1997 Honda Civic - Granturismo 02 -That GT Flava
Focusing In On A Clean Touring Civic
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Article provided by: Import Tuner Magazine
What's your all-time favorite video game? With all the new consoles out and the awesome graphics, sound and physics they command, you might be inclined to choose a newer game, maybe "Final Fantasy X" or "GTA 3." But when I say "all-time" favorite, I mean just that. Take your pick from the entire span of the last 20 years, from Pong to present, and things get pretty complicated. There's a lot to choose from. How about The Legend of Zelda? Double Dragon? Tecmo Bowl? Street Fighter? Mortal Kombat? Asteroids? Centipede? Or what about the one where you're a bartender and you have to fill the mugs, throw 'em down the bar to the barflies, then catch the empty mugs when they fly back up the bar at you? That game was the shit.
Whatever your preference, there is one game that belongs on everyone's favorites list, no matter who you are (especially if you like cars). What, do I have to say it? It's only the dopest racing simulator known to man, and will be playing on at least 50 percent of the cockpit-mounted gaming consoles at any one time at any given car show. Los Angeles, Calif., resident Ernie Rico has made his '97 Civic a moving monument to the game. Today the car looks like something you might expect to see in your own Gran Turismo garage, and, lo and behold, here it is in 2NR, shining in all its wicked glory.
Carcraft Auto Body Salon in North Hills is the body shop. They shaved the moldings and antenna and added the body kit-Octane front bumper, Black Widow sides and rear. A Corvis touring wing, Bomex mirrors and carbon-fiber hood complete the look. CABS also converted the headlights, added carbon-fiber taillights and applied the paint, white with yellow and green pearl, in no less than 15 coats, according to Rico. The Gran Turismo graphics are the work of Modern Image in Huntington Beach, Calif.
The new suspension, worked over with Skunkworks coilovers and Koni shocks, drops the chassis about 2 in., over big 18-in. Racing Hart M5s wrapped in Pirelli P7000 rubber. Behind the fronts you'll see Brembo cross-drilled rotors clamped by bright yellow calipers. A DC Sports lower tie bar keeps the rear end together, on high-g turns I would assume.
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