Home » Here’s Everything Wrong With The $260 Honda I Bought From Japan

Here’s Everything Wrong With The $260 Honda I Bought From Japan

Honda Life Fix List Ts2
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Back in March, I found the cutest little car, a 1997 Honda Life, for sale in the Japanese auction system and then paid all of $258 for it. Now, after paying a few thousand dollars all-in, waiting the duration of a lengthy ocean voyage, and bungling a road trip to the port, my new Life is finally home. Unfortunately, I learned immediately that my little Honda wasn’t quite ready to hit the road yet, and some critical components needed replacing before I could confidently drive this car.

Japan has an entire industry dedicated to sending used cars to other countries. There are sites where you can buy a whole car just as easily as you can buy an old watch on eBay. Some exporters even take PayPal! It can be easy to get overwhelmed, feeling like a kid in a candy store. It can be especially tantalizing if you live in a place with a currency that’s much stronger than the yen. You can get entire cars purchased and shipped to America for well under $4,000.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Then there’s the fast-paced Japanese auction system, which is like one of the loot boxes from a modern video game. Rare cars will show up in the Japanese auction system that you won’t see on other Japanese car export platforms. If you miss out on these cars, there’s no way of knowing when you’ll see cars like them again. But, how are you supposed to know that you’re getting a good car before you ask your auction agent to put in a bid for you?

Mercedes Streeter

Condition Sheets Are Great, With One Caveat

One of the great parts about the Japanese auction system is that most vehicles will get a basic inspection. The inspectors at the auction write pretty detailed condition sheets that are supposed to tip buyers off to all sorts of potential red flags. The inspectors will mark little stuff, like scratches that you can only barely see, and big stuff, like rust, non-operational equipment, or crash damage.

At the end of it all, the car is assessed with a condition grade. If you want to know how to read these grades, click here to read one of my previous pieces.

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Mirive Saitama

In theory, these sheets can give you peace of mind that you know what you’re getting. Generally, a car with a grade of 3.5 could be expected to be in daily driver condition or at least wouldn’t take much work to get there. A car rated with a 4 or a 4.5 is supposed to be pretty close to being mint, and a 4.5 is generally the highest condition grade you’ll find for a car that’s older than 25 years old.

But here’s the thing: These grades are subjective. The inspectors sometimes exaggerate some issues or miss other issues. A grade R car might actually be in decent shape, while a car slapped with a 3.5 might be hiding something. My first-ever import was a 1991 Honda Beat, which was assessed with an RA grade. The inspector noted a “bent core support.” However, this so-called “bend” was just a dent to the car’s front recovery hook, a part that’s technically welded to the core support.

This is why I say that getting an independent inspection is crucial.

A Little Blueberry Shows Up For Auction

Mirive Saitama

In my case, I saw the little blue Honda Life show up in the auction system and was excited to see that it was assessed with a condition grade of 3.5. However, my heart sank when I had the condition report translated, as it said that the car had peeling paint in two places, a torn driver seat, and a window regulator that did not work.

This put me in a weird place. I can search auction statistics going back about a year, and my data suggested that if I passed on this blue Honda, I’d end up with one that was silver or white. For whatever reason, perhaps about 95 percent or so of the Honda Life cars that have been going through the auction were either silver or white. Some red examples have gone through the auction system, but they usually had some bad paint damage.

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Yet, at the same time, I didn’t want to buy this car for $258 (the minimum bid) and then pay more than the car’s value to import a window regulator. In my eyes, this car was borderline. It was a cool color, but it might have required me to spend more than I wanted to. When I find myself in a situation like this, I pay for an additional, independent inspection. This time, it was just $20.

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Mercedes Streeter

My inspector had great news. What had failed was a tiny strip of clearcoat on the tailgate and some clearcoat on the right front fender. The inspector then confirmed that the air-conditioner blows cold and that all four windows work great.

Wait, so if the windows worked, why did the original auction inspector get it wrong? The actual problem was that the window up button for the front passenger window didn’t work on the driver’s window switch panel. The regulator was fine, and the button on the passenger door worked great! The only problem was with a single switch. The inspector also noted dry-rotted tires, but also reported that the car had a valid inspection until December 26, 2024.

