Hi, I am Honda Bob. I am a tuner in the cleveland ohio area. I work with the guys from Big 3 Racing, and I dedicate this build to them. They helped me out with a lot of stuff, including shop space, tools, and moral support.
This is my 92 accord ex build. I am about as diehard of a honda guy as they come, but I've never had an accord untill now. I needed a winter beater bad, and I picked this car up for 200 bucks with a blown head gasket, and that is all I knew of at the time. The car had 208k on it. After getting it, and putting a head gasket on it, I further inspected the vehicle to find it needed new trailing arm bushings, rear brakes (the one rotor was cut off the hub), upper and lower ball joints, stab link bushings, trans (no 3rd gear), clutch, egr control solenoid, o2 sensor, and quarter panels. All of that is no big deal at all... The real problem is, I cannot leave well enough alone.
I have fixed about everything except for the rot, and made the car safe. At the same time, I realized the car needed more power, b/c it was terribly slow. My other project car (race car) is a 400+ whp sohc civic. (35psi off a borg warner gm8, no joke) This car was a complete dog, but I fixed that.
This is about the best whole car pic i have right now.
I definatly went turbo with the build. I picked up a ported evo3 16g, manifold, o2housing, heat shield and j pipe for 90 bucks, Every bolt hole on the turbo was stripped out, and the manifold had a couple cracks, but all that was fixed.
When I went turbo, I decided I was not looking for the biggest hp number b/c I have my civic. I did want torque though. I also wanted the shortest charge piping possible to keep lag to a very minimum. I ended up using a ford turbo coupe intercooler and placed it where the battery goes. I relocated the battery to infront of the passanger tire, and made a battery tray out of angle iron. Here are a couple pics.
The engine bay, after first boosting...
With the intercooler where it was, I needed to get air to it. I am planning on going to an evo style cf hood in the future, but untill I do, I did this...
This was my first TIG welding project. I learned on this hood.
I could not match the paint at all, so I went for some contrast. I love the VHT flame proof ceramic paint, Its like a satin color with a little bit of shiny grain to it, like sand paper. Its hard to describe, but its not just plain ole flat black.
On the tabs that go inward, I'm going to get vynl made up that says Turobcharged for the driver side, and INTERCOOLED for the passanger side.
I replaced the trans with a good ex 5speed, and installed a new flywheel and Spec stage 3 clutch, rated for 360 ft/lbs of torque.
I highly reccomend spec. They hold up. I origonally installed a centerforce dual friction, but the bitch would not disengage at all. I returned the clutch at summit racing (i live 40 minutes away) for another centerforce dual friction clutch, thinking it was a fluke, and it too would not disengage. At that point, I swore off centerforce, because I had to remove the clutch a 3rd time, pulling the trans a second time unnecessarily. I ended up springing for the spec, and im glad I did. It has great engagement, and its not too rough. My whole goal for this car was to maintain stock driveability, just with more power.
I then headed to the egr box. I raped the shit out of it, removing the internals and replacing the guts with a omni power 4bar map sensor and a MAC ebc solenoid (fuck AEM, they sell this solenoid for 90 bux. We did the research, found the part number, and picked it up from a local MAC distributor for 13 dollars.)
This is my 92 accord ex build. I am about as diehard of a honda guy as they come, but I've never had an accord untill now. I needed a winter beater bad, and I picked this car up for 200 bucks with a blown head gasket, and that is all I knew of at the time. The car had 208k on it. After getting it, and putting a head gasket on it, I further inspected the vehicle to find it needed new trailing arm bushings, rear brakes (the one rotor was cut off the hub), upper and lower ball joints, stab link bushings, trans (no 3rd gear), clutch, egr control solenoid, o2 sensor, and quarter panels. All of that is no big deal at all... The real problem is, I cannot leave well enough alone.
I have fixed about everything except for the rot, and made the car safe. At the same time, I realized the car needed more power, b/c it was terribly slow. My other project car (race car) is a 400+ whp sohc civic. (35psi off a borg warner gm8, no joke) This car was a complete dog, but I fixed that.
This is about the best whole car pic i have right now.
I definatly went turbo with the build. I picked up a ported evo3 16g, manifold, o2housing, heat shield and j pipe for 90 bucks, Every bolt hole on the turbo was stripped out, and the manifold had a couple cracks, but all that was fixed.
When I went turbo, I decided I was not looking for the biggest hp number b/c I have my civic. I did want torque though. I also wanted the shortest charge piping possible to keep lag to a very minimum. I ended up using a ford turbo coupe intercooler and placed it where the battery goes. I relocated the battery to infront of the passanger tire, and made a battery tray out of angle iron. Here are a couple pics.
The engine bay, after first boosting...
With the intercooler where it was, I needed to get air to it. I am planning on going to an evo style cf hood in the future, but untill I do, I did this...
This was my first TIG welding project. I learned on this hood.
I could not match the paint at all, so I went for some contrast. I love the VHT flame proof ceramic paint, Its like a satin color with a little bit of shiny grain to it, like sand paper. Its hard to describe, but its not just plain ole flat black.
On the tabs that go inward, I'm going to get vynl made up that says Turobcharged for the driver side, and INTERCOOLED for the passanger side.
I replaced the trans with a good ex 5speed, and installed a new flywheel and Spec stage 3 clutch, rated for 360 ft/lbs of torque.
I highly reccomend spec. They hold up. I origonally installed a centerforce dual friction, but the bitch would not disengage at all. I returned the clutch at summit racing (i live 40 minutes away) for another centerforce dual friction clutch, thinking it was a fluke, and it too would not disengage. At that point, I swore off centerforce, because I had to remove the clutch a 3rd time, pulling the trans a second time unnecessarily. I ended up springing for the spec, and im glad I did. It has great engagement, and its not too rough. My whole goal for this car was to maintain stock driveability, just with more power.
I then headed to the egr box. I raped the shit out of it, removing the internals and replacing the guts with a omni power 4bar map sensor and a MAC ebc solenoid (fuck AEM, they sell this solenoid for 90 bux. We did the research, found the part number, and picked it up from a local MAC distributor for 13 dollars.)
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