MrJoshua wrote:
There is always a way to do stuff cheap enough for the challenge.
Fuggin'a. Ye ov little faith:
Car: Spend no more than $500 (preferably $200 or $300.) 2 $250 cars can usually make one running one. Try to steer clear of un-common stuff, as you'll be less likely to find multiple cars. Old hondas seem to work pretty well for us. If you're only $250 in, you should be able to sell @ least $100 worth of E36 M3, and even with scrap prices low, recoup $100 at the squisher (hint, pilfered motors, bed frames, etc, are heavy, and will fit in the car you plan to scrap.)
Suspension: Troll craigslist for cheap coilovers/springs/shocks. If nothing pops up in a couple months, the "ebay motorcycle shock" thing seems to be pretty popular, and stankin' cheap. We're considering this setup on this year's car.
If all else fails (here we go again,) go to junkyard, find big-ass heavy vehicle (think big vans,) with springs sort of close to the same diameter as the stock ones on your challenger. 2 bigass chevy van springs cut in half (they're like 18 berkeleying inches long) equals 4 springs for your toyota/honda/neon/whatever. 2 springs should be 15 bucks or so.
Take the stock shocks to your favorite local vato-zone, where you know all the guys behind the counter and occassionally bring them a 12 pack. Pick through their boxes of truck shocks until you find something similar to yours. Adjustability shmustability, they're meant to handle big ass beefy springs on big ass heavy vehicles. These should run you no more than $50.00
Engine performance: A $100 nitrous kit is easy to install, and goes a long way toward significantly lowering drag times.
Cage: Wait until after the challenge to put the cage in. Duh.
Other safety equipment: Doesn't count toward the budget.
Rustoleum paint: $50.
Total budget spent: $215. This leaves $1,785 for the best wheel/tire combination the challenge has ever seen.
Dew eet.