The diff arrived back with two weeks to spare to go in the Mx5 clubday on the 20th of Feb. Then I had new more annoying issues. Firstly my car would no longer start. It has the original factory battery still so it's now over 10 years old and the car had been sitting dormant for a little over 2 months. So I grabbed my starter pack, started the car and decided to take it for a drive to charge the battery up a bit. First attempt I got about 2.5km's away from home before the car cut-out. Next attempt I got from Wollongong to Robertson in one go. Only issue was the car was misfiring if I tried using the power windows

Next issue is one of my 949's has popped a small air bubble in the casting and one wheel was dead flat on the Saturday before the clubday. I covered it in silicon, left it 8 hours and then pumped it back upto 36 psi. I checked it in the morning on the car and it was only down to 35psi but figured it should be alright for the clubday, that might only be the cold temperature.
For the first time I think ever I didn't kane the car immediately from the start of the day. I'd been having a bit of a tooth problem which had just started and giving me a lot of sensitivity and a headache to boot which didn't. Car wound up incredibly stable and had no problem with the longer sessions the club was running. Diff was tight, tyres stayed up and the battery stayed charged but it's still taking some adjustment to be as smooth with the button clutch as I was with the standard one. I only managed to get my car into 10's which is slower than usual. Highlights of the day were definitely driving Luke's turbo mobile which has way more power than grip, the stock SE suspension is definitely not much stiffer than a standard NB. Then after that I got to Drive Brett's turbo NB aero-monster which was a completely different beast again. It only had 130kw atw which is conversative for a boosted 5 but wow did it have rear end grip thanks to the big wing. Only issue was trying to get it to stop as only half the pedal had it trying to lock the front wheels. Still the motor was amazingly smooth with it's power delivery and a awesome fun to drive. I didn't drive my car anymore after that, my headache was getting the better of my so I called it a day. Unfortunately that wasn't the end of the day... on the way home in convoy with Peter Feutril I ran into my cars old demon. The loss of throttle position and inability to hold a speed started yet again... The car even stalled a couple times randomly right up until we hit Macquarie Pass and then it came good again.
After that I organised a dentist appointment which ended up the day before the Supersprint...and it turned out I had a wisdom tooth coming through and it had remove the gap between teeth and lifted one of my teeth out of the jaw which had been what was giving me the grief. Seeing as the other tooth was already part-way out and was only going to get worse the dentist removed that molar... which was WAY worse than I expected. I ended up missing the already paid for supersprint as I was in no condition to drive and was not allowed to get my blood pressure up until my gum had healed. That pretty much sealed me to giving Supersprints a miss this year.
Since then I've bought a few toys for the Mazda and performed two repairs. Firstly I got a new fuel filter to try as the car has hit 80,000kms now and Daniel Deckers suggested I replace the filter to try and sort my throttle position loss. This ended up being an incredibly tedious job as my bracing was locking the cover in place over the filter and I couldn't stop the lines leaking with a gold tee like I had heard. So off went the bracing and wasted atleast a litre of fuel but the car seemed to gain throttle response just idling after replacing it. So I cut the old filter in half and it had quite a lot of particulate matter in it... so that Shell on the way to PI might've had a rusty tank or something and blocked the filter.
I then ended up up buying TCR's DL1 datalogger which was at a price too good to pass up so I can keep trying to get what I can out of the car. That of course needed a laptop to go with it so I could tune at the track... so kinda an expensive month and a massive fail at saving for that turbo conversion

Next fun issue was the 949's again.. the silicon burned up while on the track and the tyre was empty again after only a few weeks. Seeing as I left it WAY too late to organise a wheel repairer to have a go my Dad had a idea. He set up an old fridge compressor and used the vacuum side and put a vacuum on the rim with tyre. Then used loctite over the hole and let the vacuum suck it in a few times, then pulled the valve, let it return to normal pressure and covered the whole with some paint. Then left it one day until pressuring it to 36psi. It held pressure for over 3 days at this point.... and nearly a week now after the club-day on the 9th of May it is still holding pressure.