I'm going to try and wrap up the background stuff, so I can (finally) move on to the new car.
Fast forward to March of 2022. I read about the new 2022 Civic Si for the first time right here on the forum. I wasn't actively looking for another car (I had just taken delivery of a new Accord Hybrid a few weeks before), but the car sounded really interesting, especially considering the very reasonable MSRP.
I was starting to think about how great it would be to have a brand new car that I could run some track days with, without having to add a ton of modifications. Nothing too heavy or complicated (no AWD). I also wanted to buy one last new car with a manual transmission. And as a bonus, the Civic Si comes with a real limited slip from the factory.
I had been driving and enjoying the Volvo V70R for three years, but that car was starting to show its age. And I had just bought a nice Jeep Wrangler, but that quickly turned into an unreliable nightmare. I was ready to get back to some rock solid Honda reliability. I called the dealer that we had just gotten the Accord from and asked him to contact me when they got a new Civic Si in stock so that I could sit in it and see how well I fit.
Every three or four weeks, I'd call or drop him a text, but each time I was told that they didn't have on the horizon. I kept checking Inventories at Honda.com, but they weren't showing any of them in the Tri State area. As it turned out, my dealer didn't get a single Civic Si for the 2022 model year.
Meanwhile, I read every review and watched every YouTube video on these cars. There were certainly cars out there, but they all seemed to be either down south or out west.
As 2022 turned into 2023, I was starting to get pretty annoyed. I had missed a whole season of track days and I still hadn't even seen a single example on the road or in any dealership around here. I was ready to take a chance, figuring that if I bought one of the cars sight unseen and decided that it was too small or something, I could probably sell it on without taking a huge loss.
In January, I called the dealer back, put down a deposit (at MSRP) and told him that I'd take any color except red. At this point, the Honda website was starting to show a small handful of the cars trickling into dealers in New York and New Jersey, but I still hadn't seen one in person. He said that if they didn't have one in his next month's allocation, that they would locate one at another dealership and arrange a swap.
By March of 2023, they still hadn't gotten a single example allocated to them, and said that no dealer that had one was willing to swap it for any other Honda. At that point, I had found four dealers in the state who were showing cars in their inventories, and a few more in NY and NJ, but they all wanted $5000 over MSRP, and I refused to do that. I even contacted Honda to see if I could by a car directly from them, but they said no.
Around this time, in the course of one of my forum rants about Honda making it hard for me to give them my money for a new Civic Si, the former Datsun310Guy / now Datsun240zGuy mentioned that Acura dealers near him were selling new Integras at MSRP.
I hadn't paid any attention to the Integra when it was first introduced because the Civic Si looked like such a great deal, at least on paper. I went to the Acura website, saw that it had the same engine, transmission and limited slip, with some more extras thrown in, but quickly dismissed them, because in order to get the manual transmission, you had to jump up a significant ($5000) trim level to the A-Spec. I clicked out of there, ignored the Integras for a few more weeks, and went back to daily searches for a Civic Si within a few hours drive from home.
Eventually, I ventured back to Acura.com a few more times for a closer look. Before long, I realized that the A-Spec and the Technology Package actually included a bunch of stuff that I'd actually like to have in my next car. I checked inventories and found a handful of A-Spec Integras in stock within a reasonable distance. I scoped out a few dealerships when they were closed and was liking what I was seeing. Most were CTV automatics, but there were a couple of them around with the six speed manual. And all Integras had the Civic Si engine regardless of the pedal count. I drove a few six speeds, and one with a CVT, just because it was there. I didn't even hate the CVT as much as I wanted to.
I went back home to do some more thinking. Eventually, I came to the conclusion that an Integra A-Spec Tech, with all it's extra goodies (and a longer warranty) at MSRP, was a better deal than a Civic SI at MSRP + $5000, at least as far as I was concerned.
I had seen just two red Integras on the lots and really liked the color, but they were both CVTs. I went back to Acura.com, searched the inventories and found two dealers in New York who each had a single red 2024 Integra A-Spec Tech with the six speed manual allocated to them. I emailed them both and asked for a price. Both came back with MSRP. Period.
I made a phone call to confirm, drove to New York, drove a couple more 2023 cars in other colors, and then made a deal for one of the incoming 2024s at MSRP. It would be there in about six weeks (mid June).
So my quest to buy a 2022 Civic Si ended sixteen months later with a 2024 Six Speed Integra A-Spec Tech.
It was exhausting, but I am happy.