), was not able to show its full potential and failed to score a single World Championship point during 1994 despite coming close on 3 occasions. This was the only season in which Mugen engines (and Lotus) did not score a World Championship point during their time in Formula One.

After Lotus closed at the end of the year, Mugen switched to the Ligier team, which was then being run for Flavio Briatore by Tom Walkinshaw, with drivers Olivier Panis, Martin Brundle and Aguri Suzuki, although it was initially planned for the Minardi team. The 3.0 L engine, conforming to the new regulations, was codenamed MF301H. The 1995 season was promising with points being scored at nine races and the team securing two podiums, one courtesy of Brundle finishing third at the Belgian Grand Prix and the other by Panis finishing second at the Australian Grand Prix. The team secured 24 points and finished a respectable 5th in the Constructors Championship. The following season with Ligier resulted in Mugen's first Formula One victory as well as Ligier's last Formula One victory at the 1996 Monaco Grand Prix with Panis at the wheel. Despite this unexpected success, the Mugen powered Ligier car only scored three more points finishes during the rest of the season two 6th-place finishes from Diniz and one 5th-place finish from Panis; the team suffered 17 retirements during 1996.

Ligier was taken over by Alain Prost in 1997, and the newly named Prost Grand Prix ran MF301HB engines with Jarno Trulli leading the Austrian Grand Prix before suffering an engine failure. The Prost team managed two podium finishes during the 1997 season at Brazil and Spain, scoring points in 8 races over the season securing a final total of 21 points and a 6th-place finish in the Constructors Championship.

With Prost establishing a relationship with Peugeot and switching to them from 1998 onwards, Mugen looked for a new partner and reached a two-year agreement with Jordan Grand Prix for which Mugen produced the MF301HC engine. The first half of the 1998 season was an absolute disaster; it was so bad that at one point Mugen officials met with Eddie Jordan and his team during the 1998 Monaco Grand Prix to find out why up until then the team had failed to score a single World Championship point. The relationship continued at Silverstone where the team scored their first World Championship point of the season courtesy of a 6th-place finish from Ralf Schumacher, followed by points finishes at the next 3 races. It was not until Spa-Francorchamps, when Jordan's fortunes changed for the better with drivers Damon Hill and Ralf Schumacher scored a 1–2 finish securing Jordan's first ever Formula One victory and their only 1–2 finish during their existence after a crash-marred start. The team would score points on two further occasions with Ralf achieving a 3rd-place finish at the Italian Grand Prix. Gary Anderson would later reveal that, by that season, Honda's headquarters had increased their involvement in developing the engines that otherwise still carry Mugen branding.[5]

The 1999 season resulted in further success with Heinz-Harald Frentzen winning twice in France and Italy and even challenging for the title, although he failed in doing so due to better performance from McLaren and Ferrari. After Honda returned to the sport from with British American Racing, Mugen left Formula One after another year of having both Honda and Mugen engines racing together, leaving Honda to supply the engines to Jordan as well in 2001 and 2002. Mugen-built engines were also used for the RC101B/RC-F1 2.0X, a car built by the Honda R&D Center without direct support from Honda headquarters (previous cars built by the R&D Center used older Honda engines when they supplied engines for McLaren) and for the Honda RA099, an official Honda test car to prepare for Honda's factory engine supply operation.

Sportscar racing

In 1998, Mugen built four NSX models, two for the Mugen/Dome partnership, one for Team Kunimitsu and one for Nakajima Racing. The cars were fast but unreliable at first, until the Nakajima NSX scored the car's first win at the fourth round in Fuji. This was followed by three more wins (one of them by the Mugen/Dome team), which led to a second place championship finish for Tom Coronel and Kouji Yamanishi. In 1999, the Honda took three more wins, one of those with the Mugen/Dome team of Juichi Wakisaka and Katsutomo Kaneishi scoring a victory at the opening round in Suzuka and finishing the third best team in the championship. In 2000, the Mugen/Dome team was champion with Ryo Michigami, but the car's performance was limited by regulation changes and Michigami reached the title without a single win. Still, Honda won four races, one of them by the second Mugen/Dome car.