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The peel is just below the lock cylinder. Mercedes Streeter

Based on this updated information, I felt more confident in buying the car.

Better Than I Expected!

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The stevedores pack these cars in like sardines! Mercedes Streeter

I breathed an initial sigh of relief when I got to Baltimore. The paint issues really weren’t that bad. In fact, I couldn’t even find the clearcoat damage on the tailgate for a least a couple of days. That’s how minor it was.

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Sadly, I had realized that something was terribly wrong with the car the second I gave it any throttle. I drove the car no more than 5 mph to get it to the U-Haul trailer, and a terrible metallic rubbing sound emanated from the front wheels. I crossed my fingers, hoping that it was just rusty brake rotors from all of the salty air, then loaded the car onto the trailer.

Mercedes Streeter

When I finally got the car home, I went through a little bit of testing. The battery worked great, as did all four windows, all four stereo speakers, and even the air-conditioner. The little Honda Life has one of the coldest air-cons in my entire fleet, which is so cool. If only it didn’t feel like running the air-conditioner robbed the car of its already morsel of power.

I even love how I got all of the original documentation with the car.

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Mercedes Streeter
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Mercedes Streeter

Then, I was surprised that, on top of the original documentation, I also got a container of Japanese cleaning wipes, a yoga mat-looking thing, and two really nice cleaning towels. Stuff like this isn’t supposed to be left in the car during shipping, and yet, here we are.

I was especially excited to see not a speck of rust on the body and only what I’d call “California-level” rust on the underbody components.

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Bursting My Bubble

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Mercedes Streeter

Then, it was time for the test drive, and that’s when things fell apart. The first thing I noticed was that, holy crap, the left front wheel has the worst-sounding wheel bearing I had ever experienced in a car. It felt like I was sitting directly next to a low-bypass turbofan at takeoff thrust. Additionally, the bearing was so bad that I felt vibrations in the steering wheel, and the affected wheel had heavy vibrations during braking.

While I wasn’t being shocked by the horrible bearing, I had also noticed that the three-speed automatic was shifting quite hard. Now, it’s a 28-year-old transmission, and I don’t expect it to shift the smoothest, but this seemed abnormal.

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It was hard to get a consistent pull. Other times, the fluid was even lower on the stick. Mercedes Streeter

I checked my inspection report again, and neither of these was noted. In fairness, your inspector will likely tell you that your car goes into gear, but they don’t take them for a drive, so I get how that part was missed. However, the bearing was so bad that I thought there was no way it could have been missed. My Honda Beat had a bearing that wasn’t as bad as this, and the inspector for that car noted the bad bearing.

Thankfully, neither of these issues was hard to solve. The transmission was only about half full. So, I just topped it up. Now the car shifts fine. I’ll do a whole transmission flush later. The vehicle doesn’t leak, so I suspect that the owner rarely checked their transmission fluid over the vehicle’s 150,000-kilometer/93,200-mile life.

Img 20250604 141456
Mercedes Streeter

The other good news is that the Honda JA4 platform, which also underpinned the Today of the same era, uses a lot of parts that are shared across Honda’s JDM models of the 1990s. The front bearings here are shared with the Honda Acty truck, a couple of JDM Civics, and other common JDM Hondas. This meant that I was able to get a pair of new bearings overnighted from Japan for only $60.

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Then I called up my awesome mobile mechanic, Jack of Jet Mobile Auto Service, and penciled in a time to have the bearings installed. Part of the reason why I love Jack as a mechanic is that when other mechanics wave away my weird cars, he’s excited to work on something different. In this case, he mentioned that, once he peeled off the wheels, he bet the Honda Life isn’t much different to work on than a Honda that was sold in America.

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Mercedes Streeter

I stuck around for a little while to watch this process, and we were both blown away. The Honda not only had fresh hardware holding its hubs and brakes on, but the existing fasteners and other parts had so little corrosion that they gave Jack no fight.

