Witness one M3 owner's attempt at building a Honda that is more fun to drive than the BMW he drives to work everyday. We think he hit the nail on the head.
When your daily ride is an E46 M3 dumped on BBS LM’s, it takes a bit more for a Civic Hatchback to catch your eye. Brandon Mallough of Santa Ana, Calif., set out to build a Honda weekend track toy that was more exciting to drive than his lackluster Bavarian commuter. The hatch’s power-to-weight ratio gives it the advantage over the M3. Its weight savings also equate to a more
nimble, easy-to-manage car.
Brandon has found a foolproof formula for a kick ass Honda street/track killer. The K20A found in Mallough’s EK is about as stock as it gets. The only performance modifications made are the addition of a DTR header, a custom intake, some fuel system upgrades, and a Hondata K-Pro, all of which are necessary for the swap. Even with such minimal modification, the K unit managed to muster 240 wheel hp and 177 lbs-ft of torque, the power equivalent of a heavily built, naturally aspirated B-series.
The price of a Type R K series swap is approximately the same as, if not more than, that of a similarly powered built B-series. So what’s the point?
Two reasons: reliability and torque. First, one can safely assume that a K20 in factory form should hold up to whatever abuse you throw at it as long as it is treated like a stock motor (i.e. no 11,000 rpm burnouts).
Second, if reliability is not an issue for you, then going fast must be. There isn’t a B series motor on the planet that will pull out 177 lb-ft of torque at a mere 240 wheel hp. Slap that kind of reliability and power into a RHD EK Sir-II, and you save the trouble of having to track down all the JDM parts you would be buying anyway if it were a USDM EK. Getting it registered to drive on the streets in America, in Southern California for that matter, is some pretty tasty icing on the cake.
Bolts & Washers
Brandon Mallough’s 2000 Honda Civic Hatchback
PROPULSION
Brandon’s Type–R K20A is completely unaltered internally. The two liter has only been enhanced by the addition of a DTR (Danny Tran Racing) custom header dumping into 2.5-inch piping straight back and out a Spoon N1 muffler. A custom intake was also built by Kevin Wei using 3-inch piping, a velocity stack and a K&N filter. Fuel is controlled by a SX-10 fuel pressure regulator which is remotely connected to a Golden Eagle fuel rail sitting on the stock 310cc injectors. Cooling duties are left up to a C&R half-sized radiator while pretty much everything else relies on a Hondata K-Pro for guidance. The transmission itself is an OEM Type-R six-speed, but the axles necessary to get it to fit into the Sir-II are a combination of RSX and GSR parts Frankensteined together to create a cheap alternative to the expensive aftermarket K swap axles available on the market.
RIMS & RUBBER
The EK rocks a set of white, 15x7 Mugen MF10L’s shod in 225/45/15 Toyo RA1 competition DOT legal race tires.
STANCE
Tein RA coilovers take up residence in each of the wheel wells. An A Spec Racing subframe reinforcement facilitates the installation of a Civic Type-R rear sway bar to go with the GSR front sway bar on the EK. A Spoon rear strut tower bar and J’s racing rear pillar bar help an OEM GSR front strut bar keep the chassis rigid under high load.
RESISTANCE
The braking system on Mallough’s EK is another amalgamation of OEM Honda parts and aftermarket goodies. He started by re-drilling a set of 4x144.3 Prelude VTEC rotors to fit the 4x100 hubs. Spoon Sports calipers clamp down on Project µ pads when the Motul RBF600 fluid is transferred from a Civic Type-R master cylinder, through a 40/40 proportioning valve, and to the calipers via Earl’s lines.
FASHION
Inside: Bride Zeta 2 seats and a Spoon Sports steering wheel make up the entirety of the EK4’s interior modifications.
Outside: A set of Spoon Sports mirrors and carbon-fiber duckbill wing are the only two exterior modifications to this car.
I.C.E.
Stock Gathers stereo powered by a super baller Spoon Sports battery.