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Victorofhavoc

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Sounds like another adverse consequence of having the clutch and brakes share fluid. Nothing to be done about it, but is that your read?

Obviously track use is hard on the brakes and the fluid, but in my experience not very hard on the clutch - I think street driving is worse. Of the track cars I've had I've never changed clutch fluid until I had to have the motor out (for various issues) and changed the clutch preventively.

(I've changed clutch fluid on plenty of cars, but that was because they were old and there were symptoms. I'm not against it, I just don't think track driving should make it worse.)

Correct me if I'm thinking about this wrong.
As far as sharing a res, I think it's a personal view point if it's truly problematic or not. It kind of depends on your use case and frequency, but I can see it having benefits for the dealer and driver at service time. It pretty much guarantees the fluid will be changed, since people often forget about clutch fluid. For cases like this, yeah it's annoying but not the end of the world.

To be fair, I'm MUCH more annoyed Honda and acura didn't find a way to rotate the turbo 90 degrees so the intake has a shorter and direct inlet path, the cold side of the turbo stays separate from the exhaust, and the exhaust would have a straight down run instead of a right angle. Maybe ac packaging just got in the way, but it seems like a miss if they didn't even consider it.

I will say when I started bleeding the clutch, before my pressure bleeder forced air in, I DID get air out of the line. Once it was bleeding manually I did find contamination in the clutch as well. Whether this contamination is enough for most people to notice will vary.

I've had clutches work perfectly fine, and then after 40 mins on track fall straight to the floor without engaging the friction disc or pressure plate at all. It all depends on your heat and the system. If you delete the slave cylinder and clutch delay valve, it's much more likely to see clutch heat issues, and you'll definitely need to rotate at least yearly. With them, the cdv will prevent the friction disc from quickly slamming and generating more heat, while the slave cyl will add extra pressure which masks any smaller bubbles. It's also dependent on how much heat your engine is transferring to the transmission. Some cars just run hot (like my Z that runs oil at 285F even with a 32 row oil cooler). Other cars are just bad at transferring that heat elsewhere or don't have a ton of trans fluid so it overheats quickly.

Once I got most of the old fluid out via the driver's caliper inside bleeder, the clutch really didn't have much of the old fluid left. It didn't take a tremendous amount of bleed before it started running much clearer. Maybe two tablespoons or so.

Given how quick and easy it is to bleed manually after doing brakes, I would honestly just throw it onto the todo pile. It's already there, and worst case you can pay a kid (your own or a neighbor's if you don't have your own) to pump the clutch for you a dozen times. 5$ for 15min is a deal for any kid, lol.
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Victorofhavoc

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Looks like I'll need to add changing/bleeding fluid to my to-do list for this car, which is EVER-GROWING.

So now @Victorofhavoc, explain to me like I'm 4 years old the difference between camber-correcting ball joints and a roll-center adjuster? Whiteline makes each for these cars.

Also looking at finally just ponying up for an MBRP exhaust and PRL HVI.
Camber adding ball joint will increase "static" camber, but the roll center (not to be confused with "center of gravity") will not be affected. Typically if you lower a car, your center of gravity goes lower, but your roll center stays the same, which means it moves up in relation to the car.

Roll center adjustment changes one or more "pickup" point on the suspension, usually raising an inside joint or lowering an outside one to bring the motion of the control arm back in the same range as factory.

This is all especially important on a McPherson strut car because the shock travel is so limited and the suspension by nature of design gains positive camber after the lower arm outer joint crosses the lateral line of where the inner joint sits. If you can picture the lca, lowering it on the outside or raising it on the inside will angle it downwards more, so that lowering the car means the arm sits at the same angle as it did factory.

This making sense in my head as I describe it, but it's not the easiest thing to visualize. Let me know if I'm not being clear enough and I can find a different way to paint the picture.
 

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As far as sharing a res, I think it's a personal view point if it's truly problematic or not. It kind of depends on your use case and frequency, but I can see it having benefits for the dealer and driver at service time. It pretty much guarantees the fluid will be changed, since people often forget about clutch fluid. For cases like this, yeah it's annoying but not the end of the world.