For example, when Jack loosened the clamp on the steering knuckle, the knuckle actually began falling off of the strut all by itself. I had never seen that outside of California before. Certainly, I had never seen it on a used car in Illinois before.

Mercedes Streeter
Mercedes Streeter

Jack told me that my 28-year-old Honda was in such great condition underneath it really was like it came from California. He couldn’t even remember when was the last time he had seen a classic Honda that was so clean underneath.

Jack then peeled the old bearings out of the hubs and showed me what was going on. Here’s a race from the bearing on the right side. I wasn’t even aware that this bearing was bad! The left side was significantly worse. However, the twist was that the wheel didn’t actually have any alarming play in it. So, it’s not surprising that an inspector who didn’t drive the car missed the bad bearing.

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Mercedes Streeter
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The bearing seals were definitely shot. Mercedes Streeter
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Check out the inner race that was still on the hub. Mercedes Streeter

Based on the overall condition of the car and the fact that it had been legal to drive until late December 2024, I think what happened is that the front bearings started going out on the previous owner. Given the fact that replacing the bearings would have cost more than the car was worth, they decided to sell it rather than fix it. I bet the hard shifting probably even further motivated this.

I paid Jack $220 for the bearing job, bringing the total to just $280 to fix the bearings. I then spent $190 on a new set of tires and $103 to have them installed. Alright, so I put in $573 to make my $258 car safe to drive. Look, project car math never actually works out! But hey, the car was now perfect to drive, right?

One More Thing

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Mercedes Streeter

The bearings and the tires made a night and day difference in how the car drove. In fact, the car drove so well that in just a couple of days, I managed to put half the miles on the Honda Life that I put on my Honda Beat over four years. I suppose that also illustrates just how rough my Honda Beat was, but that’s a story for another day.

But there was one issue that bugged me. At first, I felt a very small vibration and heard an extremely quiet rotational noise. The noise showed up only when accelerating and braking, but never when coasting or turning. But after I put more kilometers on the car, I started hearing loud clicking noises, specifically when turning left at slow speeds.

Mercedes Streeter

The car likely has a bad constant velocity joint. The boots aren’t leaking and aren’t torn, but the joints do look original. Maybe it was just their time to go. Fixing this will set me back about another few hundred plus labor, but once it’s done, the car should be mechanically as perfect as a 28-year-old high-strung city car can be. I’ve also done some experimentation, and it looks like some buffing and a shot of clearcoat should take care of the paint, at least good enough for my standards, anyway.

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I spent way more money than I originally wanted to on this car. Initially, I expected to come out of this having spent less than $3,000. I’ll break down my costs later on, but I am probably past $4,000 now. I’m okay with it! I love this little car so much that I polished it up and parked it in my mini warehouse of dream cars. Once I fix the axle, I plan to get this car out on the show circuit this year and bring it to a Chicago Autopian meet, too!

If you want to import a car from Japan, don’t let this dissuade you. Do it! Just be aware that, even if you get a car with a decent condition grade, there might be a thing or two that you have to fix that you weren’t aware of. But once you fix it all up, it’ll all be worth it. Have fun!

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Vetatur Fumare
Vetatur Fumare
9 hours ago

I spent $3500 on my JA4 Honda Today, and I had to drop another $2000 on new, used front struts and then $3K on a paint job as the clear coat was letting go pretty much everywhere. Things could be a lot worse!

If anyone knows of a source for Dunlop or Yokohama 155/70 R12 tires (or approved equal) I would love to hear about it. Trailer tires are depressing.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
7 hours ago

In the midst of getting a 1954 Panhard Dyna Z with metric tires back on the road (a long-term project with my kid who just recently started a new career several states away so we work on it whenever my kid is in town) and was told by some in the Panhard community that this is a pretty good resource (sometimes shipping to the US is actually free but we have yet to place our orders so I’m not sure): https://www.longstonetyres.co.uk/
Looks like you might be able to order by tire size (& equivalent) as I don’t see the Life listed among their Honda models.
There’s a vintage tire specialist fairly close to me called Coker Tire https://cokertire.com/ but the prices can be rather high on some tires and pretty reasonable on other tires and the inventory depends on production runs and the demand expected so selections can be a bit spotty, plus I’m not sure about the new ownership though they do still sponsor the Great American Race.
A few years ago I visited Coker Tires & their museum where a highlight was seeing the mold they used to produce 12 tires for a GM Futurliner (seems each tire cost a few thousand dollars each!! Based on the timing of my visit I’m guessing it might have been this particular Futurliner https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/02/27/gm-futurliner/ which sold for 4 million dollars so the cost of those tires was *relatively* trivial.)

