Good luck with the sale Ken! But you will get another NSX in no time. It happened to me and I never knew how much I'd missed it.
The good news is, some lucky person is going to get an absolutely pristine “no issues” NSX
Wow, what a shock!
I remember seeing your nsx in Toronto XPO2009 and thought "now here's a guy who's a lifer".
man, that ain't gonna buff outturns out there were only six like it built.
The Integra ist the cheaper car if something goes wrong on the track. Many NSX owners use their Integras on the track.Sell the Integra TypeR :biggrin:
Just like any mechanical repair (or body repair from a minor fender bender), an engine replacement doesn't constitute an issue, as long as it has been done properly by a competent professional. My harmonic balancer pulley failed four years ago. I replaced my engine with a used one with slightly less miles on it; at that time, I also replaced (with brand new parts) the timing belt, the harmonic balancer pulley, and all the cooling system hoses. The work was done by the top NSX mechanic in the Midwest. Since then I have driven 17,000 miles on the car, including its use by Car and Driver for an article in 2008. The car has been maintained and refurbished far better than most NSXs, and needs absolutely nothing to be done to it for the next owner to enjoy it.I thought that you blew your engine and had it replaced with a junkyard engine?
My harmonic balancer pulley failed four years ago. I replaced my engine with a used one with slightly less miles on it; at that time, I also replaced (with brand new parts) the timing belt, the harmonic balancer pulley, and all the cooling system hoses. Since then I have driven 17,000 miles on the car, including its use by Car and Driver for an article in 2008. The car has been maintained and refurbished far better than most NSXs, and needs absolutely nothing to be done to it for the next owner to enjoy it.
If I were shopping for an NSX, I would have much more confidence in a car even if the engine were replaced, as long as all the preventive maintenance were up to date, and if the owner went out of his way to do everything possible to make the car trouble-free. These include things that virtually no one does, like having BrianK refurbish the electrical circuit boards for the climate control and sound system without waiting for them to fail, like replacing the brake lines even though there were no symptoms of problems, like replacing all the cooling system hoses, and like having a clutch that has been replaced only 3,000 miles ago. (Can you say that your own NSX has had all of these items replaced/refurbished within the past few years? I bet not.) Most used NSXs require repairs and maintenance of some items, often costing thousands of dollars. An NSX that doesn't require any repairs or maintenance is a "no issues" car. And there aren't many of them out there for sale, as anyone who has been searching have found.
...because owners who take care and do the preventative repairs keep the car usually. Well said.An NSX that doesn't require any repairs or maintenance is a "no issues" car. And there aren't many of them out there for sale, as anyone who has been searching have found.
BTW does the new owner get to remove the Ken Sax headliner sticker:tongue: