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Comments
My '99 EX 5spd consistently gets 25 mpg around town, and 29 mpg on the highway at 65-70 MPH using cruise control.
Try slowing down to 65 mph (or whatever the posted limit is) for a couple of days and check your fuel use. Slowing to 65 mph from 75 mph over an 85 mile distance will add less than 11 minutes to the trip.
JM2C
What do you think?
The next car we buy is hers, and our wish list is rather extensive: AWD, ABS, traction control, stability control, roomy cargo area, 200+hp, good mileage, above average reliability (or at least a long warranty), leather, and a moonroof.
I think the S6 Avant meets most of those criteria. Anyone know where I can get one for half price? ;-)
-juice
If Honda copied something Subaru or whoever brought out first and improved on it, I would buy the Honda if it fit my needs better.
Mileage is really a factor of speed with any barndoor class vehicle. If I cruise at 65, I can get 30mpg all day long. If I bump it up to 75, my mileage drops to 25. If fuel use is your biggest concern, slow down a bit.
Make a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door. You don't have to invent the darn thing.
Some figures (Cdn):
Honda MSRP: 27,900 (+ frt/pdi)
Invoice: 26,300
My price through fleet manager: 27,500
I'm only paying for the $20 tire fee, $100 a/c fee, and the taxes on top of that.
So, before taxes, my price on an LX was 27,650.
Hope that helps...
Actually, beat, one kid means zone (each covers a room). Two kids is man-to-man. 3 kids? Blown coverage!
We will officialy become SITCOMs (single income, two children oppressive mortgage).
Vans like the Odyssey and MPV are also on our list, but it's a tough sell for the image-conscious wife. She liked the Kia Sedona but turned it down strictly based on the brand name. I like the Ody but tranny trouble on early models along with a higher price (vs. MPV) has me hesitant.
We'll check out a CR-V, too, but I hope by then an SE is offered with 16" wheels, traction and stability control, maybe more power, etc.
-juice
I hadn't test-driven the vehicle before buying it, so that was a first in itself for me. No regrets though, as I'm very happy with it. My main alternative vehicle was a Forester, but I was hesitant as there's a redesign next year that'll kill an 02 model's resale.
I love the sound of the doors. A nice solid Euro-like thud when closing.
I got keyless remote, front mudguards, and a cargo cover all at cost.
I do wish the rear tire cover were a little snazzier, though. The hard cover is a little over the top as far as looks go, so I'll be looking for another option...
May add the Bose subwoofer and tweater kit in the next month or so.
Oh yeah,.... wooohoooo!!!!
Yeah, official Cdn release date was Dec. 1st. That came and went as the seatbelt fix kits were not at dealers as of last Saturday. ETA was for Tuesday, but the kits hadn't shown up by mid-afternoon yesterday. My dealer was optimistic for today, and the kits arrived at noon here in Vancouver. So, he wasn't out to lunch. I, being a bus-taking, impatient customer, was just vocal in my complaining
I guess you guys on the left coast got your Vs early enough to be affected by the recall at the dealer.
I remember reading some time ago in the Washington Post how Subaru was advancing its niche strategy in a way that shows their spunk. I found the WP article at its site, but you have to pay to retrieve it. Doing another search, I found it here:
http://www.warroom.com/gaysubaru.htm
And no, I am not being funny. A huge industry shakeout is expected during the next several years/decade. Some see only the strongest "independents" like Honda and BMW surviving w/o being amalgamated into other, larger organizations. Some may deserve to go the way of the dinosaur, but for others, that would be a shame.
Subaru and its fans show they may beat those odds (ok, so GM did take a piece). When I see what happened to another innovative - among the most innovative - automaker, it makes me cringe at the prospect of further industry consolidation.
I remember Citroen from my first summer in France. That was when they had the SM and just introduced a marvelous replacement for the DS, the CX, I believe. They still made the Deux Cheveaux and its variants, like the Ami. They were alternatively delightful and bizarre. And they were good. Really good.
Two nights ago on Speedvision I saw an example of the most recent Citroen and it was a crying shame. The consolidation with Peugeot had ruined all the Citroen character. It could have been the latest Renault Appliance. It may have been good too but it looked like a rental car, not some outrageous spaceship you would have expected from the makers of the DS.
All car buyers profit by Subaru's independent existence so I hope for their continued success.
Hey, 2 kids means the wider back seat in the CR-V would be a plus, given the nanny squeezes in the middle some times. I just wish Honda would offer more content (heated seats, traction control, stability control, leather, etc).
dudka: A4 is tiny. In that size class, I'd pick the WRX in a heartbeat. Wife said it's too small (I was majorly bummed).
Passat 4Motion is nice, as is the Outback VDC, but the wife doesn't really want a wagon (I do). She doesn't think the Forester, CR-V, RAV4, Highlander look like wagons, so they're OK. We definitely want something car-based, not a truck. Highlander is closest to offering all the features we want, but I want to see the new Forester and maybe wait until prices drop a bit.
