Hi, I am William and as you tell from my date joined stamped on my username I am pretty new to the car scene, but here goes. Late last year, my mate came to me and said he was going to place an order for a brand new Toyota 86 GTS, at that time I have to say, I was also keen on placing one myself. I had the money and the permission from the wife to go ahead with it, but something was tugging at my heart strings and in my head, the 86 is a great car no doubt, but I felt like I needed to explore something else. Something different.
So I went on-line and did some research, I Google 'greatest handling cars ever' and some of the results were pointing to a car called a Honda Integra type R. The article was from some magazine called EVO - a UK based car magazine. The article tested this Honda Type R against some of the greatest front wheel cars in history, cars like the VW golf GTi, Mini cooper S etc. and to my surprise, it won.
I more I read, the more I knew I wanted to see where this was going.....so the next thing was to go to carsales.com.au and have a look at what cars were selling for. At this time, all I wanted to do was maybe test drive a few and see what the type R was like.
The aim was to find one that was in reasonable condition, have little to no mods and had to have a service history. I was not going to touch a type R without knowing its history. I don't know a lot about cars, but common sense was telling me, if these cars were highly tuned and engineered from the factory, and then letting some Joe blow with a spanner set from Kmart he got for Christmas tinkering with these car, maybe wasn't a good idea.
The first one that came up, was a championship white Type R with red Recaros, I called the owner and set up an appointment on the following sunny Sunday afternoon to inspect the car. He lived close by and the price seemed fair, $13,500 was the advertised price. When the time came to view the car, I asked my friend who brought the Toyota 86 to come along. I wanted to see his smudged face when he saw what a beast the type R was. When we arrived the car was parked outside the front of the seller house, and I noticed he had P plates on the car, now I don’t have anything against P-Platers but from personal experience, P-platers generally do stupid things with their cars and have little money to spend properly servicing their cars. I am totally generalising here, but in my experience, there’s some truth to this notion. I was once a P-Plater too and I did some stupid things too.
The exterior of the car was rough, when I opened the bonnet, clearly along the welding joints along one side of the engine bay looked like was put together by a 5 year old with some super glue. I asked the seller if the car had been in an accident and he said, he didn’t know. When I pointed out the strange looking welding, he dismissed it, quoting that he had owned a lot of Hondas, and that sort of welding was normal.
The sirens and warning lights were going off in my head, so I asked the seller, if he didn’t mind if I got a qualified mechanic to inspect the car? He totally changed his tune, and mentioned something about the car being a write off, but it was only a small front end accident. I nodded my head in awe of the shear lack for having nothing to say. Next I asked to see the service books, as the ad said, the car had a complete service history. He said they were in the glove box. I reached in and pulled out a pile of receipts and what appeared to be the service book. There were just so many receipts, all in no particular order. Sorting this lot out was going to take some time. I rifled thru what was in my hand and I came across a receipt that showed a tyre service, in South Australia. Further receipts showed the car had been living in Sydney NSW as well. If things couldn’t get worst, I noticed on one of the latest receipt, the odometer reading showed 145,000km. I looked at the ODO in the car and it clearly read 135,000kms. I immediately got out of the car, closed the wade of receipts and thanked the seller for his time and left promptly.
I gave up hope. The other type Rs listed on the website was quite high in Kilometres and with even higher asking prices. I looked at my other opinions. I was seriously thinking then, maybe I should just buy a Mitsubishi EVO 6, TME edition. $26,000 dollars and be done with it. Performance car with 4 doors and enough street creeds to marry whoever it wanted. I even made appointments to go see some imported evo 6s but there was something about the Integra type R that I liked, whether it was that generous N/A engine or that sleek 2 door coupe look, I knew I had to get one. Mind you at this stage, I have neither heard of VTEC or what a B18C is....This was the reputation that the type R had from the internet.
4 weeks later, while at work, my mate called me up and said that he one of work colleagues has a Black Type R that he was considering selling. My heart jumped out of my chest like it was my first time with a girl in high school. Actually I wasn’t so lucky in high school, but that’s another story. No Way, could this be fate? I asked for more details. He was the second owner of the car, it was extremely clean, little mods and he haven’t used in as daily driver for the last 5 years. It was living under a tree for the last few years, collecting dust. I asked for the mobile number and immediately called and arranged a time to see the car that evening.
I drove home from work that evening and immediately proceeded to get the wife to leave everything behind and drive me to see the car, if the car was good as the description over the phone; I was on intent on driving it home that evening.
The rest as they say is history......$9,200 dollars later, I owned a 2000 black DC2 Type R, mind you if you saw the condition of the car at the start, you would believed that the car had been living under a tree. For one thing, there was a layer of bird poo and dust and dirt so thick you could have scraped it off with a shovel. I couldn’t see thru the windows they were that covered in crap. So the first thing when I got the car home was give it a good wash. Surprise, surprise, under that entire firth was a black swan waiting to emerge. I was in love.
