Now’s Your Chance To Own A Wicked Integra Type R Rally Car With Boost
We’ve all found ourselves at one point or another stumbling across a reasonably priced race car in the classifieds. Before we even know it we’re convincing ourselves that we need a such a car in our lives and that the finances don’t look too bad. Unfortunately after some further investigation we discover that the cost of maintenance is stratospheric and that the car is only a reasonable price because it’s been thrashed to within an inch of its life - dream of a race car over. Amazingly, there are no such problems with this one-of-a-kind JDM rally car.
If you can look past the fairly ghetto light bar (fibreglass with four 100W auxiliary lamps) this 2000 Acura Integra Type R is actually a very tasteful and well-put-together project car. The exterior remains fairly standard with a stock body kit, factory wing and original Phoenix Yellow paint, although we’re sure it’s probably had a few re-sprays. But it’s the light modifications that really make the car stand out. The bright white first-generation Infiniti Q45 wheels give the car that traditional rally car look and the contrasting red mud flaps set everything off. The rear window has also been replaced with a much lighter FAL Lexan hatch to comply with rally regulations.
The interior continues with the brash colour scheme featuring red cloth Sparco Pro2000 seats, a yellow FIA compliant roll cage, Camlock harnesses, a Sparco steering wheel, a Wilwood hydraulic handbrake and of course the essential fire extinguishers. Despite the car’s heavy use the interior looks to be in great condition, the sign of a well maintained vehicle.
Under the hood is where things get even better. The owner claims that the original B18C5 motor has never been opened, but thanks to a Jackson Racing supercharger (running at 10psi), the 1797cc engine puts out an impressive 195bhp at the wheels. Other modifications include an AEM fuel rail with RC 400cc injectors, a Koyo Aluminium Radiator, Hondata ECU and a 2.5-inch stainless steel FIA approved exhaust. The original five-speed transmission remains stock but the clutch has been replaced with a beefed up Exedy unit to handle the extra abuse that rally driving entails.
Acura Integra Type Rs were great packages straight out of the showroom, so the suspension has only received minor tweaks. These modifications include adjustable aluminium shocks, custom rear wishbones and Eibach helper springs. Brakes also remain fairly stock featuring standard discs, Carbotech XP10 pads and Goodridge braided stainless lines. The owner states that the front discs are are two snow rallies old so they should still be in good shape.
The car has covered 99,821 hard miles but the owner looks to have serviced the car properly after every rally outing. The care that has gone into the modification of this Integra is impressive with every mod being carried out carefully and considerately. It even comes with a clean CarFax (a clean vehicle history report). And if you want to see in-depth details of the build, the owner has step-by-step pictures. At £9700 ($13,999, €12,913) this might be a race car purchase that finally makes sense…
Source: Bring A Trailer
Comments
That’s not JDM, that’s USDM
Yep
That’s rally car, not DM things. And not even ken block’s gymkhana sh@t, which just showing off he is rich.
Guys, shoutout to that codriver! The guy is awesome. Keep it up, codriver.
Stance kids be like “noooo it’s ruined!!”
What do you mean “fairly ghetto light bar?” That’s what most club level rally racers use. They’re thoroughly proven and work brilliantly.
Yeah, I was thinking exactly the same, I don’t see anything wrong with it, it looks normal and does the job.
Also there’s no difference in each types’ function but where I’m from, that is called a light pod not a light bar, those are two different things haha.
Tastefully is a very strong word haha.
What do you mean by saying Infiniti Q45 wheels????
Those are literally the wheels the first-gen Q45 used. Sans hubcaps and painted white.
In Finland we’ve been racing with Tegs and EP3 civics for over 15 years this is not a news.
Wait the title says it’s an integra type r, if that’s true then it just made 15 whp with the supercharger? Because if we take a 10% drivetrain loss for a fwd car, the integra type r is rated at 180whp from the factory so it’s making 195 now that’s a 15 hp gain. On top of that I thought bhp specifically meant hp at the crank, is bhp at the wheels the correct term?
No manufacturer advertises whp. They advertise crank horsepower.
I just bought a stock 2003 rsx type s for 5000, compared to this price I still have 9000 dollars in upgrade money and it doesn’t have to be yellow.
The RSX Type-S is super heavy. Yes it has the legandary K20 engine, but because if the shear weight of the RSX chassis and all the luxury stuff, it will never preform as well.
Why not :)