RE: Honda Civic Type R (FN2) | Shed of the Week
RE: Honda Civic Type R (FN2) | Shed of the Week
Yesterday

Honda Civic Type R (FN2) | Shed of the Week

At last! We find a Civic Type R worthy of shed status...


What were you doing when the news came through of the death of Elvis Presley? By an extraordinary coincidence, Shed was munching through a massive burger while sitting on the toilet. Actually it’s not as big a coincidence as you might think because he was often obliged to smuggle grub into the lav on account of the inedibility of Mrs Shed’s cooking.

But where’s the connection between that and a story on a motoring website, we don’t hear you ask? Well, just that 22 August 2025 will mark the first appearance on Shed of the Week of a Honda Civic Type R. It might not be quite as earth-shattering an event as Elvis’s demise, but it would still be marked down as a red letter day in the SOTW history books, if there were any. 

This 2008 gen-three actually sneaked into the classifieds last week, causing great excitement, but we couldn’t run it because the MOT was due to expire the day before it would have gone live. PH interns were immediately rounded up and ordered to pray day and night for the issuance of a new ticket and lo! it happened. So here it is, the first Type R shed. 

The pencil-sharpener shape of the gen-eight Civic was a challenging starting point for the gen-three Type R, and sure enough the styling did prove controversial, not least because it was such a departure from the cleaner-lined and greatly loved ‘breadvan’ EP3. It’s hard to say if the far fussier FN2 shape has aged well since 2007 because it was so different to everything else back in the day and it’s still unique now. It set its own standard.

The gen-three CTR was about 60kg heavier than the EP3 and it took a bit of a step backwrds chassis-wise, the EP3’s multi-link back end being replaced by a more prosaic torsion bar that meant a pretty firm ride and reduced dartiness. Still, relative to most other comparable stuff on the road in 2007, the FN2 held up its end well enough. Honda sold a four-door FD2 Type R saloon in Japan but in the UK it was only available as a Swindon-produced FN2 3-door hatch. If the test results of the time are to be believed the saloon was quicker around a track than the hatch.

The power of the K20Z4 2.0-litre naturally aspirated four – still surely one of, if not the, greatest of its type – was only 1hp up on the EP3’s K20A2 unit, but the newer car’s 198hp peak power came in slightly lower down the rev range at 5,200rpm. The 0-62mph was done in 6.6 seconds, not a long amount of time even by modern standards. Torque wasn’t exactly stump-pulling at 142lb ft, but who cared about that when you could gaily whizz the motor to 8,000rpm, feverishly twiddle the six-speed box’s metal knob and laugh out loud at the growly VTEC step, signalled for the terminally unaware by a light on the dash. The £1,000 more expensive GT model (as here) came with cruise control but the chances of you feeling inclined to use that last feature were slim. Top whack was 146mph.

The engine was timed by chain rather than belt, which was a good thing. It quite liked a drink of oil, which could also be seen as a good thing if you didn’t rate the thought of stale oil staying in your engine forever. PCV valves could block up and there could be a whine from the trans when you let the clutch out, but that last one was more of a Type R characteristic than a problem. Second gear crunch and a less-than-cooperative worn-synchro third would be more concerning. The 215g/km emissions score gives it an annual tax liability of £415, if Shed’s chart is still valid.

This car is currently located in Scot Land. The ad copy for the car is tight-lipped. All they tell you is what the car is. However, the banner running across the bottom of the header pic does bring the welcome news that there’s a minimum warranty of one month and a minimum MOT of six. Or twelve, as it now stands. That’s hopeful because, without being rude or country-ist, rust can be a more ruthless car-killer up there. The offside front suspension mounting area was indeed declared to be excessively corroded last August (’24) although that was put right to get it through the test.

