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| Project car #2 is a go! |
For all kinds of reasons, the 2000 Civic project is not moving forward very quickly. It seems to me there is little to no chance the car will be ready for the beginning of the season. It was dropped off at Choo's spot on December 8th and nothing has happened since. Neither Choo or I have been treating it like an urgent project. This means that the first half of the 2025 track season, basically May and June, would be a write-off... again. It often happens that I get to the beginning of the season with no usable track car. As I get older, and we take longer summer family trips, this bugs me more and more. I always thought it would be cool to have a Honda Fit to use as a backup track and street car, but they were not that cheap to buy, and then it would need suspension to become a fun track car. It was not worth the money it would cost and Alex would certainly not have been on board. A Fit would have fit nicely into Gridlife's Sundae Cup class in the U.S.A. as well.
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| Project car #1 |
I tried to figure out what could be a fun, cheap project. I have managed to accumulate some parts over the years and I figured I could use some of them to build a really cheap car. The black Civic I bought last summer came with coilovers, wheels and 4-wheel disc brakes. I also thought to contact my friend Marc, who dismantled my crashed Civic EP3 in 2017, to see if he could find the coilovers from the crashed car. At the time, he had told me that one of the corners was blown in the crash, and I figured it was time to see how much a rebuild would cost. I presented the idea of another track car to Alex and made a list of advantages:
• Participation in the 2025 season by
Vince, since the car could be ready so quickly
• This car would have a back seat, so
the whole family would fit in it, which means Vince could finally participate
in the inexpensive track events near Deschaillons
• The full interior would also allow
any family members who wanted to attend to go come along for other events as
well
• The new car would use the same
wheels and tires Vince already has
• The new car would eventually allow
Vince to participate in certain events in the USA specifically designed for
cars with about 100 hp
• The new car would also allow Vince
and accompanying family members to finally enter the Grassroots Motorsports
2000$ Challenge in Florida, at some point
• Less important but still something:
this car would use very little gas compared to our other cars, on the road or
on the track
• It may cost less to finish the other
Civic if there is no time constraint
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| The first contender |
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| The second car I saw. Note the spray painted quarter and rust hole in the rocker panel. |
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| Super clean coupe at Costco, no "for sale" sign! |
I headed home, disappointed, with other prospects of coupes for sale in the ads I'd found. I even drove by the car from the day before, thinking "was the body really so bad?"... It was. I decided to go see a sedan that was really close to my house. I don't love the sedan shape, but JS's car is a sedan, and it looks really good. It helps that his day job is auto detailing.
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| JS's car (all black), and his buddy's |
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| Then Si badge had been hidden by snow. |
The Si has Vtec and 127 hp instead of 115. It's heavier, mainly due to the options, like the sunroof. The car was a bit rough, but it was 800$ and, honestly, I could see myself showing up at the track in this metallic yellow coupe with its little wing without being at all embarassed. I called the seller and made an appointment for the next morning to try the car. I was beginning to get kind of excited.
The next morning, I headed back to Laval to meet the seller. He was a young immigrant and seemed really honest and hardworking. He had bought a newer Civic (I think it's the one in the photo above) so he could be an Uber driver, and also worked full-time at the Maxi. I had wondered how someone could leave a car in a Maxi parking lot for days, but I figured as an employee, you can ask for this kind of favour.
We boosted the car because the battery was completely dead. I removed some snow from in front of the car, soaking my feet once again, and drove it around. There had an exhaust leak and some other small issues, but the car could be driven. I took in on the street, but couldn't test much with all the snow on the road and in the parking lot. The clutch and transmission felt OK, the ride was horrible. I figured there was a problem with a shock or an axle or something, but it didn't deter me, since I was planning to install coilovers and an axle was not an expensive item. I jacked the car up to check out the floor and there were no holes. I could see the exhaust fumes coming out of the mid pipe in a couple of locations, given the cold weather. I decided not to try to negotiate the very fair price and we made a deal at 800$.
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| Broken bumper, some rust, but over all not too bad. |
I had arranged for my Mom to help my pick up the car if I bought it, so I went all the way back to Montreal to get her. We got back to the Maxi and I made my mom give me a ride in the Subaru to check that she still remembered how to properly drive a manual car... She did! The plan was to drive further north to JS's house and leave the car there. Of course, we hit a major traffic jam and there was a small but important issue with the car: the windshield washer spray didn't work. We got off the highway, at at McDonald's, and when I investigated why the windshield washer would not spray, I found a ruptured hose and when trying to re-attach it, I only made it worse. After a while, the traffic cleared up and we left the car at JS's house in Ste-Sophie, parked nose to nose with his backup Civic so he could boost my car when he needed to test drive it.
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| Safely parked at JS's house |
Since I dropped off the car, I went to pick up the coilovers, and Marc denied ever telling me one of the shocks was blown, which I thought was funne. When I got home, I looked on YouTube to see how to test a shock and, sure enough, it was fine! There were a couple of small bends in the top plate where the camber adjustment bolts slide, but I brought it to Pat Boyer and he straightened them out in 5 minutes.
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| My old Dynamic coilovers will find a new use |
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| Top plate before Pat straightened the adjustment grooves |
JS has test driven the car and suspects a broken shock. He confirmed that the floor of the car is in good shape. I have a list of small repairs we have to make, but I think there is every chance the car can be usable on track as soon as the snow melts... I hope I'm right! Stay tuned...













Re. "I presented the idea of another track car to Alex and made a list of advantages", you forgot to mention that you said YOLO! Alex :)
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