To be fair, I'm MUCH more annoyed Honda and acura didn't find a way to rotate the turbo 90 degrees so the intake has a shorter and direct inlet path, the cold side of the turbo stays separate from the exhaust, and the exhaust would have a straight down run instead of a right angle. Maybe ac packaging just got in the way, but it seems like a miss if they didn't even consider it.

I will say when I started bleeding the clutch, before my pressure bleeder forced air in, I DID get air out of the line. Once it was bleeding manually I did find contamination in the clutch as well. Whether this contamination is enough for most people to notice will vary.

I've had clutches work perfectly fine, and then after 40 mins on track fall straight to the floor without engaging the friction disc or pressure plate at all. It all depends on your heat and the system. If you delete the slave cylinder and clutch delay valve, it's much more likely to see clutch heat issues, and you'll definitely need to rotate at least yearly. With them, the cdv will prevent the friction disc from quickly slamming and generating more heat, while the slave cyl will add extra pressure which masks any smaller bubbles. It's also dependent on how much heat your engine is transferring to the transmission. Some cars just run hot (like my Z that runs oil at 285F even with a 32 row oil cooler). Other cars are just bad at transferring that heat elsewhere or don't have a ton of trans fluid so it overheats quickly.

Once I got most of the old fluid out via the driver's caliper inside bleeder, the clutch really didn't have much of the old fluid left. It didn't take a tremendous amount of bleed before it started running much clearer. Maybe two tablespoons or so.

Given how quick and easy it is to bleed manually after doing brakes, I would honestly just throw it onto the todo pile. It's already there, and worst case you can pay a kid (your own or a neighbor's if you don't have your own) to pump the clutch for you a dozen times. 5$ for 15min is a deal for any kid, lol.
Thanks.

I should correct myself. I was talking about our casual track day cars, which have never had clutch issues (only motor issues). But we have had an issue with a couple endurance race cars (E30 and E36) where we literally had to lift the clutch from the floor by foot every time we shifted. But I think in both cases the slave cylinders were bad.

With that said, it's annoying that the systems are linked. Clutch fluid should be trouble free for at least a decade.
 
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Victorofhavoc

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I did quite a few laps in the car today with both the traction partially off and full off. I didn't feel it intervening a ton at partial off, but it definitely didn't let me snap the rear out whenever I wanted. It seemed to be using the rear brakes to slow the inside wheel in slip circumstances, which led to a touch of understeer but nothing horrendous. I measure temps after the fact and one rear rotor was nearly double the temp of the other, and it was the mostly inside one. Full off, the other side was marginally hotter at the end of a 30min session.

The car drove pretty great overall! It was quicker than expected and I ran very consistent 1.48s once everything was warm. The tires are pretty consistent and didn't grease very quickly, so the special "DT1" ps4s is definitely different from a typical ps4s. I was told by tirerack the DT1 on differ in tread pattern, but the DT1 tread looks identical to my other 3 sets of non DT1 ps4s. However, this ps4s behaved very differently on track, with the consistency of a 200tw, but the ultimate grip of a 300tw. For reference, with a very similarly setup gti, my friend ran 1.56s today and my personal best in my old gti on a set of yoko a052 was a 1.45. I have full confidence with a better 200tw tire I could get it to a 1.45 to 1.46! That's pretty awesome for an otherwise stock car! Also, in my racecar, on a Hoosier slick, I ran a best 1.31 on a different day. Comparable days, my estimate would have been around 1.35 to 1.36....so yeah 10-12s off of a full racecar pace in the same power to weight category is a very solid performance from the type s!!

I can't stress enough how much better the carbotech xp10 brakes are than factory. Their compression is non existent and you basically have a rock hard pedal at all times. With ti shims, fluid never boiled and wear on the brakes looked great. These brakes are a bit much for a 300tw, but the ps4s is no ordinary 300tw so it performed admirably. The consistency of the brake was my favorite part of driving the car today. It could use a bit more top end power, honestly, but I would NOT add any torque. It has more than enough torque as is, and even a drifter that drove it today mentioned the surplus of torque compared to his drift stang. The xp10 pads were also a breeze to drive to and from the track (2.5 hrs away). They're noisy... They grind, they squeak, they squeal, and they make the racecar noises, but highway they're dead silent and quite solid. Their only issue on the highway is how aggressive the acc becomes, and how easy it becomes to touch the brake gently and suddenly slow 10mph,😂.

