i am not racing where its harmful that is exciting but ultimalty dangerous i however do want to race on a track we have here in sc for street racing cars its very fun an safe no ppl n harms way and i like the cars themselves more than anything i would like to learn more about building engines and what not but it seems so advanced and quick question what psi and how does it work noob rememba lol
Start reading!
Online, the library, the book store. I buy shelves to keep all my car books and manuals on.
You can even find good books in used stores, like antique stores.
Today I found a Fix Your Ford book for older models from 1966 for $14.50, a 1979 Civic CVCC owners's manual for $10 and an 1947-1954 Chevy Truck Factory Assembly manual for $15 all in a local antique store. Pretty cheap for what it is, but I'll be able to learn a little about some of the older systems that I'm not so familiar with. Plus the Chevy book is a gift for a friend who loves old Chevrolet pickups.
Books and good posts online can really help you learn. I suggest you pick up a shop manual from Honda too. It goes over everything in your car that you'd ever want to disassemble or fix. It's not like the cheap Haynes and Chiltons manuals that only touch on a little bit. The paper manuals are better than the PDF versions you can find online imo because you can bring the book with you. A laptop in a garage can be an accident waiting to happen.
You never mentioned your age. Do you have a job? Your engine choice is going to rely heavily on your spending limit.