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
8 hours ago
Reply to  Vetatur Fumare

Check Classic Mini suppliers. lots of 12″ wheel’d Minis.

Bob
Bob
6 hours ago
Reply to  Vetatur Fumare

Pakistan! https://javedtyres.pk/product/dunlop-sp-155-70-r12/ You didn’t specify ‘where’

D-dub
D-dub
5 hours ago
Reply to  Vetatur Fumare

Why that size specifically? 145/80R12 Yokohamas look to be readily available on eBay.

Jay Vette
Jay Vette
10 hours ago

Sure, you may have spent a little more than you thought you would on it, but hey…that’s Life.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
10 hours ago
Reply to  Jay Vette

Spending money to keep something maintained is just part of one’s Civic duty…

Jay Vette
Jay Vette
10 hours ago

She bought one of her own Accord, but let’s hope she doesn’t have to use her Passport to go on an Odyssey to find parts.

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
10 hours ago
Reply to  Jay Vette

So many Dad puns.

SonOfLP500
SonOfLP500
6 hours ago

You can’t Beat a Dad pun.

D-dub
D-dub
5 hours ago
Reply to  SonOfLP500

You can always Fit one more dad pun into a comment thread.

William Domer
William Domer
4 hours ago
Reply to  D-dub

Well you sure are in your element

Tondeleo Jones
Tondeleo Jones
10 hours ago

When your MGF shows up, it’s going to need timing belts (both of them) replaced for your peace of mind.

Redapple
Redapple
11 hours ago

Mercedes, I love your car. Awesome. Random thought. Do they use ethanol garbage in Japan? Be sure to burn E zero !!!

Jdoubledub
Jdoubledub
10 hours ago
Reply to  Redapple

Google says a max of 3% ethanol is allowed in Japan, but they rarely blend that high.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
11 hours ago

It is probably the cutest car ever. My (grown) kids would slather it with manga stickers.

IanGTCS
IanGTCS
10 hours ago

I initially read that as Maga stickers and got worried.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago
Reply to  IanGTCS

Why that his kids were intelligent independent thoughtful and well educated? Seems something to wish for

Tiki Bunny
Tiki Bunny
11 hours ago

You absolutely dodged a bullet with MIRIVE. I’ve had issues with their Saitama branch multiple times, but I’ll bet this one was from Osaka, which is typically above average. Really glad to see there’s nothing of critical concern with this Life!

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
11 hours ago

$190 on a set of tires?

The BMW i3 must be drooling of jealousy – else, terrified of what kind of questionable rubber you just mounted.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
11 hours ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

At this size, tires are usually super-cheap. Not much demand anymore for 13s or 14s.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
11 hours ago

I miss reasonably priced tires.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

You can get them if you do the work and not expect top of the line.

JDE
JDE
10 hours ago

of course that is usually the problem. either the lack of demand results in very few good options and as a result, supply of whatever still is made is suddenly worth more. Laws of Supply and demand and all.

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
8 hours ago

The real problem is finding *good* tires in those sizes.

William Domer
William Domer
4 hours ago

My Del sol would like a word. ( went from 13’s all tv the way to 14’s. Which is the VW size. Also my 86 Cabriolet.

Dirk from metro Atlanta
Dirk from metro Atlanta
11 hours ago

This makes me happy. So glad for you.

Iain Tunmore
Iain Tunmore
11 hours ago

Lovely little car!

I hope I’m not the only one who immediately imagined Ziggy Subotka driving this round the docks when Baltimorean Stevedores were mentioned.