I liked the mounting location of the camera, and eventually I placed my lap timer up high and to the right with a ram mount x. That all worked beautifully, but the gopro failed to start a few times. It'll take me a couple days to pull a proper video out and post something up. Unfortunately audio sucked because the exhaust is super silent. Tire squeal was present all the time, and I'm totally okay with that because it means the tires are communicating. I'd like to move the mic into the hatch next time, but today my cable wasn't long enough.

I did have one recurring issue. Every hot session out, the car would throw a light saying "brake system" and in my best cheeky Jeremy Clarkson impression I could certainly say, "Yes! It does exist!" It would clear on a restart and didn't effect performance or function in any way. My guess is that with all the trail braking, abs activating, and regular slip angle happening that the electronics are just being stupid and throwing some silly code. No one else driving my car had it happen, but to be fair the next fastest person was 10s slower.

Everyone that drove the car, including me, commented on how oversteer prone it was! The back end was constantly wanting to press out and even through the many sweepers at this track it was keeping the front level and planted while allowing the rear to slip around. Go in too hot and you certainly get understeer, but keeping the brake pressure in check and smoothly letting off, led to a lot of quite fun rotation.

The suspension i eventually set to sport in individual mode and that's what led to the fastest times. I didn't notice any excessive body roll. The roll that was present was quite beneficial to the weight transfer and ultimately the grip the car was producing. The roll, at least to me, I sport mode seems very well matched to a 200 or 300tw tire. This is also not an easy or ultra smooth track, so that does play a roll (dad pun 😅).

Ps4s are a bit soft and sometimes funky on tire pressure. After a few sessions of tuning with temp, feel, and chalk I found the sweet spot to be at around 40psi front and 35 rear when hot in pit temp/pressure. With a smoother track, I bet 42 to 44 front might be needed.

If I missed anything or anyone has other questions, please do ask. Again, I'll have video up sometime this week.
 
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Victorofhavoc

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Thanks.

I should correct myself. I was talking about our casual track day cars, which have never had clutch issues (only motor issues). But we have had an issue with a couple endurance race cars (E30 and E36) where we literally had to lift the clutch from the floor by foot every time we shifted. But I think in both cases the slave cylinders were bad.

With that said, it's annoying that the systems are linked. Clutch fluid should be trouble free for at least a decade.
If you put in an rb600 type like I did, you'll get two years max before the fluid itself is shot. Whether that affects you as much as it would on the brake system is kind of hard to tell on a street or dual duty car. Sensitive fluids are just sensitive fluids though, so not isolating the brake and clutch here is definitely annoying.

I would kill to drive an E30 endurance car! I've driven one sorted e36 and it was a whole bucket of fun.
 

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Camber adding ball joint will increase "static" camber, but the roll center (not to be confused with "center of gravity") will not be affected. Typically if you lower a car, your center of gravity goes lower, but your roll center stays the same, which means it moves up in relation to the car.

Roll center adjustment changes one or more "pickup" point on the suspension, usually raising an inside joint or lowering an outside one to bring the motion of the control arm back in the same range as factory.

This is all especially important on a McPherson strut car because the shock travel is so limited and the suspension by nature of design gains positive camber after the lower arm outer joint crosses the lateral line of where the inner joint sits. If you can picture the lca, lowering it on the outside or raising it on the inside will angle it downwards more, so that lowering the car means the arm sits at the same angle as it did factory.

This making sense in my head as I describe it, but it's not the easiest thing to visualize. Let me know if I'm not being clear enough and I can find a different way to paint the picture.
No, it makes sense at a conceptual level. Also, thanks for the detailed write up of your track impressions. Definitely feels validating to know that my sentiments are pretty much echoed by someone with true track experience.

