La Honda Integra Type R DC2 et la Honda Civic EG sont au coude-à-coude sur 17 circuits communs.
What happens when you pit two of Honda’s most celebrated ’90s heroes—the Integra Type R DC2 and the Civic EG—against each other on modern circuits, with the full spectrum of modifications and decades of grassroots development behind them? On paper, the Integra Type R is the purist’s machine: factory-honed, razor sharp, a car that has become legend for its chassis balance and the incandescent, high-revving B18C. The Civic EG, by contrast, is the blank slate—the Swiss Army knife of the front-drive world, just as happy in daily-driver trim as it is reimagined into a featherweight, big-power track monster. But when the lap timer starts, character becomes as important as credentials.
The Type R’s engineering philosophy is all about harmony and communication. Honda’s engineers built the DC2 to be an extension of the driver—double-wishbone suspension at all four corners, seam-welded shell, close-ratio gearbox, and a differential that locks under power with a kind of mechanical honesty that’s rare even among contemporary performance cars. The result? A chassis that telegraphs grip levels, rotates on demand, and rewards a driver who’s willing to balance the car on the edge of adhesion. On technical circuits like Vancouver Island Motorsports Circuit, this pays dividends: the Type R clocked a 1:21.85, edging out a heavily modified Civic EG by nearly three seconds. That’s classic Type R territory—precision, predictability, and poise.
But the Civic EG is a shape-shifter. Its greatest strength isn’t just in how it drives out of the box, but in how readily it adapts. The EG’s lighter shell and simpler mechanicals invite engine swaps, cagework, and suspension upgrades that can transform it from an eager, tossable hatch into a ruthless, time-attack weapon. Consider Ruapuna Park, where a K20-swapped, race-prepped EG Civic uncorked a stunning 1:30.5, annihilating the Type R’s best lap by nearly 16 seconds—a margin that speaks not just to raw power (the EG was running well north of 300 PS), but to the platform’s adaptability and the zeal of its builders.
Yet, not every track tips in the Civic’s favor. On circuits that reward cohesion over outright firepower, the DC2’s purpose as a driver’s car shines. At Winton Motor Raceway, the Type R’s 1:20.82 bests a well-modified B18C EG by over ten seconds, a testament to the DC2’s ability to translate available grip and power into lap time with uncanny efficiency. The Integra’s balance and feedback allow a skilled driver to extract every tenth, lap after lap, without resorting to brute upgrades.
The trade-off is clear: the Type R DC2 is the thinking driver’s companion—rewarding, surgical, and confidence-inspiring at the edge. Its limits are approachable, its feedback transparent. The Civic EG, meanwhile, is for the experimentalist, the builder, the one who finds satisfaction in wringing out every ounce of potential from a humble base. When pushed to its extremes, the EG can be twitchier and less communicative, especially when laden with horsepower and aggressive geometry. But in the hands of a committed tuner and driver, it can eclipse even the most hallowed factory specials—see Nürburgring BTG, where a race-prepped EG posted a mind-bending 7:21.74 in wet conditions, over a minute ahead of the Type R.
Ultimately, the Integra Type R is the car for those who value clarity, flow, and a chassis that always tells the truth—even if it means leaving a few tenths on the table when facing the wildest Civic builds. The EG is the canvas for the restless: endlessly modifiable, sometimes unruly, but capable of rewriting what’s possible with the right imagination. In the world of front-drive Hondas, the stopwatch tells only part of the story—the rest is written in the hands of the driver, and in the vision of the builder.
Spécifications
| Spécifications | Honda Integra Type R DC2 Integra Type R DC2 | Honda Civic EG Civic EG |
|---|---|---|
| Années du modèle | 1995-2001 | 1991-1995 |
| puissance | 187 | 125 |
| couple (N_M) | 178 | 144 |
| poids (KG) | 1,145 | 1,055 |
| Puissance par rapport au poids | 0.16 | 0.12 |
| Rank | - | #77 |
| Pneu | 180 POTENZA RE-01R | 400 POTENZA RE97AS |
| Description du moteur | 1.8L NA I4 VTEC (B18C) | 1.6L NA I4 (D16A9 ) |
| boîte de vitesses | 5 SPEED MANUAL | 5-SPEED MANUAL |
| Type de transmission | FWD | FWD |
| empattement (MM) | 2586 | 2573 |
| largeur (MM) | 1700 | 1702 |
| longueur (MM) | 4400 | 4069 |
| hauteur (MM) | 1320 | 1346 |
| 0 - 60 MPH | 6 Secondes | 11.3 Secondes |
| Vitesse maximale (KPH) | 233 | 169 |
| prix MSRP | $ 22,211 | $ 13,775 |
| Valeur actuelle | $ 42,500 | $ 12,000 |
| Temps au tour global vs moyen | -1.02s | -1.24s |
Honda Integra Type R DC2 Integra Type R DC2 — Lap Times vs Average
Temps au tour
| Nom de la piste | Integra Type R DC2 Integra… | Civic EG Civic EG | Diff | Mod | Treadwear TW | Vidéo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buttonwillow Raceway (13CW) | 1:59.465 | 1:59.3 | +0.16 | Race / Heavy | 100 / 200 | |
| Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (Pro Course) | 1:33.999 | 1:34.563 | -0.56 | Race / Race | 180 / 100 | |
| Willow Springs Raceway (Big Willow) | 1:31.2 | 1:34.5 | -3.3 | Heavy / Heavy | 40 / 200 | |
| Roebling Road Raceway (Road Course) | 1:19.99 | 1:21.39 | -1.4 | Race / Race | 40 / 400 | |
| Winton Motor Raceway (National Circuit CW) | 1:32.188 | 1:31.082 | +1.1 | Race / Heavy | 40 / 100 | |
| Barbagallo Raceway/Wanneroo Raceway (1.53 Mile CW) | 1:04.059 | 1:02.989 | +1.07 | Race / Heavy | 180 / 100 | |
| Collie Motorplex (Long) | 1:15.465 | 1:18.18 | -2.71 | Race / Stock | 40 / 400 | |
| Tor Kielce (Little Loop) | 1:33.261 | 1:26.8 | +6.46 | Race / Race | 180 / 140 |