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DC2 TEG Fetching silly money
- wurlycorner
- Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
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- vanzep
- Supporter 2016
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ive always liked the look of the ukdm dc2 teg and its one honda ive never driven - with prices like that it looks like i never will
it wasnt too long ago (5-6 years ago) that you could have got an NSX for around £15-£20k - now look at the prices
still hoping the Prelude will get the recognition it deserves

it wasnt too long ago (5-6 years ago) that you could have got an NSX for around £15-£20k - now look at the prices

still hoping the Prelude will get the recognition it deserves

1996-2000 1993 EG9 Blue Civic 1.6 Vti - Traded in against the BB4
2000-2019 1994 2WS BB4 Milano Red JDM Prelude Si VTEC LSD
2015 on > 1991 4WS BB1 Phantom Pearl Grey JDM Prelude Si VTEC LSD
2021 ON > 1998 2WS BB6 White Pearl JDM Prelude Si VTEC
2000-2019 1994 2WS BB4 Milano Red JDM Prelude Si VTEC LSD
2015 on > 1991 4WS BB1 Phantom Pearl Grey JDM Prelude Si VTEC LSD
2021 ON > 1998 2WS BB6 White Pearl JDM Prelude Si VTEC
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Good point Vanzep the NSX's command some serious money now.
I think the lude will always be in the shadows because it wasn't promoted as a hard core racer or pipped against a supercar.
By the sounds of it a DC2 seems like a good investment to make then.
I think the lude will always be in the shadows because it wasn't promoted as a hard core racer or pipped against a supercar.
By the sounds of it a DC2 seems like a good investment to make then.
I came before the chicken.. The argument is now settled!!
H22A8 197 motor with 190k on the clock
Tanabe lowering springs.
Skunk 2 megapower exhaust with a decat
M2B4 LSD Gearbox
Lightened flywheel
S2000 Steering Wheel
Type S Door inserts in Red
H22A8 197 motor with 190k on the clock
Tanabe lowering springs.
Skunk 2 megapower exhaust with a decat
M2B4 LSD Gearbox
Lightened flywheel
S2000 Steering Wheel
Type S Door inserts in Red
- norks27
- Supporter 2016
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Some mutter that the lack of an R-Type let the model down?Free Ranj Egg wrote:I think the lude will always be in the shadows because it wasn't promoted as a hard core racer or pipped against a supercar.
One of the writers that contribute to Drive Tribe, (New Age Icons tribe), replied to a comment I made praising the Lude, that he respected the car, new little about it, but suggested that the lack of R-Type left it just short. In that it failed to make the same impact as the Civic R, and was never a big seller. In terms of sales the 3G Prelude was the peak, after that sales declined steadily, (I suspect the market for that type of car was declining anyway, given other marques dumped equivalent models).
I think interest in the Prelude is getting there, and arguably, (for the 5th Gens), the Type S will help hold up the market for the Lude, it's rarity makes it a bit of Prelude glamour? If I where looking for a clean Lude now, low mileage, FSH, bodywork sorted, etc, I'd happily part with 4-5k, for a well looked after car. Am I mad???
Seen some higher prices for the very rare 4G, the value of a good 4G must be climbing steadily??
As for the original question, I'm thinking high, but in this market someone will pay that price. They'll buy it, wrap it in clingfilm, store it for 10 years and then get silly money at auction.

- Sailor
- Supporter 2016
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Oh, the prices will go up eventually.
In the normal run of things, lesser or once-unfashionable models start to climb once the glamour boys are priced out of reach. If that's true for Preludes, the 4G will end up with punters who can't afford Tegs.
5Gs are harder to predict, but as a late 90s fwd touring car, the car's an oddity for Jap scene fans. I'm guessing really good H22s with 4WS will start to rise first. Let's keep them a secret for now, eh?
Unless they're really exotic or hyped, car prices go through different phases.
1. They reach the lowest point. (Where we were a year ago?)
2. They rise a bit as more people discover that they make good daily drivers that are a bit different. (The boys who loved CTRs are getting a bit older now and remember when a Prelude showed them they weren't actually kings of the road)
3. Journalists start mentioning them. (DC2s and ATRs are beginning to see this now.)
4. Really, really good examples cause a stir in an auction house. (Anglia here we come?)
5. TV shows feature collectors who are quite happy to have 'cooking' models alongside their 275GTBs.
6. No one drives them anymore.
I say we should buy rather than sell for phases 1 to 3. Keep through phase 4. And never let it get to phase 6. For me, the joy of the Prelude is in its usefulness.
In the normal run of things, lesser or once-unfashionable models start to climb once the glamour boys are priced out of reach. If that's true for Preludes, the 4G will end up with punters who can't afford Tegs.
5Gs are harder to predict, but as a late 90s fwd touring car, the car's an oddity for Jap scene fans. I'm guessing really good H22s with 4WS will start to rise first. Let's keep them a secret for now, eh?
Unless they're really exotic or hyped, car prices go through different phases.
1. They reach the lowest point. (Where we were a year ago?)
2. They rise a bit as more people discover that they make good daily drivers that are a bit different. (The boys who loved CTRs are getting a bit older now and remember when a Prelude showed them they weren't actually kings of the road)
3. Journalists start mentioning them. (DC2s and ATRs are beginning to see this now.)
4. Really, really good examples cause a stir in an auction house. (Anglia here we come?)
5. TV shows feature collectors who are quite happy to have 'cooking' models alongside their 275GTBs.
6. No one drives them anymore.
I say we should buy rather than sell for phases 1 to 3. Keep through phase 4. And never let it get to phase 6. For me, the joy of the Prelude is in its usefulness.
International Pensioner of Mystery
- simonc
- Supporter 2016
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Hi all, this Integra price thing has been bugging me, as I remember reading something about it not too long ago. Anyway, I dug out my back-issues of 'Octane' and found the article. I retyped the 'what to pay' part to show what they've written.
Retyped from ‘Octane’, September 2017 issue.
Honda Integra Type R
Headline: Pared for track use, an icon on the road – and getting rare.
Subhead: The Lowdown, What to pay
Cheap ones are no more. Higher-mileage and modified examples in need of cosmetic work start from £5000; £8000 should find a great sub-100,000-mile example. Full Honda dealer history is highly valued. Perfect UK cars are rare: budget £12,000 plus.
Consider importing from Japan. The exchange rate is less favourable than it was, but you can get a relatively fresh-feeling car into the UK for about £8000. The Integra was offered up to 2001 in Japan, and generally the later the car you buy, the better the spec you will get.
Looks like what he's asking ,(plus haggling factored in) , is not too far off the rates quoted in 'Octane'.
Retyped from ‘Octane’, September 2017 issue.
Honda Integra Type R
Headline: Pared for track use, an icon on the road – and getting rare.
Subhead: The Lowdown, What to pay
Cheap ones are no more. Higher-mileage and modified examples in need of cosmetic work start from £5000; £8000 should find a great sub-100,000-mile example. Full Honda dealer history is highly valued. Perfect UK cars are rare: budget £12,000 plus.
Consider importing from Japan. The exchange rate is less favourable than it was, but you can get a relatively fresh-feeling car into the UK for about £8000. The Integra was offered up to 2001 in Japan, and generally the later the car you buy, the better the spec you will get.
Looks like what he's asking ,(plus haggling factored in) , is not too far off the rates quoted in 'Octane'.
'Mr Bridger, will drive them, into the sea...'