So now a more practical question- should I just bite the bullet, not waste any more time and have both the camber kit and roll-adjusters installed at the same time? I don't see many folks doing roll-adjusters- is it something I could/should just skip altogether? Compensate with something else like a rear sway bar???

I'm now starting to feel like a complete hypocrite. I swore to myself I was going to leave this car as close to stock as possible, but now I'm following the white rabbit and feeling like since I've done one thing in lowering the car, now I need to do a lot more to compensate.

Also this is making me question my previous stance on not wanting to do any work to my car myself. I'm admittedly not a great mechanic, have a loose assortment of probably 2/3 of a Craftsman tool set, no lift, no press, maybe an oil filter attachment and some channel locks somewhere- but I'm getting literal stomach aches thinking about the install costs... I've done enough front suspension work to know that it can truly test your patience and self-worth- and the quote I received for the labor for the ball joint install is evidence enough- but on a new car it can't be that bad, right?

Also assuming I'd need an alignment after either of these mods.
 
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Victorofhavoc

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No, it makes sense at a conceptual level. Also, thanks for the detailed write up of your track impressions. Definitely feels validating to know that my sentiments are pretty much echoed by someone with true track experience.

So now a more practical question- should I just bite the bullet, not waste any more time and have both the camber kit and roll-adjusters installed at the same time? I don't see many folks doing roll-adjusters- is it something I could/should just skip altogether? Compensate with something else like a rear sway bar???

I'm now starting to feel like a complete hypocrite. I swore to myself I was going to leave this car as close to stock as possible, but now I'm following the white rabbit and feeling like since I've done one thing in lowering the car, now I need to do a lot more to compensate.

Also this is making me question my previous stance on not wanting to do any work to my car myself. I'm admittedly not a great mechanic, have a loose assortment of probably 2/3 of a Craftsman tool set, no lift, no press, maybe an oil filter attachment and some channel locks somewhere- but I'm getting literal stomach aches thinking about the install costs... I've done enough front suspension work to know that it can truly test your patience and self-worth- and the quote I received for the labor for the ball joint install is evidence enough- but on a new car it can't be that bad, right?

Also assuming I'd need an alignment after either of these mods.
Yeah, the car on track was very good. Balance was pretty solid and I liked the tendency to oversteer. The oversteer has a lot to do with alignment and it could probably take up to 1/32nd toe out in rear for even more rotation.

Most people will just lower a car for street use and typically won't really 100% push it on track. When new drivers ask about mods at our track events the typical answer is "the fastest way to ruin a great track car is to start modifying it." I personally don't totally agree with this sentiment, but I do believe in the premise of the ethos. Certain things like fluids, brake pads, and tires I think are often critical to getting a car to just be consistent enough for people to learn off of. Then there's little things that are nice to do like shifter bushings, speed bleeders, remote oil drain lines and filters, louvres, and of course there's the racing godsend duct tape!

None of these things affect how the car drives specifically but rather are there to adapt to the heavier track use requirements, specifically the higher temps. It's not realistic, however, to believe no one will do things for appearance reasons. Like you mentioned before, you like the idea of 19" wheels and a lowered car, and you very well recognize this is vanity. There's nothing wrong with that though. We're not robots, we're humans, so we want some emotion from a car that's appealing to our eyes. If the car is where you like it appearance wise now, then I would work on correcting the things impacting your drive and balance.

Start with what tire you want to run. If you're not planning on doing a true track day tire (100tw) or a slick of some sort, then look up what the tire likes in terms of camber. The nankangs you mentioned before I believe like around -2 to 2.5 camber, about on par with other 200tw tires. If that's the category you plan to run, you'll want the roll adjustment completed for sure. That will increase your dynamic camber, and as long as you pull the strut pins to get all factory negative, you'll likely be right in the range of what the tire likes. You might not even want or need the ball joint changed. I'd recommend making one change at a time if you can, but I do understand cost is always a concern.

Also keep in mind if you want to run a wider tire for more heat tolerance and lateral grip, that will effect the inherent spring rate of the tire and what tire pressure settings are needed. It can further determine how much camber you'd need. There is a point of too much tire, but that would likely start after a 295 because of the weight of this car.