In 2001, Mugen concentrated once more in the JGTC, the NSX winning two races, and finishing second (Mugen/Dome) and third (ARTA) in the series. More importantly, in June, the company announced development of a new 4.0 L V8, dubbed MF408S, for the main prototype class in the 24 Hours of Le Mans and American Le Mans Series. At the time, Mugen acknowledged that international sportscar racing was a new category for them. The concept of the MF408S was high power, compact size, durability and reliability. Mugen chose a 4.0 L (N/A) Naturally aspirated engine because they felt through their experience in Formula Three that restrictor size was key to performance. The idea was to save fuel with a smaller displacement engine, since, theoretically, restrictor size will bring power in any engine to a similar level. The main engines in use at the time were producing around 600 hp, including the turbocharged Audi and Cadillac, as well as the larger displacement BMW and the Roush-prepared Ford. Mugen excluded a turbo as this necessitated use of intercoolers to extract maximum performance, which added to the weight and reduced performance.

2002 was a good year for Mugen at the track. The Mugen-prepared NSXs won five rounds, with the Mugen/Dome team winning two races outright, which gave them the Team's championship title. The debut of the MF408S was in a Panoz chassis in the 2002 Sebring 12 Hours, first round of ALMS.

In 2004, M-TEC decided to drop down to GT300 and help train Japanese drivers for GT500 speeds. By grabbing promising drivers early in their careers, M-TEC would then be able to mold them and have definite access to future champions. M-TEC driver, Hiroyuki Yagi, was sourced from the Integra Series. Giving the drivers experience was more important than developing the car to take the championship. To this end, M-TEC simply detuned the car for the GT300 class without optimizing it for the new power level. Winning the GT300 series by one point over the ARTA Garaiya was simply an unintended bonus for a dedicated, championship-level team.

Breaking into the United States is another goal for the M-TEC team and the Mugen name. Currently, the authorized dealer of Mugen parts in the US is King Motorsports. Team director Junichi Kumakura thought racing the NSX in the United States was a great way to promote the company in a previously unvisited environment. When asked what else M-TEC would like to accomplish in America with the golden NSX, competing at Sebring and Daytona were marked as attractive goals.

MF408S Engine Technical Specifications

MF 458S Engine Technical Specifications

Engine Name: MF458S

Motorcycle Racing

Isle of Man TT Races

Mugen have become the dominant force in electrically powered motorcycles competing at the Isle of Man TT Races. In the eight years since their introduction into the TT Zero, the average speed of the Mugen Shinden around the Snaefell Mountain Course has increased from 102.215mi/h in 2012 to 121.91mi/h in 2019.[7] By 2019, Mugen has won five TT Zero races using its Shinden bikes.[8]

2012Making their competitive debut at the 2012 Isle of Man TT, John McGuinness took the Mugen Shinden Ni to second place behind the MotoCzysz of Michael Rutter at an average speed of 109.527 mph.[7]
  • 2013At the 2013 TT Mugen again finished runners up to MotoCzysz, with Rutter and McGuinness repeating the previous year's result.[7]
  • 2014
  • Mugen's development has continued at subsequent races in the TT Zero Category. Fielding two machines at the 2014 Isle of Man TT, John McGuinness secured their maiden victory ahead of teammate Bruce Anstey who took second place on the other Shinden San.[7]

    2015At the 2015 TT McGuinness and Anstey again took the first two spots on the rostrum.[7]
  • 2016Mugen continued their dominance in the TT Zero class at the Isle of Man TT Races in 2016, when Bruce Anstey took the honours, although their other machine, ridden by John McGuinness, retired during the one lap event.
  • 2017
  • Anstey and Guy Martin came first and second respectively, both riding Mugen machines.

    2018The Mugen motorcycles achieved first and third place with Michael Rutter and Lee Johnston respectively, split by Daley Mathison riding for the University of Nottingham. Rutter broke the 120 mph barrier to set a new lap record of 121.824mi/h.

    2019

    Mugen achieved their sixth consecutive victory with Michael Rutter again increasing the lap record average speed to 121.91 mph. John McGuinness followed his team-mate home to complete a 1-2 finish for the team.

    Vehicles

    M-Tec has also built concept Honda vehicles, using the company's own performance parts. Some models (e.g.: Mugen Civic RR) are also sold in Japanese domestic market.Mugen also sells individual parts for newer vehicles that includes the 2017-2021 Civic Type-R (FK8), as well as 2016-2021 Civic Hatchback (FK7). These parts include aerodynamic body parts such as front lips, rear diffusers, and wings. This also goes for earlier gen vehicles, and is typically well known to be sought as an OEM aftermarket purchases for countries such as the U.S that do not receive Mugen produced vehicles like in Japan.