After Martina became spokesperson for the Forester, people joked that it became the car for lesbians. I can assure you than I am not a lesbian. Sorry to dissappoint! ;-)
GM wanted Subaru for the Chevy Borrego, and for the AWD technology. Subaru will supposedly only get hybrid electric technology from GM. I have my doubts, though. The Traviq sold in Japan is a rebadged Opel, and doesn't even offer AWD. The 2005 big SUW may go on the GM Epsilon platform, which IMO means it won't be a real Subaru - a shame because I could use a roomy vehicle like that.
But partnerships are inevitable. Honda will use Isuzu diesels in Europe, and has rebadged those here. It's just a reality in the current market - you have to share costs to survive.
-juice
Terry
The Forester will remain our work horse, but her 626 is getting long in the tooth and will soon be due for replacement.
-juice
Without the "automatic" and the free TV.
As for Isuzu, I read that Honda was more or less told by the Japanese government that it had to help Isuzu stay afloat by selling the Passport and the Acura whatever it was. They were never up to Honda standards and people knew it.
As for the diesels, Europeans demand them in ever greater numbers. I tried to buy a Jetta TDI two years ago (when gas was lower than today) but couldn't get delivery because they limit imports.
As for costs, Honda sets the industry standard for efficiency - their costs of tooling up are about half what the best of the rest can manage:
http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2001-12-05-honda.htm
hcmmike - Hmmm... I didn't notice with either of my test drives. I've never heard of a significant problem with the 96-01 models (some have reported 2-3mph variance). Maybe your Mazda was off?
Driving my new CRV in the Vancouver rain this morning, I noticed something odd. I could feel the wiper blade movement in the brake pedal - meaning the click of the wiper motor starting, and the click at the end of each stroke.
Weird. Is is possible for the fit of components to be too tight???
Nitpick, nitpick, nitpick...
I believe this was introduced with Honda's new slogan, "Powered by Dreams". But in this case, the engineer had a foot fetish.
Heh
You might want to try going (indicated) 80 mph in your CRV in a 55-60 mph zone when a cop is around. He will give you the closest actual speed reading unless ofcourse the speedometer is that far off.
Alternatively, note odometer reading to start with, drive for 15 minutes at 60 mph, and see if the odometer has 15 miles added to it or not, the best way to determine accuracy.
Grab a buddy and two FRS radios (cheaper and more common than GPS). Follow each other and use the radio to read out speeds. If one is off, I'd get it recalibrated.
I'm sure a lot of people are looking forward to the Honda version of the MDX, but that's just it. There will be a wait, full MSRP prices, dealer arrogance, who knows. I'll give it a shot, but an Ody with leather is $28,690 (about our limit), so an SUV would add to that. And a 3/36 warranty is short for version 1.0, so it's risky. The first year Ody had a weak tranny and problematic door latches. We'll see.
Speaking of DVD players, my notebook is 12.5" wide, will that fit between the front seats of the CR-V (or the Odyssey for that matter)?
-juice
marky777- I'm SURE everybody around me was speeding - that's a given. Still, I didn't think 55 felt like 55 and 80 certainly didn't feel like 80.
robertsmx- thanks for the advice- actually I used to prosecute speeders and now that I'm in private practice, I sometimes have to take care of tickets for clients - I don't want to have to do that for myself, however:)
This is something to consider if your speedometer tests out OK, and you're still wondering where the speed went.
The 2002 Odyssey seems to be sharing its (5-speed automatic) transmission with the MDX. But I have not heard about any problem with Odyssey's original transmission, atleast not from the couple of guys in my team that have one.
Does Honda give you loaner cars if your car is in service?
http://www.canadiandriver.com/testdrives/02cr-v.htm
Generally positive and shows acceleration times better or on par with the V6 competition.
The catch is that the 5 speed is actually geared lower than the auto, i.e., 5th gear spins the motor more than top gear in the auto (hence the lower gas mileage in the manual). Fortunately the motor is so smooth and quiet I find running at 4-5K rpm not a problem.
I am glad I am getting the manual (my wife actually demanded it). It is much more fun to drive and given how scarce they are they should be valuable (to the right person) down the road.
A couple points:
1. They neglect to mention the 0-100km/h time for the V-6 Escape. The V-6 Escape has tested 0-60mph in the low 8's so it is noticeably quicker than the CR-V, albeit at the cost of fuel mileage.
2. The CR-V's RT4WD is classified as being merely "adequate" and inferior to the RAV-4 and Subaru AWD systems. Many consumers fail to understand this differentiation and tend to treat all 4WD systems as "equals". The degree too which this matters depends on the amount and type of driving done on rain/snow/ice covered roads.
If Nissan ever brings the X-Trail over to North America, Honda, Ford, Mazda, Subaru, Saturn, Toyota, Suzuki, Jeep, etc will definitely have something to worry about.
My wife also says no to vans and station wagons, yet somehow loves the look of SUV's. Interestingly, she claims one of the reasons she wants a SUV is to get higher seats for placing the kids in the car without bending and stretching. I guess it is getting harder for her as she gets older too.