I haven't looked up the factory spring rate; do you know what it was? Do you know what the new rate of your new spring setup is? For a 1" lower setup, my suspicion is you'd need about 50% more rate in front, and maybe 85% rear. That's just based off historical familiarity, admittedly I haven't yet measured it myself. I can guarantee that the rear rate should have gone up a lot more than the front, though. If it didn't, you'll have to compensate with more rear bar and more tire pressure. You can also add a spring isolator in rear to raise the spring rate, but that will raise your ride height in rear a tad.

There is definitely a point to start wrenching yourself or start paying for a trackside mechanic. Things like swapping brake pads and rotors, bleeding fluids, swapping wheels, replacing o2 sensors, replacing wheel bearings, and checking codes should be on the skills list in the event something goes wrong trackside (like a panic stop for a red flag boils fluids and warps a rotor).

HPDE is not a cheap sport unfortunately. 6k is about a normal budget for driving a miata for 1 year and about 6 to 7 events. Stepping up in wheel/tire size to 255+ and 18s and you start looking at 8k. While autox has a lower entry cost, its per minute costs are 8 times higher. As a result of the running costs, miata are super popular.
 

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I'm digging the location of the camera. Just knowing myself, it seems like more effort than I'd be willing to manifest to procure the pvc, cut it to length, and "install" it every time I head to the track or autocross...

I may explore some other options.
 
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Victorofhavoc

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I'm digging the location of the camera. Just knowing myself, it seems like more effort than I'd be willing to manifest to procure the pvc, cut it to length, and "install" it every time I head to the track or autocross...

I may explore some other options.
Home depot will have someone cut a 24" section for you if you ask.

You could also use velcro cable ties to make it reusable and leave the camera mount mounted. It's honestly quite easy. Bonus points if you put a small screw into the velcro ties to keep the pvc and them from spinning.
 

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Think I'll try the helmet-cam first. I've watched a few of Zygrene's videos and this view seems great:
 
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Victorofhavoc

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Helmet mount can be good. The nice thing about the helmet mount is that it should follow the eyes, so if you're not "looking through the corner", the camera won't be either. It's a good view point, but I personally forget it's there and then smack it on the car getting out. That's a "me problem" but it's the reason I don't do them anymore.
 
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Dropped off the car at the dealer this morning to fix the fender they misaligned last time, the front bumper cowl still sitting incorrectly, and the hatch handles that just keep popping out.

I had them note the horrendous factory fill and the severe amount of contamination in the brake fluid. The service advisor guy was shocked at the photos I showed him. 🤷‍♂️

They gave me an aspec Integra loaner. So far this is the nicest loaner I've had from them, at least in terms of interior finish and how it drives. I'd say the aspec is 99% of the car the type s is and most people would never notice the difference until going WOT past 5k rpm. It has door/window/trim rattles just like my type s, though. Its rattles are on the rear right and front left door and just pressing the glass from the outside it's clear that it's excess play causing it.

Also, I fixed another loaner's key fob rattle. 🙃
 
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Victorofhavoc

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Well, car already came back from the dealer. Hatch handles appear to be significantly tighter now that the new ones are in. We'll see if they randomly fall out again, but it definitely seems like they should just be replaced any time the hatch trim is pulled, just like all the green clips.

The rear fender piece actually fits properly now and the panel gap matches appropriately.

The area where the fender meets the bumper cowl still isn't perfectly aligned, but that's a factory design issue with how the fender is rolled to match. At least now the vertical is aligned and the gap on both sides is mostly even. This was 100% the result of the black badge install where the cowl didn't go back on properly. The plastic trim underneath was bent way out of the way under the cowl and that led to sides unable to line up.

Everything up to this point was the best service visit I've had with them so far, and in large part the service advisor I've been dealing with is responsible for a lot of that.

