








TELLING YOU MORE ABOUT HONDA THE MOST POWERFUL VECHICLES
Startling looks and a new handling party trick come with a hefty price-tag.
Startling looks and a new handling party trick come with a hefty price-tag.
Rating: 3.5/5
Price: From $41,990 plus on-road/dealer costs
Engine: 2.0-litre four-cylinder, 148kW/193Nm, six-speed manual, 9.3 L/100km, 219g/km CO2, FWD
What it has: Limited slip differential, tyre deflation warning system, parking sensors, single CD tuner with USB port and aux jack, dual-climate control, cruise control, a trip computer, bodykit, rear wing, alloy wheels, red footwell lighting, six airbags and stability control
For: Limpet-like handling; limited slip diff works; sounds racy and looks racy; spaceship-like styling yet surprisingly functional cabin.
Against: Price; hard ride; some outward visibility problems.
Not all cars are about functionality and efficiency. Some, like the Honda Civic Type R, emphasise the fun factor.
Launched here in 2007, the British-built hot hatch has just been updated with a Torsen limited slip differential (LSD) to help keep the front wheels gripping in corners.
What do you get?
The Type R is based on the Civic three-door hatchback and is built only at Honda's Swindon plant in Britain. To confuse matters, the popular Civic sedan comes from Thailand and shares only some mechanicals with the hatch.
Apart from the LSD, the R's new equipment list includes a tyre deflation warning system, parking sensors, an auxiliary jack, USB port and red footwell lighting. Dual-zone climate control, cruise control, a trip computer, a single-CD tuner, a bodykit including surfboard rear wing and alloy wheels are already standard. A full-sized spare tyre is not.
Despite so few changes, the list price has risen $2000 to $41,990.
How safe?
The reverse parking sensors are an important safety addition considering the limited visibility the Type R offers.
Other standard safety equipment includes six airbags, stability control and anti-lock brakes. The Civic hatch has collected the maximum five stars in Euro NCAP crash testing.
What's inside?
The Type R's spacecraft dash features red-lit and stacked instruments, the digital speedo sitting at the top, furthest away and sometimes hard to read. The analog tacho, with its 8000rpm redline, has the trip computer mounted in its centre. The dash wraps around the driver and the gearshift sits high in the upswept centre console, the alloy knob falling easily to hand.
There is substantial storage up-front including big door bins, double cupholders and a centre bin with lid.
The rear seat is spacious for two (and has only two seatbelts), has a sizeable storage area underneath the bench and can be split-folded flat to expand the already sizeable boot from 415 litres to 1282 litres.
The problem for rear seat passengers is claustrophobia, thanks to the tiny windows.
Under the bonnet
Pumping 148kW out of a 2.0-litre normally aspirated engine is a pretty good effort, even if it does arrive at an astronomical 7800rpm. However, torque is a relatively puny 193Nm at 5600rpm.
That means you have to rev the Type R like mad to get any sort of meaningful response. Around town and cruising, the engine is tractable enough to live with, although something like the Golf GTI shames it for usability.
The 9.3 litres per 100 kilometres combined fuel consumption average is closer to reality, so the hip pocket can have a good time as well.
The Type R's six-speed manual is enjoyable because of its short throw and high position.
But you still wish for a dual-clutch DSG-style 'box or auto around town.
On the road
You also wish for a more compliant ride around town. The Type R tends to bounce and crash from pothole to bump at slower speeds. It's not poorly set up but it has short suspension travel and low-profile rubber. The upside is a front-wheel-drive chassis that is a hoot to punt along a winding road.
The electric steering provides razor-sharp response and the handling offers limpet grip.
Does the Torsen LSD help out? The Type R showed admirable grip on soaked mountain hairpin corners, refusing to spin the wheels despite plenty of provocation.
Yep, great fun and safer too.
Verdict
The beauty of the Civic Type R is that it feels fast when it's actually not. The engine noise, the tight chassis, the lairy bodykit, the red instrumentation, the drilled alloy pedals — it's atmospheric rather than ballistic.
The LSD is an improvement but hardly one that justifies a $2000 price increase. It makes the Type R no less loveable, just that much less affordable.
The competitiors
VOLKSWAGEN GOLF GTI
From $40,490 plus on-road/dealer costs, Drive's three-time Car of the Year category winner is now awaiting the Mark VI version that promises to pick up where the Mark V left off. A great hot hatch with practicality and safety in spades. 4.5/5
MAZDA3 MPS
From $39,690 plus on-road/dealer costs. A more grown-up version of the devil of all hot hatches. Trick electronics seek to quell torque steer. Huge 190kW/380Nm turbo 2.3L engine. Full airbag/stability control kit. Yet to be tested.
