Prelude BB1
The Honda Prelude fourth-generation BB-chassis introduced 1992-1996 represented pinnacle of Honda's front-wheel-drive sport coupe engineering during Japan's economic bubble era, featuring revolutionary mechanical innovations including world's first production four-wheel steering system (4WS) and VTEC variable valve timing technology applied to H22A 2.2L inline-four producing 190 horsepower in Japanese-spec variants or 160 horsepower in North American Federal emissions-compliant versions. The BB1/BB4 chassis distinguished itself through sophisticated double-wishbone suspension all around, a rarity among front-drive platforms typically employing cost-saving MacPherson struts, enabling handling dynamics rivaling contemporary rear-drive sports coupes while maintaining practical daily-driver usability and Honda's legendary reliability reputation.
The Active Four-Wheel Steering system mechanically linked rear wheels steering up to 5.3 degrees in same direction as fronts during high-speed maneuvering or opposite direction during low-speed parking, reducing turning radius and improving stability during lane changes. While technologically impressive, 4WS added complexity, weight, and maintenance requirements that enthusiasts often bypassed through aftermarket modifications converting to conventional fixed rear geometry. Interior appointments reflected period Japanese luxury expectations with digital gauge clusters, power everything, and premium materials, though American-market examples received decontented specifications eliminating some JDM features due to cost pressures and regulatory compliance burdens.
Production spanned five years before fifth-generation SH-chassis successor arrived 1997 with refined styling and enhanced performance, though many enthusiasts consider BB-series optimal balance of classic Prelude character before later bloat and complexity. The H22A VTEC engine became legendary within Honda tuning community for robust internals tolerating significant forced-induction modifications, abundant aftermarket support, and straightforward maintenance despite VTEC complexity. Today BB-chassis Preludes occupy cult-classic status among Honda enthusiasts, valued for period-correct 1990s Japanese engineering excellence, front-drive platform enabling accessible performance driving without rear-drive snap-oversteer risks, and increasingly rare unmolested examples commanding premium prices reflecting nostalgia for era before emissions strangled naturally-aspirated performance and electronic nannies replaced mechanical driver involvement. Clean BB1/BB4 examples particularly sought-after by collectors appreciating last generation before 1997 redesign's styling changes and final evolution before Prelude nameplate discontinuation 2001 marked Honda's exit from sport coupe segment.