I've never owned a Honda before, so this one seemed like a good place to get my feet wet.
This car went from sitting in a field in North Dakota, to sitting in my friends driveway for 8 months, to my garage.
This is the story of how this stripped down shell of a Honda came to live in my garage.
Last January I bought a 2000 VW Golf with lots of miles & some rust, but overall a decent car. I fixed the rust, put coilovers and oem wheels on it, made it look cool and drove it most of the summer as my fun/daily car. It got great mileage, and it was super fun to blast around in. BUT, having 3 cars and a 1 stall garage is dumb, so I sold it in favor of keeping the truck for our yearly camping trip. Fast forward and that trip is over, fall is fast approaching, and I'm racking my brain trying to decide what project I want to tackle next. I had a list of things I 'could' do to the truck, but none of them seemed financially sensible, nor did they seem like they would really increase my level of enjoyment.
Frankly, I was ready for a change. I've been playing with carburetted American cars for the last 10 years. It's time to have a fuel injected project car!
When I sold the VW in August my friend (who is a big Honda guy) mentioned to me that he'd sell this Coupe to me for the paltry sum of $300. I laughed and turned him down. Well, as time went on I could not get the dang thing out of my head. It haunted me (in a good way). So wheels were set in motion, the truck got sold, and I headed over and got my Coupe.
Or should I say had my Coupe delivered; my buddy was kind enough to deliver it the 6 blocks to my house.
Here's the details and overall plan - car has no engine, trans, engine harness, ecu, gauge cluster, hvac controls, back seat, etc, etc, etc. Originally it would have had a single cam 1.6 (d16y8- I believe this car was a vtec car originally) - it will now be a twin cam 2.0 non-vtec (b20b) from a CRV. It should make about 146 horsepower and hopefully give the car a little extra pep from stock. I will be using an Integra GSR transmission that should also be a little closer ratio than stock. I intend to try my hand at painting for the first time and spray the front clip & bumper covers, and basically just reassemble the whole car.
In the end I hope to have an efficient and capable car for some amateur Motorsports participation and a fun commuter/toy. Hopefully a good combination of OEM and quality aftermarket parts will accomplish that. I'm trying to allow the budget to run a little rampant in an effort to just relax and have fun. Luckily my initial purchase price is pretty low so it still should end up being an inexpensive project. Frankly, if it looks half as good as Cousin Eddie's recent Civic (seen here ) when all is said and done I would be ecstatic.
It's not there yet. ha ha ha