circular
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Friday, September 10, 2010
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Essential mix best part
some older caspa isn't it crazy he was only 18 at the time this was recorded!!
filth.fm
sick website a buddy of mine told me about at school, its funny how many people love/hate dubstep. its a dualistic kinda thing so its one way or another. but yeah its just filth.fm , click on listen live pick a program to run it on and they stream new/old dubstep good for parties or gaming! enjoi!
Monday, August 30, 2010
cool find, makes me regret getting an Si lol
1998 Acura Integra Type R vs. 2010 Honda Civic Si
Revenge of the Acura Integra Type R
By John Pearley Huffman, Contributor | Published Feb 23, 2010
It's a time capsule Inside Line could drive and test. A
perfectly preserved 1998 Acura Integra Type R with just 5,400 miles
showing on its odometer and new car smell still wafting through its
interior. Recently disinterred from somewhere deep in the
climate-controlled bowels of American Honda's Torrance, California,
headquarters, it's undamaged, unmodified, unmolested and almost
flawless. And it's quite likely the nicest Integra Type R left on Earth.
We beat the snot out of it.
By now, virtually all its brother Type Rs have been ruined with
stupid modifications, stolen, salvaged and ruined again. But this one is
hermetically
sealed-in-a-mayonnaise-jar-underneath-Funk-&-Wagnalls-front-porch
awesome. Except for the fresh oil in the Type R crankcase, it's pure
1998.
It was an Acura service-training vehicle
and, until Acura decided to sell it earlier this year, it was never
titled. When it was made available to American Honda employees for
purchase, more than 100 of them signed up for the privilege of buying
it. Gary Robinson, an old friend and the new head of Acura Public Relations , won the lottery. And then he made the mistake of mentioning his purchase to us over lunch.
Heck, we'd have settled for a whip around the block. But he let us
test it and put a couple hundred miles on its barely used odo. And for
some contemporary context, we also borrowed a 2010 Honda Civic Si coupe equipped with Honda's "FP" Factory Performance parts.
Unfortunately, Bridgestone doesn't offer the RE010 in the Type R's dinky 195/55R15 size anymore, so Tire Rack
recommended the Dunlop Direzza Sport Z1 Star Spec as the closest
substitute. Like the RE010, Tire Rack classifies the Z1 Star Spec as an
"Extreme Performance Summer" tire and it's both the highest rated tire
of its type by Tire Rack customers and the best seller in its category.
We asked Tire Rack to shave 3/32nds of tread off the new Dunlops to
simulate the break-in miles that we couldn't put on them.
That Tire Rack was able to not only shave the tires but get them to us in just two days is dang near a miracle of logistics.
Old School Done Right
By 21st-century standards, the Integra Type R is hopelessly archaic.
Forget the dinky, body-color wheels. Look at how thin those A-pillars
are — no airbags in there. That cowl barely comes up to your knees, the
steering wheel has dorky horn buttons on its spokes, the radio head unit
is pure Pep Boys and the slider-based ventilation controls would look
at home in a '48 Ford.
But there are plenty of elements to the Integra design that made us
nostalgic. The instrumentation is all in one single, easily scanned pod
directly in front of the driver, the front seats mold well to any body,
the shifter is perfectly positioned and feels directly connected to the
five-speed transmission, and that low cowl means lots of greenhouse
glass for better visibility. Yeah, the tall deck spoiler knocks out a
bunch of rearward vision, but the Integra otherwise remains a paragon of
ergonomic virtue.
And with the Civic Si parked next to it, the Integra looks absolutely
tiny. The Integra's 172.4-inch overall length, 101.3-inch wheelbase and
51.9-inch height are all 3.1 inches shorter than the Civic coupe's
dimensions. At 66.7 inches wide, it's 2.2 inches slimmer than the Honda.
On Inside Line's scales, the Type R weighed in at a svelte 2,598 pounds — 270 pounds less than the Civic Si.
So the Civic Si is a full NFL defensive end — say, Jared Allen of the Vikings — heavier than the Integra.
Hard-Core Hardware
It had been almost nine years since anyone at Inside Line had
driven a stock Integra Type R, but once inside it was love again at
first sit. There never have been many cars as closely tailored as the
Integra Type R and there are fewer of them now than there were then.
Compared to today's thickly insulated tubs, getting into an old Integra
is almost like swinging your leg over a motorcycle or mounting a horse.
You feel somehow exposed, as if the doors weren't there at all.
Turn the key — and it's a real bare key — and the Type R's
hand-massaged 1.8-liter B18C5 engine rocks to life. Sound deadening had
been stripped from the Type R to cut weight, and sometimes the engine
sounds like it's revving in your lap. Rated at 195 horsepower, it's down
a mere two ponies from the 2.0-liter K-series power plant in the Civic
Si. And it makes that 195 hp at a wailing 8,000 rpm — 400 rpm short of
its redline. This car is unquiet in the best possible way.
Getting to that 8,400 means tipping into the accelerator pedal, and
that means reliving the sensation of a real mechanical throttle cable.
