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Honda Cars : Car & Driver's Winter Driving Guide | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 12:34 PM

Here's something that some of us (more than some of us now, I just heard that it snowed in Las Vegas the other week!) could use....
Simple tips to help you survive the snow and ice.
BY STEVEN COLE SMITH December 2008

News flash: Global warming doesn’t necessarily mean we’ll all be living in the tropics within five years. The headline in the Houston Chronicle last week read, “Surprise Snow Flurries Warm Houston Hearts.” Las Vegas was just covered in nearly four inches of the white stuff, and our offices in Ann Arbor have effectively become an igloo as of this writing, courtesy of a winter storm.

Now, we can’t definitively pin the blame for every freak flurry on global warming, but we agree that somebody ought to do something about cars and flatulent cows and hairspray and all the other things that may or may not be causing climate change. The point is this: Get used to snow. Are you and your car fully prepared? Here are a few things to think about.

How to Drive

Winter driving isn’t as hard as people think it is. It just takes a little more concentration and awareness. Drive like you’re tiptoeing on ice, because you might be. Use small, slow motions. Ease on the brakes, drive like there’s an egg under the accelerator, and if you start to skid, steer in the direction you want to go and keep steady, light pressure on the gas. If you’re skidding sideways, the brake is not the pedal to press. It will just make things worse. When you brake in a straight line and the pedal starts pulsing or chattering, don’t release pressure. Keep your foot in it. That noise means the anti-lock brakes are working.

Most important, slow down. Don’t leave the house unless necessary (which is splendid advice no matter what the weather’s like—traffic congestion thanks you). Keep your head on a swivel, drive defensively, and stay away from drugs and trans fats.

Your Battery

We’ve consulted multiple electrical engineers, and most say the same thing: If you have a weak, failing battery, it will not get better if you ignore it. The battery is one of our favorite parts of a car, and one that we really don’t mind spending money on, because the alternative to having a good battery—your car doesn’t start, and you and your loved ones freeze to death—is unappealing. If you have a fresh battery and it’s still running down, get your charging and electrical systems checked for problems. This is not something to put off. There are few worse sounds than the death of a battery as you try to crank the engine. Idling with your front and rear defrosters on high, your lights on, Bubba the Love Sponge cranked to full volume, and a coffee warmer plugged into the cigarette lighter is asking a lot of an alternator. A good battery can help manage the electrical load.

Proper Warm-Up

Yes, we know, plenty of people claim that letting the engine warm up any longer than it takes for the oil-pressure gauge to register is wasting gas. But a fully warmed engine is a more efficient engine. Besides, taking off in a car that hasn’t warmed properly, hasn’t had the windows cleared of ice or snow, and is still freezing cold inside is dangerous at worst, no fun at best. You think Al Gore hops into his Toyota Prius without warming it up?

Winter Tires

Readers from less snowy areas might think of winter tires as those big knobby-lugged “mud and snow” tires on the rear wheels of two-wheel-drive Ford F-150s used for possum chasing on dirt roads. But if you move up north to, say, Detroit, you promptly learn that snow tires, by golly, are amazing. Bolt up a set of Bridgestone Blizzaks or Michelin X-Ices, and suddenly your car can actually go and possibly even stop in slippery conditions.
Just be sure to take them off when the weather warms up—45 degrees is a good rule of thumb—because the soft rubber compounds used in winter tires wear out more quickly on dry pavement. Even if you don’t have winter rubber, at least remember that tread, and quite a bit of it, is a good thing. And if you drop the air pressure to 5 psi to get out of a snow bank, remember to fill the tires back up, okay?

Emergency Kits

Yes, we know, the preaching your local bated-breath TV weatherperson does about how you should always carry an emergency kit is sort of like your mom insisting that you sew your name into your underwear.
But, really, it’s a good idea—actually, both are, since underwear theft is rampant in our office.

The ideal cold-weather crisis kit consists of a thermal blanket, ten bucks in cash and two in change, a charged-up flashlight with batteries (or one of those crank-’em-up flashlights with the LED bulbs), an extra ice scraper, a five-pound bag of cheap clay cat litter (to throw under your tires when you get stuck), a small shovel, a charged-up battery booster with an extra cell-phone car-charger cable, one of those little sets of jumper cables that come in a pouch, a couple of pairs of warm gloves, a warm hat, an extra flannel sweatshirt with a hood, some paper towels, a can of aerosol spare-tire filler, a few packs of chemical hand warmers like Hot Hands, and a half-open box of fabric-softener sheets. Why dryer sheets? Mostly because they smell good, but when people see your kit and ask why you have dryer sheets, you can look sly and say, “Wouldn’t you like to know?”

