In
the Winter of 2017, our friend Ryan told all of the
Junior Varsity Honda
Challenge (JVHC) Squad about
a free car he had found on the Chump
Car Forum in Delaware.
Within a day at most, my buddy Alex
drove down to Delaware from
Philly to check the car out. He
brought with him: a case of beer to show gratitude, a license plate,
and his own self off the couch. Total cost? About $40 bucks.
And so The
Chronicles of #TrashTeg
began.
Alex picked up an Integra for free, with the catch that he remove it
from the seller’s property. Not only this, but Alex was told that
the car had a bad head gasket! And would likely need serious work.
Figure 1: #TrashTeg
Either the same day, or the next, I went over to Alex’s and with
the help of our friend Adam, we started the car and slowly
troubleshooted an issue that started as overheating and climaxed in
not-starting.
Figure 2: Video of Alex, Adam, and I putting water in the radiator
After some water and a new distributor cap, rotor, and plugs, we had
the car running. My boy put the classic PA tag on and he ripped it
up and down the block and it didn’t smoke. So we decided we would
try and track it.
My Goal? To get Alex in a Honda just because. Alex’s Goal? IDK.
Our Goal (I Think)? (I think) our goal was to make a freakin’ race
car!
But for real
though-- Alex and I both knew we wanted to race wheel to wheel. We
both talked, and still talk, regularly, about endurance racing with
AER or in Lemons, since our friends do it. We talked about having
our own race team together. I was already building my Civic in his
garage. So, I guess, impulsively and rationally it was a pretty good
decision to pick the car up. What’s the worst it would
do? Take up space?
Figure 3: Using #TrashTeg as a Vise to Break a Motor Mount Bolt for
#ChelseaTheCivic
As is apparent in the figure above, the #TrashTeg proved to be very
useful just in its presence, initially.
I told Alex I would help him get the Trash Teg on track if he would
track it. He agreed. So in return for lending me his space, I would
give or sell to him second-hand parts from my build and my own
services at the least, in return.
Figure 4: Roll Bar, Harnesses, and Seats All Installed on a Budget
Stay tuned into the
#TrashTeg: The Chronicles
Series on EJ2 Track Rat.
And you’ll find a story of building a cheap, capable track car, to
use for driver development and (eventually in some way) racing--
including tips on how it benefited the driver and can be applied to
the reader’s own driving style.
Figure 5: Trash Teg at Lime Rock
Thanks for reading.
--EJ2 Track Rat
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