Wednesday, March 21, 2012

2012 Honda Pilot Touring



Test Drive: 2012 Honda Pilot Touring

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Last week, I tested a 2012 Honda Pilot Touring in and around Washington, D.C. I didn’t get a chance to utilize all of its 87 cubic feet of cargo space since the biggest thing I hauled was a new iMac, but I still managed to get a good picture of the Pilot as a family vehicle.
The first thing I noticed was that anyone who plans to use all three rows of seats while making a big grocery store run would be better off with a minivan. I had been procrastinating a trip to the grocery store and Target for far too long, and by the time I made it out of both stores, I was using most of the floor space behind the second row for all of my new food and odds and ends. Assuming that a month’s worth of food, cleaning supplies and some new clothes for a single city dweller is about equivalent to a week’s worth of groceries for a bigger family, there wouldn’t have been enough space for the family’s groceries with all three rows of seats in use.
Other than that, I can see what makes the Honda Pilot so ubiquitous in the suburbs. It had tons of convenient cubbies, and it smoothed out even the roughest roads. While this meant it wallowed over back roads to the point of seasickness, it’s hard to imagine that Pilot owners will be frequently attacking turns on their way to work or play dates.
In my opinion, if you need a big SUV with towing and hauling capability and plenty of cargo space, a better choice would be a Chevrolet Tahoe, since it can tow more weight and has a bigger cargo hold. And if you’re looking for a three-row family hauler, a Honda Odyssey minivan handles far better and has loads more cargo space. But for buyers who don’t want minivan styling but like the idea of having plenty of seats, space and all-weather capability, the Honda Pilot is a good compromise.

2012 Honda Pilot


Honda's popular eight-seater gets mostly minor changes.

Honda, like airline companies, likes its Pilots to be sober, and there’s nothing to raise the pulse in the 2012 Pilot, which the company has subtly refreshed. But for the vast number of Americans—and many of our own staffers—who appreciate the current Pilot and the innocuous, reliable, and easy way it transports up to eight people and their stuff, this is no bad thing.
For 2012 the Pilot is available in the same four trim levels as last year—LX, EX, EX-L, and Touring—and buyers can spec any Pilot with two- or four-wheel drive. On all Pilots, the seemingly Battlestar Galactica–inspired fascia seen on the current model is mostly gone, replaced with a rather plain face for 2012. A three-slat grille has been installed, while the lower edge and fog lights are redesigned. LXs still wear 17-inch steel wheels, but EX models and up gain new 18-inch aluminum wheels (an increase of 1 inch over last year’s). A power rear hatch is now standard on the EX-L, in addition to the Touring.
Like the changes to its face, the alterations to the Pilot’s interior aren’t immediately apparent and require a Pilot expert to spot. The buttons on the center stack were rearranged for what the company says is a more user-friendly layout, the trim ringing the gauges was redesigned, and the instrument cluster lighting is now white instead of ice blue. EX-L models without the optional navigation system get a new eight-inch color display above the center stack. Those with nav now have a sharper screen and memory expanded to 60 gigs. Honda’s HandsFreeLink Bluetooth and audio streaming is now standard on EX, EX-L, and Touring Pilots—previously the feature was available only when paired with navigation on EX-L and Touring models.
It’s the changes we can’t see that comprise the significant upgrades to the three-row crossover for 2012. Honda added sound insulation to all Pilots, and the acoustic windshield glass exclusive to last year’s EX-L and Touring models has spread throughout the lineup. A 2011 Pilot placed third in a recent three-way comparison test and excessive road and wind noise were among our biggest complaints with it, so any efforts to quiet the racket are welcome. The Pilot is powered by the same 250-hp, 3.5-liter V-6 as last year, but fuel economy is up, courtesy of friction-reducing engine tweaks. In a world where eight-speed slushboxes are becoming more commonplace, we expected Honda to upgrade from its five-cog unit, but the quint soldiers on. Regardless, the 2012 Pilot’s efficiency improvements vault it to the top of the eight-passenger crossover heap. Front-drive models now get 25 mpg on the highway and 18 mpg in the city—up 1 and 2 mpg over last year’s car. Four-wheel-drive Pilots see the same mileage increases, now earning a rating of 17/24 mpg.
Prices for the 2012 Pilot are up marginally, with the EX-L model’s $300 increase being the largest. The front-drive Pilot LX starts at $29,280, followed by the $32,130 EX; $35,380 EX-L; and $40,030 Touring. Adding four-wheel drive to any model will set you back $1600. Honda says this refreshed model will begin arriving at dealers in September.
View Photo Gallery

Friday, March 16, 2012

2011 Honda Accord SE Sedan


2011 Honda Accord SE Sedan

Same great Accord, now with a Special Edition package and improved fuel economy.

