Update!
The rebuilt alternator was sourced from a local alternator/starter shop. Never knew we had one. He had some pretty serious industrial stuff sitting around, my little tiny alternator was comical. Anyhow, it's in along with a timing belt and water pump. The size of the water pump is hilarious, you could shoplift one in a pocket. I need to take a picture of it beside my LS3 pump. The pulley on the LS3 pump is bigger than the entire Honda pump assembly. Anyhow, preventative maintenance and repair done, car is happy.
Well, except for something that's been bugging me for a while. The rear suspension bottoms more than I think it should. I was chalking it up to simply a characteristic of the car, but I noticed today that it was still squatting in the rear a bit. Remember, when I first bought the car, I dropped the nose a touch to level it out. I pulled out the manual and checked the rear ride height. It's about 1/2" lower than the minimum.
So I did something that's never been done before. I raised the ride height on a Honda.
The first plan was to use all my random coilover parts and make myself some coilovers with a stiffer spring rate while I was at it. Well, the 10" 225 springs I wanted were at work. And I didn't have a good way to adapt the 2.5" springs to the body. So we'll try that some other time.
Plan B was to add a spacer under the perch on the current setup. I grabbed a chunk of 1/2" UHMW plastic (leftover from making skid plates for the rally car) and a few hole saws. Buzz buzz buzz and voila. A spacer along with a centering ring.
Don't mind the crappy photos. Or the fact that I lost interest in cleaning up the edges on the belt sander after the first piece. I thought about swapping out the bumpstops while I was at it, but decided to just go with this to start. I did decide to assemble the bumpstop and Koni spacer correctly, unlike the previous fellow who had been inside the rear suspension.
The Koni shocks also turned out to be adjustable. I saw the color and assumed STR.T, but they predate that line. I also found out that they were adjusted very differently, with one at full soft and the other close to full stiff. So I carefully chose a random setting and matched them.
A short test drive is promising. I'll find out more tomorrow when I brave my torture test stretch of pavement on the way to work, but I didn't manage to bottom near my house. I may end up lifting the nose back up again, but the higher tail will give me a bit more oversteer thanks to the increased rear weight transfer.
Progress!
Mileage update: last tank was 36 mpg.