Honda Civic 1993 Should I replace or not ?
The distributor parts are the Achille's heel of early 1990s (and some other)
Hondas. Thankfully, that's the only real weakness of these Hondas. Thus: A
new ignitor will be needed about every five years. Same for the coil. The
rotor set screws have a history of not holding. The bearing goes after a
while. Ultimately, a new housing is a good idea. The housing is the big
expense: Figure one every ten years. Then the distributor's good to go for
some time.
Like you imply and IMO, mufflers are the price of driving in the North. Some
folks here might have some suggestions about whether to go with a place like
Midas, an independent, or a dealer. IIRC, an OEM muffler installed at the
dealer's has been said to be worth it. I just use an independent muffler
shop, though next time, I think I'm going to do it myself. I reckon my 91
Civic is on its fourth muffler. Needed one about every four to six years in
the Northern U.S.
The radiators on early 1990s Civics are almost as notorious as the
distributor. I think they're mostly or all plastic and prone to cracking.
Your new one should last at least five years; maybe ten. (I lucked out: The
guys at a dealership broke my 1991 Civic's in 2002 while messing up a
distributor repair, and, without even telling me in advance, went ahead and
replaced it. Guess that made their failed distributor repair worth it. I
since gained a lot of expertise in distributor part replacement repair and
so do those myself now.)
I would expect the manual transmission to last longer than auto
transmission, based on general reading about transmissions. You may need the
clutch overhauled at some point. (I assume it's the original.) I am figuring
$500 American for that.
I think last year was the big year. Like High Tech Misfit said, the $1500
bill from last year isn't likely to occur year after year.
I also agree with High Tech Misfit about the Fit: It's supposed to arrive in
the U.S. in 2006. I expect it will arrive in Canada about the same time. I
thought it was closer to 1.4L or 1.3L. The net has a fair amount of info on
its specs; google for "Honda Fit."
Given you just put a pile of dough into the Civic, that it has only 120k
miles (that's pretty low for a properly maintained Civic), I'd see it as a
very good investment and wait at least two more years. That way, the Fit may
not be in such high demand, too. (I'm betting it goes on back order and so
may be a tad pricey for its first year or so.) If you still like it after
two years, maybe wait until the next major repair before giving up on it.
Recently ome guy here slapped a cheap-o Autozone distributor into his early
1990s Honda (a Civic, I think) for $200 (it included a new coil and
ignitor). OEM for all that goes for closer to $500. Guy said he'd be happy
if the cheap-o one lasted around a year, which it certainly may. It's
something to consider in the future, depending on your timeframe.
I should have mentioned brake fluid and power steering fluid before, also,
with regular changing of the brake fluid being highly important to keep
moisture from causing rust in the brake system.
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