I also asked them to scan the car and tell me if any residual codes had popped up due to the "brake service" light being on while at the track. This is where things started to devolve a bit. Apparently the shop foreman told the service advisor that my "brake warranty is voided by driving on track." This is VERY wrong, and I have asked the advisor to follow up with his service manager and the GM. I've already had two negative run ins with this shop foreman and this makes a third. If the service manager and gm don't have reassurance for me that this foreman won't cause other problems, I will be taking it to acura/Honda directly. I already have concerns that the fluid the car had from factory was so putrid and contaminated, which no one in the service department spotted and said anything about. It's very possible the copper sediment could have gotten into the abs pump, and if I have a shop foreman looking to throw people's warranties out for "driving on track" in a car honda/acura are marketing as track capable that could turn into a major issue down the road.

That being said, the service advisor found the sales manager, who was obviously going to be a yes man as a salesman, and they found a scan tool together to scan the car for me. The yellow "Brake System" light apparently came on for code c0072 which means "brake pads too hot"... Yep, can confirm they got to north of 700F on track, and in hot pit they were reading over 500F at the front.
 

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Well, car already came back from the dealer. Hatch handles appear to be significantly tighter now that the new ones are in. We'll see if they randomly fall out again, but it definitely seems like they should just be replaced any time the hatch trim is pulled, just like all the green clips.

The rear fender piece actually fits properly now and the panel gap matches appropriately.

The area where the fender meets the bumper cowl still isn't perfectly aligned, but that's a factory design issue with how the fender is rolled to match. At least now the vertical is aligned and the gap on both sides is mostly even. This was 100% the result of the black badge install where the cowl didn't go back on properly. The plastic trim underneath was bent way out of the way under the cowl and that led to sides unable to line up.

Everything up to this point was the best service visit I've had with them so far, and in large part the service advisor I've been dealing with is responsible for a lot of that.

I also asked them to scan the car and tell me if any residual codes had popped up due to the "brake service" light being on while at the track. This is where things started to devolve a bit. Apparently the shop foreman told the service advisor that my "brake warranty is voided by driving on track." This is VERY wrong, and I have asked the advisor to follow up with his service manager and the GM. I've already had two negative run ins with this shop foreman and this makes a third. If the service manager and gm don't have reassurance for me that this foreman won't cause other problems, I will be taking it to acura/Honda directly. I already have concerns that the fluid the car had from factory was so putrid and contaminated, which no one in the service department spotted and said anything about. It's very possible the copper sediment could have gotten into the abs pump, and if I have a shop foreman looking to throw people's warranties out for "driving on track" in a car honda/acura are marketing as track capable that could turn into a major issue down the road.

That being said, the service advisor found the sales manager, who was obviously going to be a yes man as a salesman, and they found a scan tool together to scan the car for me. The yellow "Brake System" light apparently came on for code c0072 which means "brake pads too hot"... Yep, can confirm they got to north of 700F on track, and in hot pit they were reading over 500F at the front.
This is that bullshit, right here. I ran into similar eye-opening remarks from my dealer yesterday.

First, I figured I'd just ask if they'd be willing to flush the brakes with different fluid, or even install an aftermarket exhaust. I could hear the confusion audibly on the other end of the phone, as the service advisor stuttered through a response that roughly equated to "we don't do that here". Then I just asked if they'd be willing to use oil I brought to do the oil change with. I got another non-answer but at least somewhat optimistic tone that they "might" be willing to do that but would have to double-check with the service manager.

This all points back to these Acura dealers just not having any experience whatsoever dealing with an enthusiast customer. They either don't know or want to shift blame at any reference to track usage or, apparently, aftermarket parts.

I think we all collectively should just start right now with setting an expectation early with the dealer that we intend to USE the car as Acura has marketed it, and they need to start wrapping their minds around purging the thought of track usage negating any warranty claim.

Also I think with this comes the acknowledgement that sharing any details about track usage with the service department at your local dealer will almost certainly result in enhanced scrutiny and quite likely a very negative experience overall.

Also- I think I've decided that instead of doubling down and buying a bunch of parts right now, I'm going to invest in a modest set of new tools. NOTHING about owning this car has reminded me so sharply that it's not a Porsche than the 3.5 minute conversation I had with an Acura service advisor.
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