    List of Mugen vehicles

    Production vehicles

    Formula One statistics

    YearTeamGPsWinsPole PositionPodiumsFastest lapsPoints
    Footwork-Mugen Honda1600006
    Footwork-Mugen Honda1600004
    Lotus-Mugen Honda1600000
    Ligier-Mugen Honda17002024
    Ligier-Mugen Honda16101015
    Prost-Mugen Honda17002021
    Jordan-Mugen Honda16103034
    Jordan-Mugen Honda16216061
    Jordan-Mugen Honda17002017

    Complete Formula One results

    (key) (results in bold indicate pole position)

    YearEntrantChassisEngine(s)Drivers1234567891011121314151617PointsWCC
    Footwork Mugen HondaFootwork FA13MF-351H 3.5 V10RSAMEXBRAESPSMRMONCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPORJPNAUS67th
    Michele Alboreto1013655777797Ret7615Ret
    Aguri Suzuki8DNQRet71011DNQRet12RetRet9Ret1088
    Footwork Mugen HondaFootwork FA13B
    Footwork FA14
    MF-351 HB 3.5 V10RSABRAEURSMRESPMONCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPORJPNAUS49th
    Derek Warwick79RetRet13Ret16136174RetRet151410
    Aguri SuzukiRetRetRet910Ret1312RetRetRetRetRetRetRet7
    Team LotusLotus 107CMF-351 HC 3.5 V10
    MF-351 HD 3.5 V10
    BRAPACSMRMONESPCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPOREURJPNAUS0NC
    Pedro Lamy108Ret11
    Alessandro Zanardi915
    Johnny Herbert7710Ret
    Lotus 109Ret8711RetRet12Ret13
    Alessandro ZanardiRetRetRet13Ret1613Ret
    Philippe AdamsRet16
    Éric Bernard18
    Mika Salo10Ret
    Ligier Gitanes BlondesLigier JS41MF-301 3.0 V10BRAARGSMRESPMONCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPOREURPACJPNAUS245th
    Martin Brundle9Ret104RetRet3Ret87Ret
    Aguri Suzuki8Ret116RetDNS
    Olivier PanisRet796Ret484Ret69RetRetRet852
    Ligier Gauloises BlondesLigier JS43MF-301 HA 3.0 V10AUSBRAARGEURSMRMONESPCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAPORJPN156th
    Olivier Panis768RetRet1RetRet7Ret75RetRet107
    Pedro Diniz108Ret107Ret6RetRetRetRetRetRet6RetRet
    1997Prost Gauloises BlondesProst JS45MF-301 HB 3.0 V10AUSBRAARGSMRMONESPCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAAUTLUXJPNEUR216th
    Olivier Panis53Ret842116Ret7
    Jarno Trulli108471510Ret
    Shinji Nakano714RetRetRetRet6Ret1176Ret11RetRetRet10
    1998Benson and Hedges JordanJordan 198MF-301 HC 3.0 V10AUSBRAARGSMRESPMONCANFRAGBRAUTGERHUNBELITALUXJPN344th
    Damon Hill8DSQ810Ret8RetRetRet7441694
    Ralf SchumacherRetRetRet711RetRet16656923RetRet
    1999Benson and Hedges JordanJordan 199MF-301 HD 3.0 V10AUSBRASMRMONESPCANFRAGBRAUTGERHUNBELITAEURMALJPN613rd
    Damon HillRetRet4Ret7RetRet58Ret6610RetRetRet
    <-- nowrapping this name means none of the names wrap -->23Ret4Ret111443431Ret64
    2000Benson and Hedges JordanJordan EJ10
    Jordan EJ10B
    MF-301 HE 3.0 V10AUSBRASMRGBRESPEURMONCANFRAAUTGERHUNBELITAUSAJPNMAL176th
    Heinz-Harald FrentzenRet3Ret176Ret10Ret7RetRet66Ret3RetRet
    Jarno TrulliRet415612RetRet66Ret97RetRetRet1312

