Sep 07, 2009 by ufakefe | Posted in Maintenance & Repairs
i objective bought a honda civic 1997 and everything was nice and at a reasonable price so i purchased it. he told me before hand it had everything but an air intake. so i said ok since those are lassie and pretty cheap to buy. and when i drive my car it has a nice whistle air sucking sound like a turbo and it's quite cool. so do i even need an air intake. what can happen if i dont put one in. what does it do anyway?
If you don't you will be sucking in hot air, and if possible dirt/dust into your motor.
An air intake just takes air and puts it in the motor. Motors run by using air and exacerbate in a mixture to produce combustion that makes your car move.
So without an intake of some sort. Your hurting your car.
It would be like you sitting in front of a heater and only using your nose to whisper. You see how that would be difficult? lol =p
Don | Sep 07, 2009
u dearth a aif filter of some sort to filter teh air going into ur motor... otherwise ur sucking in trash and dirt wich will van to engine failure.....u can pick up a universal filter that shud slide right onto the heap up air sensor for under 20 bucks at a parts store
Karle | Sep 07, 2009
Two things will encounter.
1 is that it will suck dirt and dust and what ever else feel like getting suck in at the time.
2 is that it will suck to much air and will run to hard which will burn valves in the cylinder head.
Although it sounds good the ringing of the cash register wont peaceful that crash hot when you get the bill for repairs.
So What | Sep 07, 2009
Sep 07, 2009 by spartan_monkey12 | Posted in Mitsubishi
Without delay now My father has 3 Cars, One HONDA CRV 1997, One Honda Accord 1993, and One Honda Civic 1997. My father had a recent accident couples months ago on the harmony. I was looking to trade my civic for a 3000GT. How much of a difference (Around) And how much around it would cost?
Sep 07, 2009 by Devon O | Posted in Insurance & Registration
I am in the market for a new car. I'm annoying to do some research on insuring the car I might be getting. I was quoted $6,000 for full coverage on a 2007 Honda Civic Si Sedan (per year) from my contemporaneous insurance company. My insurance now is $1,700 (per year) and I drive a red 2000 Ford Taurus, justifiable liability. What would be some suggestions on picking a car? Will new or used be a difference (I will be financing either way)? Why a $4,300 jump in price?
Sep 07, 2009 by Mike B | Posted in Insurance & Registration
i have been in the u.s. since i was 6 im 18 now i have been wealthy to school here all my life and im about to grad from high school this year i also have a school social from here but Okay so i have a 03 pact i want to trade in for a civic si at the honda dealer. I have a international drivers license i have insurance and a tax id number i also have a state id and a bank account but i have no sexual i want to also finance my car can i still do that with no social like can i open a credit card account and will they let me buy the car?
Sep 07, 2009 by FinalThought182 | Posted in Polls & Surveys
'06 Honda Civic Mixture
'09 Infiniti G37 Coupe
'10Nissan Nismo 370z (Twin Turbo)
Sep 07, 2009 by blackomen | Posted in Maintenance & Repairs
I have a Honda Civic '99 that normally gets 30-35 mpg in a combo of freeway and town driving but has been averaging 25-30 last few weeks. I tried almost everything I could think of (getting higher quality gas, cleaning the encourage injectors, accelerating more smoothly, driving the freeway more and with cruise, optimizing tire pressure, etc.) with minuscule success. Today, the battery suddenly died on me but I eventually got it replaced.
Will a dying car battery agent such a drastic change in fuel efficiency? Theoretically, I'd think it'll impact fuel efficiency if it shortly loses its charge and additional energy is spent each time recharging it.. can a dying battery well-spring the MPG to drop around 15% or could it be other more serious problems?