This isn't a pedal hooked up to a rheostat that's sending a signal to
some computer, but rather a thick steel cord that works against a spring
on a throttle body. It's an honest difference you feel in your big toe.
And it's a sensation we all miss.
More Hard-Core Hardware
There's never been a better front-drive shifter than the Integra Type
R's and it's just as good as we had remembered it. The gates are
distinct, the effort is light and the shifter movement is instinctive.
You mold your hand to the shifter so you can feel all the mechanical
bits whirring away in the engine bay through it.
This thing might have a license plate on it, but it has the
personality of racecar. And its direct mechanical connection with the
driver is made even more special by the abundance of electronically
disconnected machines sold today.
The Type R's engine produces virtually no low-end torque. And even at
its 7,500 rpm torque peak, it's only making 130 pound-feet of twist. It
wasn't built to go drag racing. It was made for the driver who knows
how to keep an engine boiling while squirting from corner to corner.
By any measure, the Civic Si's bigger, 197-hp engine is more
civilized and better composed than the Type R's. Its idle is less
raucous, it builds engine speed with less vibration and it's much
quieter at its 8,000-rpm redline than the Type R is at its redline. What
they have in common is that distinct moment when the VTEC variable
valve timing system kicks in and engine speed gets frantic. Despite the
Si's great exhaust note, its engine simply doesn't invite the
involvement the Type R's does.
Hard-Core Driving
The Type R's steering is taut and the front tires feel sutured to the
pavement. Some of this is due to the double-wishbone front suspension
that was once every Honda's most distinctive engineering feature. More
of it is due to the lightweight wheels and tires and mechanical power
steering.
The Civic Si's steering ratio, at 13.62:1, is actually quicker than
the Type R's 16.1:1 rack-and-pinion, but it's numbed by the electric
power steering system to which it's attached and the heavy 18-inch
wheels this car was wearing. It's nonetheless very good. It just pales
in comparison to the old Type R.
In fact, on the slalom course the Civic Si bit into the pavement with
better initial turn-in than the Type R. That's likely a function of its
slightly wider (215/40ZR18) Dunlop SP Sport tires and quicker steering.
Both cars have a helical limited-slip differential working for them
through the corners. But the Type R's chassis offers more feedback and
much better manners.
The Civic Si is fast through the slalom at 69.7 mph with the
stability control turned off. The old Integra Type R, however, is
absolutely scalding. With no stability control to turn off, it blasted
through the slalom at a stunning 71.8 mph. That's just a little bit
better than the last Porsche Boxster S we tested and it's more than 3 mph faster than a 2010 Camaro SS. Some exotics and the Corvette ZR1 will beat it through the slalom, but not much else.
More Hard-Core Driving
Throw in 0.92g of stick on the skid pad (the Civic Si only managed
0.88g) and the Type R rises to the very top rank of performance cars.
This is the best-handling front-drive car Inside Line has ever tested — it just happens to be 12 years old.
The Integra also outstopped the Civic, despite its tiny 15-inch
wheels and tires and much smaller 9.5-inch-diameter front brake rotors
(the Civic's measure 11.8 inches). The Type R stopped in an
astonishingly short 110 feet from 60 mph; that's 14 feet shorter than
the Honda could manage.
The Type R kicked its ass at the drag strip, too. The Integra's
6.8-second 0-60-mph clocking and 14.9 seconds at 95.2 mph quarter-mile
performance also handily beat the Civic Si's 7.5-second 0-60 time and
15.4 seconds at 92.5 mph bests. That's almost all due to the extra
weight the Civic is lugging around.
Yes, the Integra Type R will buzz annoyingly on the freeway.
Naturally the suspension is balanced more for performance than comfort.
Of course the Civic Si is an easier car to live with every day in
virtually every way. But the Type R is still the performance standard
against which all other small cars must be judged.
The Acura of Acuras
There's simply nothing in the current Acura lineup that comes close to
being as mechanically engaging as the Integra Type R (or the late, great
NSX, for that matter). All-wheel drive, silken V6 engines and computer
controls are still poor substitutes for a perfectly tuned chassis, a
spellbinding engine and a direct connection between driver and car. When
the Integra Type R was new, it was the embodiment of everything we all
hoped Acura would be.
If Acura ever decides to go searching for its soul, it's downstairs in Gary Robinson's parking spot.

The Type R is still the performance standard against which all otherThis isn't a comparison test in the traditional sense simply because comparing a new car to one that's more than a decade old is just plain stupid, but comparisons are inevitable. All of us who drove an Integra Type R back then (it made it to America in the 1997 model year) still remember it as the best-handling front-drive car ever built. But memories are fuzzy, fungible things created in the crucible of their moments. The questions are: Has the Type R's moment passed? And just how far has Honda small car performance come since Bill Clinton was smoking cigars in the Oval Office? We decided to find out. One Change, Just One For safety's sake, Inside Line ordered up a new set of tires for the Type R before testing. The car's spooky preservation meant the original Bridgestone Potenza RE010 were still wrapped around the white wheels. That's fine for museum display, but 12-year-old tires dry out and one of our goals was to survive the test.small cars must be judged.






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