What Is It?
Car. If aliens landed tomorrow and asked for our finest example of mainstream transportation, you’d probably point them toward one of these babies. You might also tell them that the Accord has snatched Car and Drivers 10Best trophy a whopping 24 times, although they might look at you funny (we publish no interstellar editions). The 2011 model year brings a mid-cycle refresh.
What’s New?
This SE model, for one thing. It’s the fifth and middle trim level for the Accord sedan, essentially an LX-P that adds heated leather seats, a leather-wrapped steering wheel, power lumbar on the driver’s seat, and SE (Special Edition) badging. It is available only with the 177-hp version of Honda’s 2.4-liter iVTEC four-cylinder engine, mated to either a five-speed manual or automatic, and it will cost less than $24,000 when it goes on sale later this month. So this is clearly Honda’s Hyundai Sonatafighter, albeit with 21 fewer ponies.
The second big change is an across-the-board fuel-economy bump for all Accord models—sedan, coupe, inline-four, V-6—with no diminution in power. The auto-equipped four-cylinder sedans are the coffee achievers here, jumping 2 mpg in the city (to 23), 3 mpg on the highway (34), and 2 mpg combined, for a best-in-class blended rating of 27 mpg. In pursuit of these increments, Honda tweaked the front grille and bumper for better aero, lowered oil-ring tension, refined spark timing, and even dumped in lower-viscosity engine oil. But the change with the greatest mpg payoff is a taller fifth gear in all Accords. Careful observers and slushbox defenders will note that auto-trans Accords get better fuel economy than manual-equipped ones. That’s because Honda rightly amps up the gearing on its manual models for performance.
How Does It Drive?
No different from before, which is to say planted, communicative, and with a deftness belying its rather ample dimensions. The top-gear alteration is barely noticeable, at least with the automatic we drove, but we do wish this SE model came with the 190-hp version of the inline-four. Inside, the profusion of gray radio and climate buttons gets a bit easier to decipher, as the most-used HVAC buttons move to the left side of the center stack. Still takes a while to get used to, though. The car itself, however, remains a first-rate ambassador in the segment. View Photo Gallery

Benchmark minivan recognized for its family-friendly features in magazine's first-ever "Genius" issue




TORRANCE, Calif. February 09, 2012


Parenting magazine has recognized the Honda Odyssey Touring Elite as one of the year's "Smartest Family Cars" in its February 2012 issue, on stands now. The list is featured in Parenting's first-ever "Genius" issue, dedicated to helping parents unlock their child's own unique genius potential. Equipped with the latest technology to help ease the load of managing the modern family, the Odyssey allows parents and kids to take advantage of some of the smartest automotive features on the market.
"The Odyssey was conceived as the ultimate family vehicle, and the Odyssey Touring Elite takes that concept to an unprecedented new level," said Michael Accavitti, vice president of marketing operations, American Honda Motor Co., Inc. "Being listed among the 'Smartest Family Cars' pays tribute to the Honda R&D team in Ohio and manufacturing team in Alabama responsible for designing and building the best minivan on the road."
"By recognizing today's smartest cars, Parenting hopes to make it easy for families to use technology on the road, whether it's for a quick run to the store or for an extended road trip vacation," said Ana Connery, Editorial Director for The Parenting Group. "Our editors' top picks have thought of everything so that parents don't have to."
Parenting editors noted that the Odyssey was chosen for this honour based on its many available family-friendly features, such as its Blind Spot Information System that indicates when radar sensors detect another vehicle that may be positioned in the driver's blind spot, and the Honda DVD Rear Entertainment System (RES) with a 16.2-inch Ultrawide display capable of simultaneously screening two different sources of video programming side-by-side.
Connect with Honda: 
Honda Media Newsroom (for journalists): www.hondanews.com
Honda Odyssey (for consumers): http://www.automobiles.honda.com/odyssey/
Honda on YouTube: www.youtube.com/honda
Honda on Flickr: www.flickr.com/hondanews
Honda on Twitter: www.twitter.com/honda
Honda on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hondaodyssey