That’s a lot of crap to cram into your trunk, but there’s a good chance you need an excuse to clean it out anyhow.

Four- or All-Wheel Drive

When ice or snow first falls, it seems the majority of weather-related crashes are in four- and all-wheel-drive vehicles, because having all four wheels powered makes drivers think they are Mikko Hirvonen or Jari-Matti Latvala, when really they lack the skill to even pronounce those WRC drivers’ names. The logic is, they say, “My Ford Explorer will accelerate to 60 mph on the ice and snow; ergo, it has got to be okay to drive 60 mph on the ice and snow.” Fine, unless at some point you plan to turn or perhaps slow down. You must know the limitations of four- and all-wheel drive. Check out YouTube and you’ll see that going too fast on ice, even if you’re Mikko Hirvonen or Jari-Matti Latvala, you’ll crash.

Traction and Stability Control

If you’re driving a new car, chances are good it has electronic traction and stability control. Both use the brakes—and sometimes the engine computer—to help the driver maintain control of the car. Traction control monitors relative speed between the driven wheels, activating the brakes or reducing engine power to curb wheelspin and wheelspin alone. Stability control adds sideways yaw sensors but uses similar methods to keep the car pointed in the direction you want to go. Stability control always includes traction control.

Stability control should always stay on in the winter, because if you hit a patch of black ice rounding a bend in the freeway at 70 mph, it can help you keep the car on the road and under control and might even save your life. On the other hand, there’s a reason that your traction-control system comes with that easily located on/off button. If you are stuck in the snow, wheelspin can sometimes help you get unstuck. Traction control will prevent wheelspin, so if you turn it off, motion might return to your car. Just be sure that your car is actually moving. If you are stuck in truly deep snow and the car isn’t moving at all, spinning the tires is going to make the problem worse.

Windshield Wipers

As with car batteries, windshield wipers do not improve if you ignore them. Get some premium, heavy-duty, snow-and-ice wipers. A lot of these have a fabric or rubber boot to prevent moisture from accumulating and freezing their moving parts. Be sure your washer fluid is filled with a good winter solution. Don’t add salt unless you are driving a car that belongs to somebody you really don’t like.

Your Gas Tank

Keep it full. More gas means more weight, which can mean better traction. Also, a gas tank nearing empty is more susceptible to condensation, which can form in the tank and then freeze in your fuel lines, preventing your car from starting.
That cover it? Good. Be careful out there. Meanwhile, call me a taxi, okay?

Source;
http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/hot_lists/high_performance/features_classic_cars/winter_driving_guide_feature


Honda Cars : Honda UK: Honda Jazz/FIT gets hybrid power | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 8:38 AM

This bodes well for us in North America, this could mean it's only a matter of time....
Honda will be boosting its hybrid line-up in 2010 with a petrol-electric Jazz.

The world’s first hybrid supermini will be powered by the same mechanicals as the forthcoming Insight hatchback.

That means a 1.3-litre petrol engine, augmented by an electric motor. In a car the size and weight of the Jazz that should translate into some spectacular economy and CO2 emissions. Expect around 80mpg and 90g/km CO2 emissions.

Honda is hoping that a hybrid Jazz will help it reach its target of selling 500,000 hybrids per year. It will be the company’s third hybrid after the Insight, due to go on sale next March, and the CR-Z coupe, which is arriving in 2010.

Source;
http://autocar.co.uk/News/NewsArticle/Honda-Jazz/236673/


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Honda Cars : Leon Paz; Acura 2 + 1 NSX Concept Design Proposal | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 8:25 AM

The Acura 2+1 Concept is a design study of a sportscar targeted to young customers with an aggressive look that adopts a multi-faceted design language. The author is Colombian designer Leon Paz.

This concept is intended to be a "gateway" car for buyers that are interested in the NSX performance car but can't afford it. It is targeted to young customers that want a unique sense of style reflected on their everyday fashion appearance.

