I admit having a pro-Civic bias, at least for the cars built while Soichiro was still alive, since I’ve daily-driven at le ast one example of every generation of Civic from the first through the fifth
The CVCC engine first appeared as an optional Civic powerplant for the 1975 model year. Because its stratified-charge design made it run so clean compared to ordinary engines, the early CVCC engine didn’t need a catalytic converter and therefore didn’t require (more expensive at the time) unleaded gasoline. This one was a 1.5-liter rated at 60 horsepower and 76 pound-feet, way better than the base non-CVCC 1.2 and its 50 horsepower. The ’76 hatchback scaled in at a flyweight 1,708 pounds (well over a half-ton less than the current Civic
The CVCC design used secondary combustion chambers that got a rich fuel mixture that was easy to ignite, connected to larger combustion chambers that got a lean mix. To make this work, the carburetor used a complex two-in-one design that worked very well during the CVCC’s early years but eventually became terrifyingly complex
This car was California-legal when new, though the non-CVCC cars weren’t sold in the Golden State in 1976.
The ’76 Civic hatchback could be had with the base four-speed manual transmission, an extra-cost five-speed manual, or the optional sorta-two-speed, sorta-automatic Hondamatic, which was derived from motorcycle technology. This car has a manual.
This one seems to have been in decent shape when it arrived here, with no serious rust and an interior that must have been nice enough before the junkyard vultures started plucking away parts.
The two-tone paint job with pinstripes must have looked sharp when this car was new.
The MSRP for a 1976 Civic CVCC hatchback was $3,189, or about $17,444 in 2023 dollars, while the base Civic two-door sedan was $2,729 ($14,927 now). The cheapest possible new Toyota Corolla two-door sedan was $2,789 ($25,256 today) in 1976, while a Datsun B210
So many affordable car choices during the Bicentennial year! Detroit would sell you a Chevy Vega sport coupe for $2,984 ($16,322), a Chevette Scooter for $2,899 ($15,857) or a Ford Pinto MPG sedan for $3,025 ($16,546). Kenosha offered its cheapest AMC Gremlin for $2,898 ($15,852), which was a lot of car for that kind of money. At least in terms of choices in new cheap wheels, the Malaise Era beats 2023.
43 highway miles per gallon.
Leave the unleaded-only and diesel cars for non-CVCC-driving suckers!
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