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In 1989, the baseball-loving Japanese dipped their bats in pine tar and came to the U.S. to take
gigundous
swings. That single year launched five legends:
LS400,
,
300ZX Twin
,
, and
concept. The
(!) hosted the global debuts of the
and the
. While
celebrates the bygones with the 30th Anniversary Miata, Acura’s reminiscing with a look at how the
— a car
Motor Trend
described in 1990 as, “[The] best
the world has ever produced. Any time. Any place. Any price …” — came to be.
The development yearbook opened in 1984, a year after
returned to
as an engine supplier for the Spirit team, and for the second Williams chassis in the last race of the season. For the first time in the automaker’s history,
wanted to build a production car with the engine behind the cabin, one that would demonstrate Honda’s engineering prowess and “deeply rooted racing spirit.” The sports car would also serve as a halo for the not-yet-launched
brand. The engineering team built the first test vehicle in February 1984 on the bones of a first-generation Honda Jazz.
After four years of formal development, Honda parked the NS-X Concept in a conference room at Chicago’s Drake Hotel in February 1989. This is where the media would meet the red wonder before the public show-stand debut. The F-16 Fighting Falcon-inspired coupe was built on the world’s first all-aluminum monocoque, and its SOHC V6 ran with titanium connecting rods.
Before the press conference, then-Honda president Tadashi Kume got in the NS-X, started the engine, and revved to the 8,000-rpm redline — a noise felt by everyone in the adjacent conference room attending a
press conference. Honda’s PR man at the time yelled, “Mr. Kume, stop it! They’re gonna hear this!”
When Kume got out, he asked Honda engineers present why they didn’t put their new VTEC technology in the NS-X. (What’s Japanese for, “Why didn’t the VTEC kick in, yo?!”) They told him VTEC had been created for four-cylinder engines. Kume told them to work on a V6 application. More suggestions came from journos who drove the early prototypes at Honda’s Tochigi R&D Center, who said the NS-X “could use more power.” The development team had grabbed the SOHC V6 from the Acura Legend for the NS-X concept, and it put out 160 horsepower in the
.
Equally vital input came from Ayrton Senna, who had gone to Honda’s Suzuka Circuit to test the new Honda-engined
F1 car. The R&D team asked him to try the NS-X, which they had targeted to match
and
for rigidity. Senna’s feedback: “I’m not sure I can really give you appropriate advice on a mass-production car, but I feel it’s a little fragile.”
The development team got to work. They built a more potent DOHC VTEC V6 with 270 horsepower. The wider cylinder head in the transverse-mounted V6 meant stretching the production car’s wheelbase, and adding longer front and rear overhangs. They also took the car to the Nürburgring for testing, where they realized Senna had been correct, so they reworked the structure to increase rigidity by 50 percent.
The name NS-X was meant to be a placeholder only for the introduction. The Japanese R&D team had coined it, standing for the words New and Sports, with the “X” representing a variable. The U.S. team changed that to New Sports eXperimental. After the overwhelming reaction in Chicago, combined with the fact that everyone loved the name and no one inside the company could agree on something better, NSX, without the hyphen, got the nod. And you know what they say about the rest…
Acura will host a panel discussion about the car that changed every exotic car to follow. Panel guests include Csaba Csere, a former editor-in-chief of
Car and Driver
who was at the 1989 reveal and the early prototype drive in Japan, and whose magazine happened to
crash two of the first-gen sports cars
. We just hope Acura has the guts to enforce a dress code of brown loafers and white tube socks on all the panelists.
Check out the huge gallery above, and if you want more stories about the early days of NSX, check out
by Honda, a video with Csaba Csere relating details like how
Honda got the NSX’s full manual steering
to work and why Honda used iron brake calipers, and an
Autoweek
piece with a story about how a test engineer
in Northern California the night before the official press drive.
Related Video:
from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2TARiJ3