Well, I skipped trying to get the valve cover from Pittsburgh for now as I wanted to get the car back together and running again. Cleaned up the inside of the valve cover a bit - I didn't like the streaks that looked like crud that had been thrown up from the cam lobes. According to my workshop manual, these cars have 7500-15000 mile oil change intervals and it looks a bit like someone made good use of them. As per the recommendation from the LHTPerformance guys on YouTube, I did replace all the gaskets with new ones. The ones that were on the valve cover were rock hard and it actually took some doing getting the grommets around the spark plug wells out. The new rubber parts are a lot more pliable. Well, there's a surprise. Valve cover ready to go back on the car:
You can kinda see similar marks on the cam lobes themselves. For now I'll stick to "they all look like that":
Before I put the valve cover on, I also changed out the spark plugs. The ones in the car were clearly the original plugs. They're supposedly good for 105k miles, but they looked rather worse for wear. I had also learned that apparently fake NGK Platinum plugs are a thing now, but at least based on some of the 'tube videos I watched on this topic, the new set I got looked like they are genuine.
I buttoned up the valve cover - we'll gloss over the part where I had to take it off a couple of times because I forgot to move the wiring harness for the injectors back underneath the breather hoses and also forgot to hook up the breather hoses. Good news, I'm now pretty good at taking the valve cover back off again.
After the valve cover, it was time to have a closer look at the connectors for the coils. I had broken a couple of locking tabs when taking the COPs out, and I know they are a notorious failure point as they get cooked on the valve cover on the F series and K series engines. I had ordered a repair kit already - Honda of course wants to sell you the whole engine wiring loom, but Ballade Sports and several other vendors have replacement connectors. The ones on mine clearly were at the stick-a-fork-in-them stage as the main (black) body of the connectors just broke apart internally on all four when I tried to get the connectors out. At least that made the job a lot easier.
All buttoned up and everything hooked up again, I decided I might as well clean up the MAP sensor, which sits in a little "cup" on the intake manifold and the hole from the intake to the cup tends to clog up over time. While I was waiting for the MAF sensor cleaner to thoroughly dry, I decided to replace the pollen filter on the car as a "while I'm there" maintenance item. Well, I don't have pink insulation in my shop building so I suspect the Rodent Mahal happened in the PO's garage:
There's a joke about what happens when you buy a car too close to the Mouse Kingdom in FL, but I can't quite put my finger to it...
I guess they didn't carry the Hantavirus, because if the nest was there when I drove the car back from Fla, I was breathing the extra filtered air for a good 1500 miles. Anyway, the filter looked like it benefited from replacing anyway:
With the filter replaced, the MAP sensor back in place and hooked up, the car felt like it started easier and happily idled. It was getting a bit late so I postponed a quick joy ride until tomorrow morning.
Unfortunately one other thing came back with a vengeance, and that is a rattle at idle rpm and when the idle dips. I did managed to finally confirm that it wasn't the bumper grill, but the undertray. I have to figure out how to address it because it's one of those rattles that drive me mad over time.
It's booked in for an alignment on Monday, let's hope that it'll improve the handling as I wasn't 100% sold. For the first HPDE/Time Trials I'm going to leave it bone stock other than maybe fresh tires on a different set of wheels and performance brake pads. I know I will need a seat, and very likely suspension, but I'm trying to be halfway intelligent about it this time and not spend 4-5k on seat and suspension before taking the car to the track for the first time.