There’s something quietly radical about driving a thirty-five-year-old Honda Civic through the backstreets and ring roads of Melbourne and feeling, genuinely, like you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be. That’s what owning an old tin-can Honda does to you.

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A “golden-era” Honda doesn’t really share the same give-and-take relationship like most modern cars do. It doesn’t give you horsepower or creature comforts. It asks for a commitment, however, if you commit, the enjoyment is unreal. I guess it is cult-like huh?

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Long before it found its way into pop culture, kanjo racing was a religion practiced on the Kanjo Loop, the elevated ring of expressways encircling Osaka. In the dead of night, drivers in stripped and livery-ridden “golden-era” Honda Civics (and sometimes other cars too, yes) would push each other through on-ramps and off-ramps, racing to defy authority and for the sheer mechanical joy of a high-revving VTEC engine singing between concrete barriers. It was illegal, it was dangerous, and it became one of the most aesthetically iconic subcultures in automotive history.

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What grew out of those Osaka expressways eventually reached everywhere that petrol-heads speak Honda, and Melbourne is no different. A few years ago my friend Jon gently introduced me to Civic ownership by allowing me to take his pride and joy ED Civic to Winton Raceway for a Nugget Nationals track day.

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I put not one, but two holes in the block after just 2 sessions.
So, of course, I ended up buying an ED Civic of my own.

Queue, Kanashimi Racing. Our little shrine to the Honda gods.

Eventually, we put a new motor in Jon’s car but hadn’t had the opportunity to get them together for a few pics, until now!

These are two very different, but still quite similar, interpretations of how we modified our ED/EF Civics.

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Keep an eye on this space for more Honda-related shenanigans from Jon and I…

Or, you can follow us at Kanashimiracing