I thought all cars are tested before they make it to the lot, meaning that the motor should already be broken in?
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owequitit : 2009 Honda Civic Si
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Originally posted by fatboy1185 View PostI thought all cars are tested before they make it to the lot, meaning that the motor should already be broken in?
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Originally posted by owequitit View PostThey do the very initial break in, but the engine is still wearing in for the first couple thousand miles. It ultimately wears in forever, eventually needing replaced or rebuilt, but the intial start, and the intial few hundred miles are really critical.
Mostly regarding evo's sti's.
Here's what I've heard, I'm curious to see what you think. As you do your homework.
The motor does better if driven hard initially. This helps to set the piston rings and other things. The clutch, brakes, trans don't like being driven hard initially.So over all drive varied.
Baby the car under 3k or 4k for 3000 miles.
Rip on the car and it's fine.
When my mom bought her rav4 I asked the salesmen and he said just to vary speed and you'd be fine.
Car and driver explicitly said with their evo to baby it initially and you wont' get the oil burn every one else gets, this worked on their test car.
And lastly my friend's a4 he just was kind and didn't rev over 4k for 4000 miles.
So basically I have no idea.
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Originally posted by ilovemycb7 View PostI've heard TONS of conflicting information about this.
Mostly regarding evo's sti's.
Here's what I've heard, I'm curious to see what you think. As you do your homework.
The motor does better if driven hard initially. This helps to set the piston rings and other things. The clutch, brakes, trans don't like being driven hard initially.So over all drive varied.
Baby the car under 3k or 4k for 3000 miles.
Rip on the car and it's fine.
When my mom bought her rav4 I asked the salesmen and he said just to vary speed and you'd be fine.
Car and driver explicitly said with their evo to baby it initially and you wont' get the oil burn every one else gets, this worked on their test car.
And lastly my friend's a4 he just was kind and didn't rev over 4k for 4000 miles.
So basically I have no idea.
The most scientific thing I could find was VERY structured, but didn't "rape" the engine, nor did it baby it.
He basically said to start low, and get the revs up to say 30% of redline, Then coast the car as the vacuum in the cylinder helps seat the rings. You repeat this several times. Then you GRADUALLY increase the % of redline, and let the engine coast under vacuum. You don't race the piss out of it to get it to redline, you simply get it there and then coast. After doing this a few times, you don't worry about it, as everything should be seated properly.
I have a feeling that Honda seats them when they drive it on the test track, and then you basically just take it easy for 600 miles to allow everything to finish wearing it in. I basically followed their instructions, since they seem to know what they are doing. They recommend to avoid running the engine hard or exceeding about 60% of redline for the first 600 miles. I was able to do that in mixed driving, except for 1 circumstance, where I had to redline 1st gear to get around someone, but other than that, I heeded the instructions, and that was more necessary that intentional.
Oddly, it was amazing how much it loosened up in the first 200 miles or so. Now it revs freely, pulls cleanly and strongly all the way through, and shouldn't be burning any oil, although I won't know for sure until I drive it awhile.
I will see if I can find the link I am referring to.
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Originally posted by Boost_Lee View Postthats what i did on my motor
drove to 3K and deceled to a stop
then did the same for 4K, 5K, and 6K
Same to what scott said. Glad you're enjoying the car, my friend drove me in his rsx-s and it felt like a really nice ride and had enough power. I'm sure it's comparable. Both k20z1s I believe. yours may be newer now.Last edited by ilovemycb7; 03-25-2009, 02:47 AM.
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Originally posted by ilovemycb7 View PostInteresting. This makes a lot of sense, it's pretty simple, and it's not really hard to do.
Same to what scott said. Glad you're enjoying the car, my friend drove me in his rsx-s and it felt like a really nice ride and had enough power. I'm sure it's comparable. Both k20z1s I believe. yours may be newer now.
Also, the K20Z3 is the version in the SI. The K20Z1 was not DBW to the best of my knowledge, and it didn't have balance shafts, which the K20Z3 does. Also, I think the K20Z3 is probably slightly underrated (many people firmly believe it is closer to 205-210HP, while the K20Z1 had a lot of ITR parts in it. I think one of the cams was even identical. I drove one of those, and it felt about the same, maybe a little stronger. Of course the RSX-S was lighter too.
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Originally posted by Prez808 View PostNice car! Si sedans are my fave!
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Originally posted by Flatline View Posti think a MOD should delete this thread. A MR thread with no piktars=Fail
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Originally posted by N9netwoAccord View Posti'm still jealous you got one of these. i LOVE these cars. coupes more so then four doors but i'm still young and not needing a 4 door yet.
As for the 4 door, I TECHNICALLY didn't NEED it, but I just liked it better overall.
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Originally posted by JaK FRoSTWhiTE View PostI thought you had a couple kids or something
Also, I just wanted you to know that I got to get on it in the upper revs finally, and there is no rev hang issue. It stays just for a fraction of a second, much as a slightly heavier flywheel might do. A slight timing change on the pedals, and no problem.
On all the older ones I drove it was REALLY bad. I also haven't noticed any throttle delays in terms of reacting to my inputs. Did you get to drive one yet?
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