1992-1995 Civic CX or VX. Both only came with manual racks, and both feel fantastic when you pull the vaccum line off the brake booster and run manual brakes (the way every civic road racer runs, because power brakes are almost as awful as bad of an idea as power steering in super light cars.) However, I like a faster steering ratio, so I swapped in an Integra GSR manual steering rack into my Civic. All the Civic/Integra (of the same generation) steering racks are freely swapable, and freely convertable from power to manual simply by unbolting the power steering lines and throwing a little foam filter over the holes. The power steering fluid on a honda rack is not used to lubricate the rack itself in anyway (that is a seperate greased area where the gears mesh). For folks who feel they can't possibily be inconvienced with mild steering effort needed while at parking speeds
, the Honda S2000 lends itself as an electronic high-ratio steering rack option that is simple to retro-fit, and becoming more popular with various kitcar builders etc.
Hondas are kinda like legos. You can put the engine from a 2001 "Acura"(a make-believe brand) Integra GSR into a 1988 Honda CRX, or visa versa. You can swap brakes between almost all generations and models of Honda/Acura (some require minor adaptor brackets). As one of the countless examples, can put the cylinder head from a 1989 Japan only CRX SiR onto a 2001 Honda CR-V (and they don't even have the same bore size! 81mm vs 84! lol). You can put the guts from all sorts of transmissions from all sorts of differnt models of Honda together (as long as you stay in the same engine family, aka, K-series, B-series, D-series etc) from all different types of models to make the gear ratios you want. My 1992 Honda Civic VX uses the block from a 2005 Honda accord base model, with the cylinder head and transmission (with custom gear set) from a 2007 JDM Integra type-R (yes, they still make the Integra in Japan). Etc etc. Swapping around Honda engines/trannys/suspension is like playing with legos, whatever you want to fit together generally just fits together with minimal effort, maybe have to drill an extra hole once in a while. Makes them extremely easy platforms to tweak to suit the needs of any application for minimal cost/effort.