ALFA ROMEO MITO SPORT
From $37,490 plus on-road/dealer costs. Spiritual successor to the Alfasud. Sport gets higher-output 1.4-litre turbo (114kW/230Nm). Switchable engine mapping a gimmick but the car is fun to drive. Seven airbags and stability control. 4/5
Honda Civic
With sales of Civic sedan in the first nine months of 09 running over 46 per cent behind the same time in 2008 Honda has introduced a limited-edition VTi with savings of over $4800.
The 40th anniversary five-speed manual Honda Civic sedan is at the special drive-away price of $24,990. Five-speed automatic adds $2300.
Metallic/pearlescent paint adds $475. Additional features include four alloy wheels, rear parking sensors, fog lights, fitted floor mats and a chrome exhaust finisher. Total value of the no-cost extras is $2806.
The no-cost extras come on top of the Civic VT i standard equipment list which includes electronic stability control, traction control, dual front and side airbags, anti-lock brakes, body-coloured bumpers, door handles and rear-view mirrors, air-conditioning, and cruise control.
Other features include a tilt and telescopic steering wheel, driver’s seat height adjustment, CD player with MP3 and WMA compatibility, disc brakes all round, ventilated on the front, a full size steel spare wheel, a driver’s foot rest, remote central locking, power windows and mirrors and a single fold/down rear seat back.
The Civic VTi sedan is built in Thailand and the lack of an equivalent hatchback limits its sales in the competitive small car segment. Once Honda Australia’s top-selling model it was outsold during September by the smaller Honda Jazz.
The current eighth-generation Honda Civic sedan was introduced in 2006 – the 1.8-litre 103kW manual VTi returns 6.9L/100km on the official combined city/country cycle, the automatic returns 7.2L/100km.
Honda’s has also introduced a limited-edition Honda Accord VTi sedan – the 2.4-litre 133kW four-cylinder 40th anniversary VTi is now at the special drive-away price of $34,990.
It also gains free reverse parking sensors, Bluetooth phone connectivity, tailored floor mats and fog lights valued at $1300. Total saving is $2691.
Equipment includes stability control, dual front and side airbags, anti-lock brakes, dual-zone climate control air-conditioning, 16-inch alloy wheels, cruise control, a six-disc CD stacker with MP3 and WMA compatibility, tilt adjustable steering wheel with audio controls, remote central locking and power windows and mirrors.
It’s been a long time since Honda sold a sports coupe. The late-great Prelude has now become a collector’s item and the once vaunted CRX remains popular amongst tuners and weekend racers, so the upcoming CR-Z is highly anticipated.
The CR-Z, of course, wouldn't be racing, unless challenging Toyota’s Prius in a hybrid shootout, but at least we’ll get to see a production prototype at next month’s Tokyo auto show, where the original concept hit the stage in 2007.
The production car will arrive in its domestic Japanese market early next year and other markets, including Canada, sometime later, with a 1.5-litre four-cylinder under its sleek hood plus Honda’s Integrated Motor Assist hybrid drivetrain. Making it sportier than the average hybrid will be a six-speed manual, while a CVT will be available for more relaxed commuters.
This “concept” won’t change much at all if any before the real thing hits the auto show stage, possibly at the upcoming Los Angeles auto show later this year, so if you like the shapely form of Honda’s sexy hybrid, you can make plans.
Honda to Show EV-N Retro Electric in Tokyo
Sometimes a retro design is so well executed that it simply must be built. BMW introduced the first modern-day Mini concept at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1997, and every British car enthusiast had to have one. The most recent retrospective subcompact is Fiat’s 500, which has taken Europe by storm and is due on our shores in jus
t a little over a year. So why doesn’t Japan get in on the mix?
By the looks of things at Honda, it might just. The new EV-N is an electrically-powered micro car with a retrospective twist. Modeled after the N600 from the late ‘60s and early ‘70s (hence the “N” in the name), predecessor to Honda’s now legendary Civic, the small-displacement four-cylinder gasoline engine expected isn’t part of the package. Rather, it gets down the road via a state-of-the-art electric motor and battery pack.
Details about the EV-N’s powertrain are scarce, but Hon
da did offer a few morsels of information about swappable seat fabrics, a solar roof, and a communications system integrated into in the black front fascia. What might be even more interesting is that the EV-N's passenger door holds a UX-3 super gyroscopic robot unicycle, if piloting a totally clean subcompact around isn’t enough.
The EV-N will debut next month at the Tokyo auto show in Honda’s “Hello! Zone,” a dedicated showcase of electric vehicles.