Junkyard Find: 1989 Honda CRX

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Honda CRX is one of my very favorite 1980s cars, hailing from an era when Americans paid well over MSRP and/or waited for months for the privilege of getting a new Honda. Twenty years ago, I owned a few early CRXs (before giving up on the carbureted CVCC examples, which were impossible to get through California’s strict emissions tests due to the “Map of the Universe” tangle of vacuum lines), and I often thought of getting a fuel-injected late CRX.

Such cars were expensive back then, but values have plummeted to the point where I now see 1988-1991 CRXs at U-Wrench-type yards. Here’s one in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Of course, the second-gen CRX is still worth enough that only the truly banged-up examples show up in self-service junkyards. This one received multiple layers of the fast-n-furious treatment, as interpreted by the Prophet Manny, the Seer Moe, and the Haruspex Jack.

My guess is that this car’s nickname was THE WOLF.

This sort of odometer reading is typical of Hondas of the late 1980s, even those that spent much of their lives with engines howling at redline. Maybe this car was a sedate commuter for 25 years before it became THE WOLF; the CRX was that rare combination of penny-pinching economy car and fun enthusiast machine.

The 1989 CRX Si got a 105-horsepower 1.6-liter engine, but this car has the regular 1.5-liter D15, rated at 92 hp. Curb weight was just barely over a ton, so fun could be had on double-digit power.

See you later, alligator.

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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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  • Pwrwrench Pwrwrench on May 22, 2019

    "I had a white over blue 88 4ws" You mean these came in other colors besides red and white?

  • Cognoscenti Cognoscenti on Jun 17, 2019

    I hit a deer while driving a 1989 CRX si once. You'd think I would be dead, with such a low to the ground car - imagine the deer coming through the windshield. However, thanks to remarkable maneuverability, I was able to swerve into the other lane (no one was coming) at 50 MPH and hit the right rear of the deer with the right front quarter of the CRX. The insurance claims adjuster found deer hair in the headlamp assembly...thanks for saving my life, Honda! :)

  • Wjtinfwb Looks in decent nick for a Junkyard car. Other than the interior being partially gutted for some trim pieces, you could probably drive it out of the junkyard. Maybe a transmission issue and the cars value precluded a $2k or more fix? J cars were pathetic when introduced in '82 and never really got any better. But GM did sort out most of the reliability issues and with a modicum of maintenance these would run a long time if you could stand the boredom. Guess this owner couldn't.
  • GS340Pete I see a lot of these on the road. I can't remember the last time I saw one on my local Chevy dealership's lot. They've never in my memory had a few lined up with balloons. Short sighted to kill it off? Perhaps. But I certainly think the rows of $65k and up trucks is short sighted. That's going to bite soon. Looks like they're piling up already.And what about the Trax? Malibu or Trax? Gotta be honest, I'd pick the Trax.Although it should have 50 more HP IMHO. And why are so many preaching doom about the 'wet belt' engine?RIP, Malibu. Ride the highway in the sky with the Impala (talk about short sighted.)
  • ToolGuy GM didn't care about these and you shouldn't either. 😉
  • FreedMike Yet another GM Deadly Sin: trot out something in what was a very competitive and important market segment that hadn't been restyled in 11 model years, and was based on a platform that was over 20 years old, and expect people would be dumb enough to buy it over a Corolla or Civic (or a Focus, for that matter).
  • TheMrFreeze Makes you wonder if he's seeing something with Stellantis he doesn't like and wanted out as a result. As somebody with three FCA vehicles in their driveway, Stellantis is sounding more and more like DaimlerChrysler 2024 🤬
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