Honda Civic Type R EK9: The First Type R Civic
In 1997 Honda launched the first Civic Type R — 185 PS from 1.6 liters, hand-assembled B16B, and the template for every Type R that followed.
Honda Civic Type R EK9: The First Type R Civic
In August 1997, Honda launched the Civic Type R EK9 — the first Civic to wear the legendary Type R badge. The EK9 was a hatchback Civic stripped to its bones, reinforced to rally-car standards, and given a race engine that revved to 8,400 rpm. It was the beginning of the Type R lineage that would go on to produce the DC2 Integra Type R, the FD2, the FK2, the FK8, and the current FL5. For Honda enthusiasts, the EK9 is where it all started — the purest, most stripped-down, most honest interpretation of the "Type R" philosophy.
The B16B Engine
The heart of the EK9 was the B16B — a specialized version of Honda's B-series family developed specifically for the Civic Type R. Key specifications:
- Displacement: 1.6L (1,594cc)
- Output: 185 PS at 8,200 rpm — the highest specific output of any Japanese production engine at that time (115.6 PS per liter)
- Redline: 8,400 rpm
- Valvetrain: DOHC VTEC, 4 valves per cylinder
- Compression ratio: 10.8:1
The B16B was hand-assembled by a dedicated team at Honda's engine plant, with blueprinted internals, balanced rotating assemblies, and carefully-selected piston weights. The engine was the first to use Honda's "hand-built by Type R experts" process that would become standard for all Type R models.
The Chassis
The EK9's chassis wasn't just a regular Civic with stickers. Honda engineers made substantial reinforcements:
- Seam welding: The body-in-white was spot-welded at additional points to add rigidity
- Reinforced strut tops: Additional gussets for stiffness
- Torsen LSD: Limited-slip differential (torque-sensing) for the first time in a Civic
- Lightweight wheels: 15-inch Enkei wheels reduced unsprung weight
- Stiffer springs and dampers: Suspension was tuned for track use
- Recaro bucket seats (JDM only): For better cornering support
Curb weight was just 1,080 kg — extraordinarily light for a factory car.
Production Numbers
Total EK9 production: approximately 16,000 units from August 1997 to August 2000. All built in Japan, all sold in Japan only. The EK9 was never sold in North America or Europe — it was a JDM exclusive.
Today's Market
Because the EK9 was JDM-only and low volume, clean examples are now rare and expensive. In the US (eligible for import under the 25-year rule starting August 2022), clean EK9s trade for $35,000-$65,000 depending on mileage, condition, and originality. Unmolested examples with original B16B engine and chassis are the most desirable.
Legacy
The Civic Type R EK9 is the beginning of the Type R legacy. It proved that Honda could build a track-focused hatchback with a race engine and sell it to enthusiasts. The philosophy — strip weight, add a specialized engine, reinforce the chassis, tune the suspension — became the Type R template for the next 25+ years. Every modern Type R (the FL5 current-generation Civic Type R) inherits something from the EK9's design brief.
For enthusiasts who want the purest Type R experience, the EK9 is the answer. No turbo, no electronic stability control, no dual-clutch transmission. Just a screaming VTEC, a light chassis, and a dedicated engineering team's best effort at a naturally aspirated hatchback.
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