The true test of the EP3 wasn't the straightaways; it was the corners. Leo approached a sharp left-hander. He stood on the upgraded brakes, rev-matched a downshift with a blip of the throttle, and turned in.
Leo looked at the Honda Civic Type R EP3 sitting in his garage. To the uninitiated, its slab-sided, upright silhouette looked like a "breadvan". But to Leo, it was a blank canvas. Honda Civic EP3 Typer 1.45
Older front-wheel-drive cars were notorious for understeer, but Leo’s suspension geometry was dialed to perfection. The rear end rotated beautifully, pivoting the nose directly toward the apex. The moment he clipped the clipping point, he rolled back onto the throttle. The true test of the EP3 wasn't the
The is an automotive icon, famous for its raw front-wheel-drive dynamics and high-revving K20A engine. While there was no factory model labeled "1.45," automotive folklore often references specific boost levels (like 1.45 bar in forced induction builds) or custom stroker/tuning configurations. Leo looked at the Honda Civic Type R
Leo dropped the car into second gear and mashed the throttle.
The 1.45 bar of boost hit like a sledgehammer. The car didn't wash wide. Instead, the front tires bit hard, pulling the car out of the corner with physics-defying speed. It was raw, analog, and demanded total concentration. There were no electronic safety nets here—just a driver, a cable-driven throttle, and a highly strung chassis.
Should we focus on a against modern supercars?
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