    Formula Nippon/Super Formula results

    SeasonCarDriversRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPointsD.C.T.C.
    2010Swift FN09 Yuji Ide9000114th10th
    2011 Naoki Yamamoto8011511th7th
    2012 Takuma Sato4000015th8th
    Naoki Yamamoto9000411th
    2013 Takuma Sato50000.518th4th
    Takashi Kobayashi3000022nd
    Naoki Yamamoto8120371st
    2014Dallara SF14 Naoki Yamamoto902014.59th7th
    Yuhki Nakayama9000020th
    2015 Naoki Yamamoto8120265th6th
    2016 Naoki Yamamoto911015.58th6th
    2017 Pierre Gasly7200332nd2nd
    Naoki Yamamoto700010.59th
    2018 Nirei Fukuzumi4001020th2nd
    Dan Ticktum2000019th
    Naoki Yamamoto6320381st
    2019Dallara SF19 Dan Ticktum3000120th5th
    Patricio O'Ward3000318th
    Jüri Vips1000023rd
    Tomoki Nojiri7100244th
    2020 Ukyo Sasahara7000518th7th
    Tomoki Nojiri7120475th
    2021 Tomoki Nojiri7323861st3rd
    Hiroki Otsu711138.56th7th
    2022 Tomoki Nojiri102611541st1st
    Ukyo Sasahara10210576th
    2023 Liam Lawson9312106.52nd1st
    Tomoki Nojiri83401063rd
    Hiroki Otsu1000024th

    JGTC/Super GT results

    SeasonCarClassDriversRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPointsD.C.
    1997Honda NSX-GTGT50070101116th
    1998GT5007233484th
    1999GT50080023610th
    GT5008110474th
    2000GT500 Ryō Michigami8001741st
    Osamu Nakako50013410th
    Hidetoshi Matsusada3000407th
    GT5008152466th
    2001GT5008110563rd
    GT500 Sébastien Philippe80001816th
    Hiroki Katoh5000622nd
    Benoît Tréluyer30001218th
    2002GT500 Daisuke Itō8101595th
    Dominik Schwager40003513th
    Ryō Michigami41012418th
    GT500 Richard Lyons
    Sébastien Philippe
    8101479th
    2003GT500 Tom Coronel
    Daisuke Itō
    81003810th
    2004Honda NSX-GTGT300 Tetsuya Yamano
    7100931st
    2005GT300
    8233812nd
    20062011: Mugen did not compete as an independent team.
    2012Mugen CR-Z GT300GT300 Hideki Mutoh
    Daisuke Nakajima
    50101215th
    2013GT300 Hideki Mutoh
    Yuhki Nakayama
    8001851st
    2014GT300 Yuhki Nakayama
    Tomoki Nojiri
    80002610th
    Ryō Michigami10000NC
    20152016: Mugen did not compete as an independent team.
    2017Honda NSX-GTGT500 Hideki Mutoh
    Daisuke Nakajima
    8000718th
    Jenson Button10000NC
    2018GT500 Hideki Mutoh
    Daisuke Nakajima
    80111615th
    2019GT500 Hideki Mutoh
    Daisuke Nakajima
    80001215th
    2020GT500 Hideki Mutoh
    Ukyō Sasahara
    80002514th
    2021GT500 Toshiki Oyu
    Ukyō Sasahara
    80102016th
    2022GT500 Toshiki Oyu
    Ukyō Sasahara
    800016.514th
    2023GT500 Tomoki Nojiri
    Toshiki Oyu
    71113210th
    Iori Kimura1000217th
    GT500 Nirei Fukuzumi
    Hiroki Ōtsu
    7122533rd

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Burton, Nigel. History of Electric Cars. 2013. Crowood. 9781847975713. Wiltshire.
    2. Web site: Honda HRV Mugen debuts - Sport variant of India bound Hyundai Creta rival. 2019-07-24. RushLane. en-GB. 2019-10-25.
    3. Web site: Mugen founder Hirotoshi Honda on why he didn't follow in his father's footsteps Autocar. Cropley. Steve. July 29, 2018. www.autocar.co.uk. 2019-10-25.
    4. Out-of-print 'What's Mugen' Catalogue "Mugen NSX Prototype – The 90’s Supercar That Never Was", JapClassifieds, Retrieved on 06 October 2014.
    5. Web site: Straw . Edd . The F1 engine projects Red Bull must surpass . The Race . 2021-08-21 . 2021-01-29.
    6. Web site: Mugen Race Car Engines . King Motorsports blog . King Motorsports . 3 July 2019.
    7. Web site: Machines - iomtt.com: The World's #1 TT Website. www.iomtt.com.
    8. Web site: Honda Shows Its Electric Bike Hand. Purvis. Ben. March 28, 2019. Cycle World. en. 2019-10-25.
    9. Web site: 2008 Tokyo Auto Salon: Honda Fit F154SC concept by Mugen. Autoblog.
    10. Web site: Honda Civic 5D MUGEN Concept. 3 September 2008.
    11. http://www.mugen-power.com/topics/news/080826/index.html Honda Civic 5D MUGEN (Concept Model)