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July 13th, 2008 06:31 PM #2
Well, just to get this out...
In no way can you consider a 2.0 turbocharged engine "economical" as compared to the stock engines in these cars.
Only "economical" engine amongst the lot is the D15. And a D15B into an Accord? The 130 hp Japanese D15B is likely less powerful than anything you can find in a recent Accord... and on paper hp doesn't matter much if the small powerplant doesn't have enough torque to move the Accord's heavy bum.
That's not to mention the fact that the swap will be difficult... indeed, problematic, at the very least. Custom engine mounts, custom rewiring (the most difficult part), custom machined axles (the D15's axles are too short, and don't fit the Accord's CV Joints), and there's no guarantee that the engine will talk to the instrument gauges.
Same issue with the 4G93T and the Galant. The turbo engine that's easy to fit into the Galant would be the 4G63T from the Evolution. (That's a cool swap)
The Camry or Corona would be easiest. And you're definitely not getting better fuel economy.
If you want the experience of an executive car without paying for the high price of fuel, the only thing you can do is get one in very good running condition and LPG it.
I'd personally go for a manual transmission Accord VTi-L amongst these (at least it was available in manual). And instead of going for crazy swaps that you aren't sure will work, spend the money on repairs and refreshing the car.
And if you still want to swap, a B20/B16 VTEC hybrid will give you some "oomph" on the Accord, or a Prelude H22A. But if you swap down to a smaller engine, like a 170 hp B16A, looking for performance and economy, you're not going to get what you want.
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
Though not on a people carrier like the Innova, I have Yokohama es32 equipped on my Sylphy since...
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