So I went on-line and did some research, I Google 'greatest handling cars ever' and some of the results were pointing to a car called a Honda Integra type R. The article was from some magazine called EVO - a UK based car magazine. The article tested this Honda Type R against some of the greatest front wheel cars in history, cars like the VW golf GTi, Mini cooper S etc. and to my surprise, it won.
I more I read, the more I knew I wanted to see where this was going.....so the next thing was to go to carsales.com.au and have a look at what cars were selling for. At this time, all I wanted to do was maybe test drive a few and see what the type R was like.
The aim was to find one that was in reasonable condition, have little to no mods and had to have a service history. I was not going to touch a type R without knowing its history. I don't know a lot about cars, but common sense was telling me, if these cars were highly tuned and engineered from the factory, and then letting some Joe blow with a spanner set from Kmart he got for Christmas tinkering with these car, maybe wasn't a good idea.
The first one that came up, was a championship white Type R with red Recaros, I called the owner and set up an appointment on the following sunny Sunday afternoon to inspect the car. He lived close by and the price seemed fair, $13,500 was the advertised price. When the time came to view the car, I asked my friend who brought the Toyota 86 to come along. I wanted to see his smudged face when he saw what a beast the type R was. When we arrived the car was parked outside the front of the seller house, and I noticed he had P plates on the car, now I don’t have anything against P-Platers but from personal experience, P-platers generally do stupid things with their cars and have little money to spend properly servicing their cars. I am totally generalising here, but in my experience, there’s some truth to this notion. I was once a P-Plater too and I did some stupid things too.
The exterior of the car was rough, when I opened the bonnet, clearly along the welding joints along one side of the engine bay looked like was put together by a 5 year old with some super glue. I asked the seller if the car had been in an accident and he said, he didn’t know. When I pointed out the strange looking welding, he dismissed it, quoting that he had owned a lot of Hondas, and that sort of welding was normal.
The sirens and warning lights were going off in my head, so I asked the seller, if he didn’t mind if I got a qualified mechanic to inspect the car? He totally changed his tune, and mentioned something about the car being a write off, but it was only a small front end accident. I nodded my head in awe of the shear lack for having nothing to say. Next I asked to see the service books, as the ad said, the car had a complete service history. He said they were in the glove box. I reached in and pulled out a pile of receipts and what appeared to be the service book. There were just so many receipts, all in no particular order. Sorting this lot out was going to take some time. I rifled thru what was in my hand and I came across a receipt that showed a tyre service, in South Australia. Further receipts showed the car had been living in Sydney NSW as well. If things couldn’t get worst, I noticed on one of the latest receipt, the odometer reading showed 145,000km. I looked at the ODO in the car and it clearly read 135,000kms. I immediately got out of the car, closed the wade of receipts and thanked the seller for his time and left promptly.
I gave up hope. The other type Rs listed on the website was quite high in Kilometres and with even higher asking prices. I looked at my other opinions. I was seriously thinking then, maybe I should just buy a Mitsubishi EVO 6, TME edition. $26,000 dollars and be done with it. Performance car with 4 doors and enough street creeds to marry whoever it wanted. I even made appointments to go see some imported evo 6s but there was something about the Integra type R that I liked, whether it was that generous N/A engine or that sleek 2 door coupe look, I knew I had to get one. Mind you at this stage, I have neither heard of VTEC or what a B18C is....This was the reputation that the type R had from the internet.
4 weeks later, while at work, my mate called me up and said that he one of work colleagues has a Black Type R that he was considering selling. My heart jumped out of my chest like it was my first time with a girl in high school. Actually I wasn’t so lucky in high school, but that’s another story. No Way, could this be fate? I asked for more details. He was the second owner of the car, it was extremely clean, little mods and he haven’t used in as daily driver for the last 5 years. It was living under a tree for the last few years, collecting dust. I asked for the mobile number and immediately called and arranged a time to see the car that evening.
I drove home from work that evening and immediately proceeded to get the wife to leave everything behind and drive me to see the car, if the car was good as the description over the phone; I was on intent on driving it home that evening.
The rest as they say is history......$9,200 dollars later, I owned a 2000 black DC2 Type R, mind you if you saw the condition of the car at the start, you would believed that the car had been living under a tree. For one thing, there was a layer of bird poo and dust and dirt so thick you could have scraped it off with a shovel. I couldn’t see thru the windows they were that covered in crap. So the first thing when I got the car home was give it a good wash. Surprise, surprise, under that entire firth was a black swan waiting to emerge. I was in love.
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