Honda Civic Natural Gas, Insight, Civic Hybrid and CR-Z earn top green scores





TORRANCE, Calif. February 07, 2012


A total of seven Honda brand vehicles earned recognition from the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE), including four Honda vehicles named the "greenest vehicles of 2012." In the annual Online “ranking of environmentally responsible vehicles, the near-zero emissions natural gas-powered Civic Natural Gas five-passenger sedan tied for second place, with the Insight, Civic Hybrid and CR-Z also included on the list of ACEEE's 12 most environmentally responsible vehicles available to the public.
The Insight hybrid, the compact Fit and the Odyssey minivan were also named as "greener choices of 2012" within their respective classes. This is the 14th straight year that multiple Honda vehicles have been named in the top 12.  
"Honda is honoured to have our natural gas vehicle and our hybrid and gasoline-powered vehicles among ACEEE's 'greenest' and 'greener' choices," said Steven Center, vice president of the Environmental Business Development Office at American Honda.  "The ACEEE's annual recognition of Honda's fuel-efficient vehicles further validates our commitment to create a cleaner, more energy-efficient and sustainable transportation future."
The ACEEE ranking system uses a singular measure that incorporates fuel economy and health-related pollution impacts plus global warming and upstream emissions. All vehicles are analyzed and given a "Green Score" which is used to rank a vehicle's total environmental performance, including a list of the 12 "greenest" and 12 "meanest" vehicles along with a ranking of greenest vehicles by segment.
Named as one of the list's 'greenest vehicles,' the Civic Natural Gas is the only OEM-built, dedicated CNG passenger car assembled in the U.S. and the only vehicle certified by the EPA to meet both Federal Tier 2 Bin 2 and Inherently Low Emission Vehicle (ILEV) zero evaporative emission certification standards. Honda recently announced the expansion of Civic Natural Gas retail sales to 197 dealers in 36 states. The increased availability of the Civic Natural Gas helps bring inherently clean-burning natural gas technology to an even broader audience while also supporting diversity in transportation energy resources. Featuring new styling, enhanced feature content and increased fuel economy, the redesigned 2012 Civic Natural Gas can now be equipped with the Honda Satellite-Linked Navigation System featuring an exclusive database of publicly accessible Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) refuelling stations across the United States.
Honda's Environmental Leadership
Honda has a long history of environmental innovation, including the retail introduction of America's first hybrid (1999 Honda Insight), delivery of the first fuel-cell electric vehicle in the U.S. (2002 Honda FCX) and the first gasoline-powered vehicles in the hands of consumers to meet stricter emissions standards, including: the 1996 Honda Civic, the first gasoline Low Emissions Vehicle (LEV); the 1998 Honda Accord, the first gasoline Ultra-Low Emissions Vehicle (ULEV); the 2000 Honda Accord, the first gasoline Super Ultra-Low Emissions Vehicle (SULEV); and the 2001 Civic Natural Gas, the first vehicle to quality as an Advanced Technology Partial-Zero Emissions Vehicle (AT-PZEV). The Honda Fit EV and the Honda Accord Plug-In Hybrid, both coming soon, will be the next critical steps in Honda's portfolio approach to alternative fuelled vehicles.
For more information or downloadable high-resolution images of Honda award winners and other Honda vehicles, please visitwww.hondanews.com. Consumer information is available at www.honda.com. For more information on ACEEE, visithttp://www.greenercars.org.
Connect with Honda: 
Honda Media Newsroom (for journalists): www.hondanews.com
Honda (for consumers): automobiles.honda.com
Honda on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Honda
Honda on YouTube: www.youtube.com/honda
Honda on Flickr: www.flickr.com/hondanews
Honda on Twitter: www.twitter.com/honda
Honda on Google+

Monday, March 12, 2012

Honda Civic Named to About.com's Best New Cars of 2012 List




TORRANCE, Calif. January 11, 2012


American Honda Motor Co., Inc., announced today that the 2012 Honda Civic has been named as one of About.com Cars' Best New Cars of 2012.
"Ranging from a gas-sipping hybrid to a kick-in-the-pants Si, the Civic lineup provides a variety of fun, fuel-efficient options to satisfy a wide range of customers," said Michael Accavitti, vice president of marketing operations, American Honda Motor Co., Inc. "We are thrilled to receive this award that recognizes the many advantages of the Civic."
In describing the award-winning Civic, About.com's Aaron Gold called the 2012 Civic hands-down the most comprehensive compact car on the market. "You can get a sedan or a coupe; a high-fuel-efficiency version; a high-performance version; a leather-lined version; a hybrid version; even an alternative-fuel version that runs on clean natural gas," Gold said. "And whichever Civic you choose, you're virtually guaranteed years of trouble-free motoring."
The award from About.com adds to the 2012 Honda Civic's growing list of accolades that include being named Green Car of the Year (Civic Natural Gas), capturing Best Resale Value for a Compact Car by Kelley Blue Book's kbb.com, and earning a 2011 IIHS Top Safety Pick. About.com is one of the largest providers of original content on the web, with over 60 million unique visitors per month in the United States.
Connect with Honda: 
Honda Media Newsroom (for journalists): www.hondanews.com
Honda (for consumers): www.automobiles.honda.com
Honda on Facebook: www.facebook.com/honda
Honda on YouTube: www.youtube.com/honda
Honda on Flickr: www.flickr.com/hondanews
Honda on Twitter: www.twitter.com/honda