Last year’s inspector also mentioned corrosion to the offside rear shock. Replacement wasn’t considered necessary then, or even now with the most recent MOT, but anyone who is even vaguely interested in getting somewhere close to the genuine CTR experience will surely want to investigate their suspension freshening options. OEM replacements look expensive at between £330 and £500 a corner, depending on who wants to chance their arm the most. Shed’s default for every online shopping search is of course ‘lowest price first’, as a result of which he has seen aftermarket shocks with obscure but cool-sounding brand names for as little as £90 a pair. You probably wouldn’t want those to be honest, but if you’re prepared to put in a bit more research effort than Shed you should be able to find a decent solution for not much money. He actually found a rear shock for £24, but that came with its own rust and the postage was £128.

In typical Honda fashion, the red paint looks a little faded and the front end is unusually free of stone chips, but if you look past that and your vehicle checks all come out okay then this seems like a tidy car for the £1,999 being asked for it. The interior is used, as you’d expect from a 17-year-old car with 134,000 miles on it, but not obviously abused. There’s not a lot of space in the back of an FN2 but the boot is surprisingly large at 495 litres. 

Door mirror modules can play up, and that could get annoying because the cabin mirror won’t be showing you much apart from the rear spoiler. Water could get into the lights on that spoiler and also past the door top seals or behind the windscreen top. 

‘Type R shed’ sounds wrong somehow. Cars wearing this revered badge generally don’t reach shed status. They’re normally good, good, good and then gone, ravaged by recklessness or rust, and almost always before they reach our sub-£2k qualifying criterion. So let’s give this one a big cheer, hope it’s as solid as we hope, and go on the hunt for a sympathetic insurer.


See the full ad

Author
Discussion

el romeral

Original Poster:

1,667 posts

153 months

Yesterday (06:19)
quotequote all
That looks like a pretty hot shed. Hopefully the seats will buff up with a bit of effort.

FrankandLynn

29 posts

9 months

Yesterday (06:55)
quotequote all
Looking good in the pics, but previous excessive corrosion in one structural area is a flag redder than the paintwork... You feeling lucky, punk?

ED209

5,979 posts

260 months

Yesterday (07:03)
quotequote all
Had one of these from new back inn 2007, it replaced an ep3 type R. I had the second gear crunching issue from new. Only issue I had with the car but ultimately the ride became too much of a compromise from me so I moved on to a VW scirocco which turned out to be an unreliable heap of cack.

GianiCakes

479 posts

89 months

Yesterday (07:07)
quotequote all
There will be a few challenges no doubt but surely a car worth saving and investing in?

Twinair

891 posts

158 months

Yesterday (07:22)
quotequote all
Shortest ownership period of any car I’ve owned - kept it 2 months… then gone… found it slooooowwww…

Maybe as a shed though? Could be good…?!

V12GT

525 posts

106 months

Yesterday (07:23)
quotequote all
MR2 last week, Type R this week. Shed’s become all sporty!

Good fun for someone who’s willing to take the chance on the rust. Proper shedding.

yme402

543 posts

118 months

Yesterday (07:31)
quotequote all
Looks nice and original.
If someone buys this and resists the temptation for vape vents, silly-sized eBay alloys, or the ‘murdered out’ look, this is a good investment. Design is ageing well.

Smint

2,458 posts

51 months

Yesterday (07:32)
quotequote all
Daughter has a realy good one of these and in some ways prefers it to her turbo TypeR, the NA version allowing the joy of using all the rev range without reaching licence risking speeds too rapidly.

This one having presumably lived in Scotland will need some close inspection underneath for rust.

rossub

5,194 posts

206 months

Yesterday (07:34)
quotequote all
17 year old car from Scotland? Run away!

….. and I live here.

Had one when they were current and it looked good at the time, but I think they’ve aged really badly - especially the rear clear light set up.

Augustus Windsock

3,644 posts

171 months

Yesterday (07:42)
quotequote all
One month warranty, they really must believe in the cars they sell
As others said, combined with the previous rust… run, Forrest, run!
Having said that my wife had one just like this, and it was a cracking thing according to her, although she had been a gal that rode a Yamaha R6 so perhaps the rev-happy and low torque characteristics suited her..

POIDH

1,938 posts

81 months

Yesterday (07:42)
quotequote all
rossub said:
17 year old car from Scotland? Run away!