The design is inspired by the multi-faceted trend and uses a very elaborated "modern baroque-fashion" formal language, yet forming an aesthetic whole.

As Leon Paz explains "The idea was to show very aggressive styling on the body and keep it very simple on the top section with a dynamic roof line flow."

The see-through engine compartment is characterized by the Acura logo cover, along with titanium brakets and twin-turbos.

Follow the link to get a few more pix and info on the designer;
http://www.carbodydesign.com/archive/2008/12/15-acura-concept/


Honda Cars : Honda Boosts Hybrid Bet With Lithium Battery Venture | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 8:16 AM

By Alan Ohnsman
Dec. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Honda Motor Co., a holdout as other large carmakers unveiled plans for plug-in, battery-powered models, increased its commitment to hybrid vehicles by announcing a joint venture to supply lithium-ion batteries.

The agreement with battery supplier GS Yuasa Corp. calls for making high-powered lithium packs for new gasoline-electric models, Honda said today in Tokyo. The business, with 15 billion yen ($171 million) of capital, will be 49 percent owned by Honda and 51 percent by its partner.

“In the short term, we believe one of the easiest ways to reduce CO2 is to expand hybrid technology to midsize and larger cars,” David Iida, a Honda spokesman, said in an interview from the company’s U.S. headquarters in Torrance, California. “These will be batteries that produce the high power needed for hybrids,” not energy density needed for plug-in vehicles.

Honda, first to sell hybrids in the U.S. and lease hydrogen fuel-cell cars to drivers, hasn’t yet offered lithium-ion packs in its hybrid models, citing cost and durability problems.

Toyota Motor Corp. plans to test lithium-ion plug-in Priuses in the U.S. next year and General Motors Corp. aims to sell rechargeable Volt sedans by 2010, when Nissan Motor Co. expects to introduce electric cars that can travel 100 miles (160 kilometers) per charge.

Setting up the battery venture is tied to Honda’s decision to delay its so-called clean diesel autos, said Paul Lacy, an analyst at IHS Global Insight in Troy, Michigan. Honda indefinitely suspended plans to sell fuel-efficient, low-emission diesel cars, originally planned for 2009.

Diesel-Gasoline Gap

“These things are not unrelated,” Lacy said. “The gap between diesel prices and regular gasoline has grown, and from a unit price standpoint, the cost of equipment needed to clean up diesel exhaust isn’t cheap.”

By comparison, offering more hybrid models, as Tokyo-based Honda said it will do, and boosting production of batteries may bring the cost of hybrid parts down faster than can occur with diesel systems, Lacy said.

“As you grow in volume with hybrids, you get economies of scale that reduce prices,” he said. “With diesel it’s not that simple.”

Lithium-ion batteries are lighter and hold as much as twice the energy compared with nickel-metal-hydride models now used in Honda and Toyota hybrids. Producing large lithium-ion cells for autos is also more difficult and costly, and such batteries have been less durable in tests, automakers and analysts have said.

Honda announced the battery project after President Takeo Fukui earlier cut the company’s full-year profit forecast by 62 percent, citing a surging yen and falling sales in North America and Europe.

Honda, Mitsubishi Supplier

For the rest of the article, follow the link;
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=a7QHNmhOAjSA&refer=japan


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Honda Cars : Honda CEO warns strong yen to cripple Japan industry | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 8:05 AM

* Says strong yen could prompt hollowing out of Japan industry
* Determined not to lower 08/09 profit forecasts again
* Aims to stay in black next year even if dollar around 90 yen
* 200,000-unit annual target for Insight hybrid may be tough
* Says sees no advantage of tying up with another carmaker

By Chang-Ran Kim, Asia autos correspondent

TOKYO, Dec 19 (Reuters) - The head of Honda Motor Co (7267.T) warned the strong yen could cripple Japanese industry and spur massive layoffs, and said the automaker would be forced to bring more production overseas if the dollar persisted below 100 yen.

"If the government is saying, 'We don't care about the export industry', then that's fine -- we'll act accordingly," Chief Executive Takeo Fukui told a small group of reporters in an interview on Friday.

Honda, Japan's No.2 automaker, this week slashed its operating profit forecast by two-thirds to 180 billion yen ($2 billion) for the business year to March 31, dragged down by an estimated currency loss of twice that amount.