Tim Farrell
Tim Farrell
12 hours ago

Yes the AC will drag the performance down. My Every van has ice cold AC that cools the entire van on 90 degree days but I feel it sucking power from the engine. Its a 25+ year old car, start the preventative maintenance right now. Replace all rubber lines/hoses/bump stops whatever. Replace all fluids immediately. Replace all filters. Make sure the brakes are good to go when you do those lines. Heres tip, you probably don’t need to get parts from Japan for this thing, I bet you can find it all on RockAuto by measuring and reading specs on Honda parts for models brought into the states at about the same time. I did the entire front breaks on my van for $150.00 (calipers/rotors/brakelines/pads/fluid all with parts from RockAuto for a common Suzuki model from about the same year as my van. The rear brakes had all new components under the drums so I just swapped on new drums and called it a day. You can find details of my journey here: https://minitrucktalk.com/threads/suzuki-every-van-progress.21475/ Good luck Mercedes!

Jdoubledub
Jdoubledub
10 hours ago
Reply to  Tim Farrell

I feel like the rule of thumb 20 years ago was that AC load robbed 10% of your power. So, 10% of 60 leaves you a whopping 54hp to spare (when new!). Wonder if the kei cars are programmed to disable the AC clutch at wide open throttle to keep the ponies in the barn.

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
10 hours ago
Reply to  Tim Farrell

My 130hp Honda Fit drives noticeably differently with the a/c on. Mostly off the line, it goes from “not much rev hang at all, what’s the fuss?” to “That tach needle’s diving almost to zero the nanosecond the clutch disengages”.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

No problem just remember to turn off the AC before passing

William Domer
William Domer
4 hours ago

Our Jetta in the 80’s was like: A/C on going up a hill in PA on the way to DC, surely you jest.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago
Reply to  Tim Farrell

It isn’t a garage find it is a gently used well maintained Kei car

Ash78
Ash78
12 hours ago

FML! Looks like you got your L F’d right up.

That does mean “fix,” right?

Drew
Drew
12 hours ago

I’m glad your Life is so easy. Way easier than lowercase life, it sounds like.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
12 hours ago

“A Little Blueberry Shows Up For Auction”
You could get a personalized plate that says PSYCH and put a pineapple in the rear window just to confuse the handful of automotively knowledgeable fans of Shawn and Gus.
https://imcdb.org/vehicle_123174-Toyota-Echo-NCP13-2004.html

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago

COTD

Toecutter
Toecutter
12 hours ago

Still worth it.

A Suzuki Cappuccino, Autozam AZ-1 and a ASL Garaiya are all on the bucket list.

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
12 hours ago

Mikey likes it.

(if you’re under 40, ask a GenX’er to translate)

Ash78
Ash78
12 hours ago

Mikey? He drives anything!

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
11 hours ago

God I hated those commercials.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
7 hours ago

I never understood why those kids tried to dump what they assumed was a nasty tasting mess on a kid whom they knew would most likely reject it. Confirmation bias maybe?

Abdominal Snoman
Abdominal Snoman
12 hours ago

Don’t overestimate the difficulty of replacing the CV yourself. I can probably do one in about 20-25 minutes on other Hondas sharing that design, and first time I’d expect it to take about 3-4 hours for you to do both. As long as you have an impact gun, a 34mm? socket for the axle nut, and a pry bar, it’s just disconnecting the knuckle from the lower control arm so you can swing it out to make room, using a sledgehammer to get the old axle out of the hub, then a pry bar to pop the axle out of the transmission. Then just undo everything you just did but with a new axle in the middle.

The Bishop's Brother
The Bishop's Brother
12 hours ago

While my car is comically simple, I second this. I pulled my CV joint because the boot was going. Ended up cleaning all of the old grease out and repacking it (brake parts cleaner is no joke – use safety goggles… Don’t ask) and putting on a new boot. It really wasn’t bad. I didn’t even have an impact wrench. Just a 4′ cobbled breaker bar. Next time, impact wrench. And I’m a wrenching newbie.