….. and I live here.

Had one when they were current and it looked good at the time, but I think they’ve aged really badly - especially the rear clear light set up.
As a Stirling resident who just bought a 19 year old Civic, dunnie fash yersen. Ours is very free of rust having been a one owner and 70k mile car since new.

This looks like a fun shed, and one I would try out for £2k.

CarlosSainz100

637 posts

136 months

Yesterday (07:47)
quotequote all
I had one from new having traded in my EP3. The suspension was seemingly made out of granite, in the end it became unbearable. I doubt 134k miles has made the ride any more pliable.

J4CKO

44,618 posts

216 months

Yesterday (07:48)
quotequote all
Bit of bright red VTEC action for two grand ? For only another 118k you could have the NSX from the other day.

Sporty Hondas have become very collectible, so this is worth looking at to see if it’s a solid enough proposition to make it worth keeping.

I know it’s the least desirable of the Civic Type Rs but it’s two grand, cheapest way into the club and I doubt there will be many around this cheap and they will be dragged up by the others.

These were fairly numerous at the time, subsequent CTRs were not quite as popular from what I can see, maybe as they got really quite expensive relative to the competitors, Honda didn’t enter the price war between BMW and VW when they were chucking M140is and Golf Rs out for 30 grand or on super good value lease deals, consequently there aren’t many round and are expensive.

Just don’t think there will be any cheap sporty Hondas around anymore, this is the best chance at owning one so cheap.



Edited by J4CKO on Friday 22 August 07:52

RacingBlue

1,450 posts

180 months

Yesterday (07:55)
quotequote all
CarlosSainz100 said:
I had one from new having traded in my EP3. The suspension was seemingly made out of granite, in the end it became unbearable. I doubt 134k miles has made the ride any more pliable.
Exact reason I sold mine.

dralig

20 posts

15 months

Yesterday (07:55)
quotequote all
Of course there’ll be rust - it’s not going to be showroom fresh at this price. Poke around underneath and if bits aren’t coming off in your hand, buy it.

griffsomething

328 posts

177 months

Yesterday (08:02)
quotequote all
Casually been looking at these and mk5 GTI/130i as a cheap but still somewhat interesting car that can also be occasionally used as a family car too. This is by far the cheapest I’ve seen one.

I know they lose the fancy rear suspension of the EP3 but with that engine I bet they are still a riot and have aged brilliantly. Also pretty robust mechanically.

Great shed.

Type R Tom

4,140 posts

165 months

Yesterday (08:21)
quotequote all
I had one from 6-month-old for 6 years. Never needed to spend a penny on it (other than consumables). Was a brilliant car, seats down could take two bikes or four adults for a long weekend.

Paid 14k for it, which was a lot but manageable. How the world has changed. I could not financially get anywhere near a 6-month-old one today.

Nickp82

3,624 posts

109 months

Yesterday (08:25)
quotequote all
rossub said:
17 year old car from Scotland? Run away!
.
Absolutely this. Would be a cool shed otherwise though

ballans

871 posts

121 months

Yesterday (08:27)
quotequote all
I’ll take last weeks MR2 (brilliant car and massively underrated, in my opinion) for the summer and this Honda for the winter please. Wow, we are spoiled in the uk for cheap fun.
Both would be tricky to live with as daily’s but for a bit of all year fun for £4k it’s difficult to argue with.

humphra

555 posts

108 months

Yesterday (08:31)
quotequote all
Much as I love this era of Civic, I reckon the 5 door (which will mean non-TypeR) is a better buy. Comfortable, easy to drive, fast enough (the 2.2 diesel has decent poke!) and amazingly roomy inside.... which is where the 5 door comes into it's own, as the rear seat arrangement (the Magic seats") is awesome! Flat floor, and seat bases that can be folded up, as well as the backs folded down. I liked them so much that I had 3 and still occasionally look at them in the ads. Also, this era of Civic isn't general strikes a nice balance between rooms inside, but not bloated external dimensions.