195k Mile update:
So I recently had a conversation with my wife as to why things on the B6 seem to be breaking down at a rate unheard of to any "Honda" owners and I realized it all boils down to three reasons.
1. Car now has ~200K miles. That's like an 80 year old, and what kind of 80 year doesn't have failing hips or what not?
2. My previous owner was a redneck. (no offense to any of my redneck friends but he definitely didn't understand the meaning of "metric" or "tolerances"
3. Admittedly, because to me the B6 is a racekar
Decided to go ahead and do the 034 Street Density motor & transmission mount replacements to go along with my 034 snub mount. Because lately I don't know if it was the cold or what but everything has been vibrating more at idle and when I would let off the throttle through the accelerator pedal, and it also appeared to me that my engine wasn't perfectly lined up, I'd been having a half a cm too much of shift knob movement on and off throttle. And in general like everything has just seeming loose and sloppy. Like that girl you always thought would be the ultimate milf and then turns into a .. well I don't know, but you know what I mean.
So, in order not to waste any of my winter vaca from school, I jumped right into it on friday with the help of my little brother. (He really helped me out on this one cause I got hit with the flu friday as well from my little one who was sick all week)
I followed this DIY
Clicky. was spot on except for the tranny mount which wasn't unreasonable to figure out on my own.
The obviously necessary pic of the new and old side by side (This one was the good one, Driverside)
the passenger side was definitely the more time consuming of the two, and would have been the most time consuming of all the mounts if it wasn't for the 034 hardware mishap. I definetly had to remove the air intake and then the heat-shields to get access to that upper bolt. Every bolt came off with ease though with the help of PB- Blaster.
Heres another close up of the driverside mount. Slight tear but nothing unexpected.
Here's where things get interesting. Ripped clear through to the inside. And the mount was dry, no fluid left. It looked to me as though this passenger side mount was already replaced. It just didn't look like it came from the same batch as the driverside. And they didn't bother putting the rubber covering on it when they did it either
And the tranny mount also was in bad shape the mount was snapped in two places. How many times does it take a tranny smacking that mount to do that?
The other piece of trouble worth noting was that the 034 tranny mount was thicker, and most notably that of the supplied hardware they provided for a "5 speed manual" the two bolts for the mount to bolt onto the support were WAY TOO SHORT!!! My brother and I must've tried readjusting the setup for an hour, then removed the washers they provided and tried again for another 1.5 hours before pulling it out again, at which point I then thought to compare the two to see what could be so different between the old and new and voila! I should've known better than to blindly assume it might be perfect just because a company said this is for "my" setup.
You can see from the photo it was something like a 30mm bolt they supplied compared to the 35mm OEM, and thats not considering the roughly 4mm extra in thickness the 034 was over OEM to begin with.

so after another 3 hours wasted and a trip to the local hardware store I decided to go with a 40mm stainless steel to safely accommodate the extra length with the washers as well.
Since we needed to drain the coolant a little bit to move the reservoir for easy access we also went ahead and replaced my leaking thermostat j-plug which was cracked, and the thermostat housing o-ring opting to save money on doing the entire housing itself. Now I need to give that engine bay a nice bath
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