um the pedal order is reversed if I'm not mistaken and the stearing column is flipped and the gears are opposite right? 5th is where first is?I would think you could drive it just as easily as driving a lhd car. What difference would it make?
this is not so.um the pedal order is reversed if I'm not mistaken and the stearing column is flipped and the gears are opposite right? 5th is where first is?
lol...um the pedal order is reversed if I'm not mistaken and the stearing column is flipped and the gears are opposite right? 5th is where first is?
your thinking of the front end, a front clip is pretty much half of the car, from the dash to the bumper.Google!
Only differance are headlights and fender side markers, along with Honda badges.
Can be done less than 400$ and less than 2 hours of time
its definitely a load of work, but thats a price to pay to be mad jdm tyte hahaI assume he said it was dangerous because of you being on the opposite side? I don't know. I think it's kind of odd that people would want that anyways lol.
i doubt that uniform bead like the ones made using MIG welders are weaker than the oem factory spot welds.this is not so.
only the steering wheel changes side. everything else is EXACTLY the same. pedals don't change and neither does the H pattern. pedal order and gear location is a global standard that does not change. the only danger of RHD car in a LHD country is the reduced visitbility in certain traffic conditions.
i'm very much pro RHD but when it comes to conversions, i can appreciate the effort but a cut and shut conversion just cannot be that safe in a accident.
There's so much more to welding then to just slap two pieces of metal together. I don't really feel like explaining why the factory setup is probably safer then if you were to cut a RHD front clip off and slap it on a normal car..i doubt that uniform bead like the ones made using MIG welders are weaker than the oem factory spot welds.