When Honda introduced the original Prelude as a 1979 model, it was a sporty-looking machine with plenty of Accord components, a generous helping of luxury and convenience features, a curb weight just a bit over a ton … and not much power under the hood. The second generation of Prelude appeared in North America as a 1983 model, and it was markedly bigger, sleeker and more powerful than its predecessor. Sales of second-gen Preludes continued here through 1987, and I’ve found a final-year example with the hot-rod Si package in a car graveyard in Phoenix, Arizona.
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This fuel-injected 2.0-liter engine showed up when the Prelude Si debuted late in the 1985 model year, and it gave the car impressive acceleration. I daily-drove an ’87 Prelude Si (red, of course) for a while in the middle 1990s and thought it was respectably quick. This one was rated at 110 horsepower and 114 pound-feet, which was decent for a car that weighed just 2,426 pounds.
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The most compelling reason to buy a fuel-injected Honda in 1987 was that the fuel-delivery systems on carbureted Hondas had become so complicated (due to increasingly strict American emissions requirements) by that time that their vacuum-hose diagrams resembled a map of the universe (or the notorious Afghanistan Stability/COIN Dynamics PowerPoint slide). By contrast, Honda’s PGM-FI system worked very well and had simple plumbing.
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Contrast that diagram with this one for the dual-carb-equipped 1988 Accord (the base 1987 Prelude’s 1.8-liter engine used a similar system). Which one would you rather have when the engine developed a misfire or wouldn’t pass a smog check?
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The MSRP for this car was $14,945 with the five-speed manual transmission, which it has. That’s about $41,366 in 2023 dollars. The base 1987 Prelude with the carbureted 1.8 engine cost $11,995 ($33,201 after inflation).
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When you got the Prelude Si for ’87, this “HIGH POWER SYSTEM” AM/FM/cassette deck with seven-band graphic equalizer came as standard equipment. This rig must have made the hits of the era sound great.
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309,527 miles show on the odometer, which (just barely) gets this car into the Murilee Martin Junkyard Odometer Hall of Fame. The highest-mile Honda I’ve ever found in a junkyard was a 1988 Accord with 626,476.2 miles on the clock.
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The interior is faded and a bit crunchy, but not abused. That’s typical of high-mile cars I find in such places.
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The Arizona sun is rough on car paint, but the dry climate kept this car rust-free until the end.
A 16.68-second quarter-mile time was pretty good for 1987.
The stylish car for stylish people.
In Japan, the Prelude was available at Honda Verno stores.