Abdominal Snoman
Abdominal Snoman
11 hours ago

So many things on a Honda are trivially easy to fix, however other things like bearings and ball joints that need to be pressed in can be a royal pain by the time you set up a jig just right that I’d rather replace a transmission myself and probably get it done in less time than the guy I’d pay to replace a bearing.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
11 hours ago

Second this, the sealed wheel bearing hubs on GMs are expensive, but all you have to do is bolt them on- no pressing or packing required.

Abdominal Snoman
Abdominal Snoman
11 hours ago

Until it goes bad… was helping a friend replace one of those on an early 2000’s BMW 5 series and we just couldn’t get the bolts to come free. We eventually resorted to using an entire patio table as a breaker bar (It was really well built) by the time we snapped the bolt. Lots of shockingly expensive parts then needed replacing.

IanGTCS
IanGTCS
10 hours ago

The front bearing on my old Century was like $45 Canadian. with trade pricing. Sure getting the old one out sucked thanks to rust but hardly expensive and took me an hour in the driveway. Very reasonable price to me.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago

This should assure you it is a gently used dd not a barn find that was sitting for years. Adjust your projection as necessary

Hotdoughnutsnow
Hotdoughnutsnow
12 hours ago

on top of the original documentation, I also got a container of Japanese cleaning wipes”… are they lemon scented? Did your Life give you lemon scented wipes?

Ben
Ben
12 hours ago

When Life hands you lemon(-scented wipe)s, make a blog post about it.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago

Cherry blossom

Jeff Jordan
Jeff Jordan
12 hours ago

I’m looking forward to more stories about your Life. Very surprised about the low cost of the front wheel bearings and the tires.

Data
Data
12 hours ago
Reply to  Jeff Jordan

Seriously, I paid twice as much for 1 tire a few years ago.

Bags
Bags
12 hours ago
Reply to  Jeff Jordan

Must be an available tire size? My buddy had a Kei truck for a little while and had to import times from Japan because they didn’t sell anything small enough in the US at the time.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago

Walmart carries down to 13 you may need to order them

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
12 hours ago

Are you gonna tell us how you managed to get it registered?

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
12 hours ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Given grey legal area that this falls under, I doubt Mercedes should go on record. But scanning for clues in other articles *cough* South Dakota Montana *cough* should tip you off.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
12 hours ago

I saw the taxi yesterday, and since the editors haven’t blurred it out it’s no secret it wears a Montana plate. I think the Autopian has a secret lair in Montana 😉

Frank Wrench
Frank Wrench
12 hours ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Saw the MT plate on the cab too and agree with your suspicion. I’m picturing a rusted RV up on blocks next to a river where David goes magnet fishing for Jeep parts…

D-dub
D-dub
10 hours ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

One LLC with a fleet of corporate vehicles.

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
10 hours ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

“R&D facility”

79 Burb-man
79 Burb-man
13 hours ago

So when do we start the cross country drive in this thing?

Dan1101
Dan1101
13 hours ago

That’s not bad, $4000 for a working rare interesting vehicle is a great deal.

James Mason
James Mason
12 hours ago
Reply to  Dan1101

I just paid $3800 for a 2006 Civic with 108k miles on it. Add $300 worth of new tires and a $24 A/C clutch from Amazon and I’ve got a fine daily driver. $4000 to have a quirky JDM car in a similar state isn’t bad at all!

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
13 hours ago

I’d pull the CV joints… then the exhaust, and then the engine and transmission.

Then drop in a mild B16….

Do you realize how ridiculous it would be with 160-180hp?

William Domer
William Domer
4 hours ago

Costs associated with projects are filed under mental health costs in my spreadsheet of car life. Otherwise I would need to be rational and why the F would anyone want that?

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Arch Duke Maxyenko
13 hours ago

“Yo dawg, now you just need somebody to make a cake that looks like it, so you can enjoy a slice of Life while in your Life.” -Xzibit, probably

A. Barth
A. Barth
13 hours ago

I was able to get a pair of new bearings overnighted from Japan for only $60

It’s my understanding that overnighting parts from Japan is the kei to allowing your car to decimate all.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
13 hours ago

Unfortunately, we seldom get the Life we expect and all you can do is make the best of it.

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