On most afternoons, 17 year-old Yoshi Shinya would leave his house in Japan and travel to a stretch of road in the Akagi mountains for a few hours on his Honda NSR 250 motorcycle. But unfortunately, while cruising the canyons one day he had an accident, which resulted in a broken back and the loss of the use of his legs. Not one to call it quits, Yoshi approached Atsushi Ito from Weld Techniques Factory to craft him a vehicle that would get him back in the driver's seat, drifting on the same canyons where he had his accident.

Getting away from life as an IT consultant, Yoshi would take out his custom Nissan Chaser as often as he could, indulging his passion for drifting while he dreamt of ditching his corporate uniform for a racing suit to play with the big boys of the D1GP. Technological advancements in steering and clutch control for the disabled have given Ito-san the ability to build a one-of-a-kind drift car, controlled strictly by hand and utilizing high tech pedals and light sensors. Today, the 24 year-old Yoshi controls his car in a rhythmic dance of hand movements that few could master.

As the CEO of Weld, Ito-san is known for his fanatic attention to detail in custom fabrication, and he has a quality reputation for crafting some of the best drift cars in the scene. For Yoshi's Toyota Cresta, Ito-san started the 1JZ-GTE's build-up by fully porting and polishing the head, and adding a GReddy TD06-25G turbo with a Trust intercooler, radiator and wastegate to heave the horsepower up to 480hp at 6500rpm. Engine electronics are handled by an A'PEXi Power FC which replaced the factory ECU and gave Ito-san the ability to fine tune all aspects of fuel, boost and ignition control.

To hold the Cresta's power to the ground, Ito-san installed his own D1-spec engine-mounted aluminum front tower brace. As drifting involves more finesse in brake control than regular racing, Weld's slotted rotors and Type R brake pads were installed with TRD calipers fitted inside a set of high-strength one-piece aluminum 18-inch Work Emotion XD-9's. The soft compound of the Bridgestone Potenza RE-01R tires provides just enough traction for hard cornering on the tight turns in the canyons of Japan.

Safety and convenience were crucial to Yoshi considering how often he took to the mountains for some creative driving, so after stripping out the front and rear seats Ito-san opted to install a 16-point rollcage, effectively wrapping Yoshi in the front of his semi-bucket Bride seat and strapping down his wheelchair behind him in a compartment where the rear seats used to be. Four Defi gauges wrapped in a custom carbon fiber pod project the meters outward from the passenger side dash. The gauge arrangement helps free up space to give Yoshi more visibility during his evening drifting sessions while still allowing him to check out the car's vitals.