Junkyard Find: 1986 Honda CRX

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Honda CRX is one of my all-time favorite cars, especially the first-generation 1984-87 models. I have owned quite a few of them and found that the CRX’s combination of reliability (if you didn’t overheat and blow the head gasket), driving enjoyment, fuel economy, and cheap purchase price was impossible to beat for a daily driver in the 1990s. CRXs are rare in self-service junkyards now, most of them having been used up and discarded decades ago, and the few that I see get stripped to nothingness within days of hitting the yard.

Here’s an unusually complete ’86 that I found in a Denver yard last week.

Just 151,903.8 miles on the clock; no rust that I could find.

The interior is a bit worn, but this is mint condition by the standards of 30-year-old cars in U-Wrench-It junkyards.

Of course, the Powerade bottle full of what I fear is crank piss reminds us that this is the wrecking yard.

Just 76 factory horsepower lay in wait under the CRX’s hood — but this was a fun 76 horsepower!

The “map of the universe” Vacuum Hose Routing Diagram, shows why 1984-1987 Civics and CRXs fell out of favor in states with strict emissions testing by the early 2000s. In California, where I owned all my CRXs, if any one of those hundreds of hoses, solenoids, sensors, switches, or relays failed, you’d probably fail the tailpipe test. Attempting to chase down the flaw was a certain one-way ticket to Crazy Town (though I managed the feat a couple of times, thanks to endless hours of work and love of my CRXs).

I managed 50 highway miles per gallon in my (non- HF) CRXs without even trying very hard. The cargo area was surprisingly capacious and you could haul 8-foot 2x4s inside (left rear to right front, between the seats) with nothing sticking out of a window. The driver’s seat offered plenty of leg and headroom. Yes, it was noisy and bouncy and slow by 21st-century standards, but I still consider the early CRX to be one of the greatest cars ever sold in the United States. And this one is getting crushed before its time.

It was known as the “Ballade Sports CR-X” in its homeland.

Kawaii!

In the United States, advertising for the first-year CRX focused on the nutso gas mileage.

The Prius is an Earth-destroying pig compared to the CRX HF!

[Images: © 2016 Murilee Martin/The Truth About Cars]






Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • IBx1 I had high hopes but forgot that people from Alabama live in Alabama
  • AZFelix Any chance of show casing a 4-door Sunfire of 2002 vintage, when they were still selling sedans?
  • Jalop1991 You do realize, you can get a $1 lease payment on any vehicle from any manufacturer, for any term.Just make a big enough "down payment". But hey, at least you have bragging rights, right?I keep seeing this insanity being marketed. "Polestar, only $399 month!" (with a huge "down payment"). Are people really this stupid?$7500 to enter into a lease just so you can say "but the payment is only $559!"??? Good God. And when some car full of Kia Boyz slams into you and totals it as you drive it off the lot, what then? The dealership will laugh at you as they count your $7500 and you stand there on the street looking like a fool.Why do people who lease, put any money down on a depreciating and very easily totalled asset like a car?
  • EngineerfromBaja_1990 A friend from college had its twin (2003 Cavalier 2dr) which fittingly re-named the Cacalier. No description needed
  • Lorenzo GM is getting out of the car biz, selling only trucks, EVs and the Corvette. They're chasing the bigger margins on lower volume, like the dealer trying to sell a car for $1 million: "I just have to sell one!"
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