what company is JDM?

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Rocky, Jul 19, 2005.

  1. Rocky

    Rocky Guest

    I am considering replacing my 5 speed tranny 94 civic 1.5L lx and see many
    JDM used transmissions for sale, used, $200 or less, some are more. They
    claim to have appx 40k miles on some of them.

    is JDM a good brand ?
     
    Rocky, Jul 19, 2005
    #1
  2. Rocky

    Rocky Guest

    one more question - if I have an open diff now, is ok the repalce the tranny
    with a LSD unit?
    Do I have to be concerned with final drive ratio? I am after max gas
    mileage, but traction in the snow.
     
    Rocky, Jul 19, 2005
    #2
  3. Rocky

    TeGGeR® Guest


    JDM means "Japan Domestic Market".

    In other words, the transmissions are OEM items that were originally
    installed in vehicles sold to Japanese dealers in cars that complied with
    Japanese safety regs, emissions standards, and driving conditions.

    Some other DMs:
    EUDM - Europe Domestic Market
    USDM - US domestic market

    There are more, but memeory fails me.
     
    TeGGeR®, Jul 19, 2005
    #3
  4. Rocky

    TeGGeR® Guest


    Japan has annual safety and emissions checks that apply to cars over two
    years old (?), that are extremely severe, and result in many cars being
    pulled off the road at a very young age as the cost of passing the test
    gets too onerous.

    The point of the regulations is to force domestic consumers to keep
    purchasing new cars, ensuring that a domestic industry will exist. It
    amounts to welfare, making those Japanese poorer who /don't/ work in the
    auto industry, so that those who /do/ will get richer. It's a
    redistributive tax, basically, and it prevents the government from having
    to look bad by directly subsidizing the industry through general tax
    revenues.

    JDM items may have low mileage, but typically have spent many, many hours
    sitting idle in heavy traffic. That "40K engine" might have *twice* the
    running hours as an engine originally installed here.

    Also, Japanese engines until recently had (still have?) significant
    differences from USDM vehicles, such as carburetors, and mechanical fuel
    pumps. This means that if you buy a JDM engine, you may have trouble
    getting all your USDM cooling system, engine controls, and smog equipment
    hooked up, and may have to blank off such apertures as one for the
    mechanical fuel pump.

    JDM transmissions may have different gear ratios to suit local driving
    conditions, and may also have other differing features that may impede a
    straight bolt-on attempt

    Proceed with caution.
     
    TeGGeR®, Jul 19, 2005
    #4
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