The Y2K Kickoff: Hot Import Nights Del Mar 2000
Date: February 5, 2000
Location: Del Mar Fairgrounds, Del Mar, California
Producer: Vision Entertainment
On February 5, 2000, Vision Entertainment opened the new millennium’s show season by bringing Hot Import Nights (HIN) to the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Acting as the first major Southern California event of the Y2K era, this exhibition set the stylistic and technological baseline for what would become the most explosive year in the history of the sport compact industry.
The Nightclub Environment
While the Del Mar Fairgrounds had been used just months earlier for brightly lit, purist-focused events, Vision Entertainment transformed the space to fit their signature HIN formula.
- Blackout Conditions: The overhead lighting in the O’Brien and Bing Crosby exhibition halls was intentionally shut down. The environment was instead driven by theatrical lasers, heavy fog machines, and elevated DJ stages pumping high-BPM trance and techno music.
- The Neon Mandate: Because of the darkened halls, underbody neon kits transitioned from an optional aesthetic accessory to a competitive necessity. StreetGlow and LiteGlow neon tubes (frequently in blue, green, and pink) became the primary light sources, allowing judges and attendees to inspect the lower halves of the vehicles.
The Y2K Stylistic Shift
The February 2000 event marked a definitive departure from the subtle, bolt-on aesthetic of the late 1990s, pivoting hard into the “extreme” modification era.
- Aggressive Aerodynamics: Factory-optional front lips were rapidly replaced by aggressive, full-replacement fiberglass bumpers. The show floor saw a massive influx of kits from Japanese manufacturers like Bomex and C-West, alongside the highly polarizing, dramatic styling of VeilSide.
- Color-Shifting Paint: If 1999 was defined by factory pearl paints, early 2000 was the dawn of the color-shifter. Chameleon paints (often utilizing House of Kolor’s Kameleon or Nippon Paint’s Maziora lines) became the ultimate status symbol in the “Wild” categories, shifting from purple to green to gold depending on the angle of the convention center spotlights.
- Aluminum Wings: Subtle factory spoilers were replaced en masse by towering, CNC-machined aluminum GT wings, signaling a distinct stylistic shift toward the exaggerated profiles that would soon hit the mainstream.
Platform Debuts and Maturation
The early 2000 show floor featured the arrival and evolution of chassis that would dominate the coming decade.
- The 7th Gen Celica: Toyota had recently released the completely redesigned 2000 Celica (T230). The Del Mar event featured some of the very first heavily modified examples, immediately validating the angular hatchback as a prime canvas for the aftermarket.
- The S2000 Matures: After making brief, lightly modified appearances in late 1999, the Honda S2000 (AP1) returned to the show floor with serious engine modifications. Comptech supercharger setups became the premier upgrade for owners looking to secure top engine bay points.
In-Car Electronics (ICE)
Occurring in the gap between the 1999 launch of the Sega Dreamcast and the impending U.S. release of the PlayStation 2, the audio/video categories were highly standardized but increasingly elaborate.
- The Fiberglass Trunk: Standard carpeted subwoofer boxes were deemed obsolete for top-tier competitors. Trunks were entirely gutted and rebuilt using custom-painted fiberglass enclosures designed to seamlessly integrate JL Audio, Kicker, or Rockford Fosgate subwoofers with floating amplifier racks.
- Screen Saturation: The metric for a winning interior was no longer just the presence of an LCD screen, but the quantity of screens. Competitors mounted 5-inch and 7-inch monitors in door panels, headliners, and motorized trunk lids.
The February 2000 Del Mar HIN occurred exactly as Hollywood was locking in its vision for the automotive subculture. During this exact window, the production team for Universal Studios’ The Fast and the Furious (still operating under the working title Redline) was finalizing its vehicle casting. The extreme aesthetic displayed at Del Mar—defined by heavy fiberglass, neon underglow, and complex vinyl graphics—served as a direct template for the hero cars that would soon be immortalized on film.



















