Expressing frustration with Japanese authorities' slowness to act, Fukui said Honda had set long-term business plans at what was until recently a cautious assumption of a 100-yen dollar, and that any level below that would necessitate a fundamental rethink of the way the company operates.

"If we go beyond (100 yen), we would simply have to transfer more production overseas, cut more temporary workers and even start laying off permanent jobs," he said.

"Beyond that we could switch to importing more cars into Japan, bring research and development facilities overseas, and in an extreme scenario move our headquarters offshore. It would cause nothing short of a hollowing out of Japanese industry."

Under pressure to reverse the dollar's fall and an economy already in recession, the Bank of Japan on Friday cut its key policy rate to 0.10 percent and took other steps aimed at easing corporate credit strains. The dollar budged little, however, briefly falling below pre-announcement levels under 89 yen.

NO MORE REVISIONS

Fukui, who mapped out this week about a dozen steps aimed at saving near-term cash and focusing on core projects, said Honda was determined to meet its new profit forecasts after issuing its third profit warning this week.

"We don't want to revise again no matter what, so we issued our forecasts with that in mind," he said.

Honda changed its dollar-yen assumption for the second half to 95 yen, far more favourable than current levels, but Fukui said the assumption for the final January-March quarter factored in a rate of about 90 yen and presented little risk for now.

He added that the counter-measures announced this week, including delaying the start of a new domestic factory by more than a year, would help lower capital spending "significantly" next year from the 650 billion yen planned this year.

"We'll have to make sure we can secure profits next business year even if the dollar averages 90 yen," Fukui said.

NO NEED FOR TIE-UPS

Global automakers are reeling from a sales slump on scant availability of financing and weak consumer sentiment. In the United States, Honda's single-biggest market, the sales slide has spread even to fuel-efficient cars, such as Toyota Motor Corp's (7203.T) Prius hybrid.

With the timing of an economic recovery difficult to read, Fukui said Honda's annual sales target of 200,000 units for its new, low-cost Insight hybrid could be tough to reach after it goes on sale in North America, Europe and Japan next spring.

"We'll need to be more cautious about this target."

He stressed, however, that with governments tightening fuel efficiency and carbon dioxide emission standards, technology to develop better hybrid systems, smaller diesel engines, and a combination of the two, among others, would be even more crucial over the next few years.

In that sense, Fukui said, carmakers without the advanced technology would probably seek tie-ups, adding that Honda, an industry leader in such technology, wasn't one of them.

"At this point, I don't think there's any need or advantage for us (to form an alliance)," he said.

"In fact, there are risks involved in boosting volumes that way, because the partner could bail at any point, and it's also not good for Honda's dealers," he said, shooting down the possibility that Honda would drop its go-it-alone policy. ($1=89.17 Yen)

Source;
http://uk.reuters.com/article/governmentFilingsNews/idUKTKG00315820081219


Honda Cars : Bush Approves $17.4 Billion Auto Bailout, Canada to add $3.48 Billion (20%) | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 7:45 AM

WASHINGTON — President Bush on Friday announced $13.4 billion in emergency loans to prevent the collapse of General Motors and Chrysler, and another $4 billion available for the hobbled automakers in February with the entire bailout conditioned on the companies undertaking sweeping reorganizations to show that they can return to profitability.

The loans, as G.M. and Chrysler teeter on the brink of insolvency, essentially throw the companies a lifeline from the taxpayers that will keep them afloat until March 31. At that point, the Obama administration will determine if the automakers are meeting the conditions of the loans and will continue to receive government aid or must repay the loans and face bankruptcy proceedings.

Mr. Bush made his announcement a week after Senate Republicans blocked legislation to aid the automakers that had been negotiated by the White House and Congressional Democrats, and the loan package announced by the president includes roughly the identical requirements in that bill, which had been approved by the House.

Mr. Bush, in a televised speech before the opening of the markets, said that under other circumstances he would have let the companies fail, as punishment for bad business decisions. But given the economic downturn, he said the government had no choice but to step in.

“These are not ordinary circumstances. In the midst of a financial crisis and a recession, allowing the U.S. auto industry to collapse is not a responsible course of action” Mr. Bush said.

He said that bankruptcy was not a workable alternative. “Chapter 11 is unlikely to work for the American automakers at this time,” Mr. Bush said, noting that consumers would be unlikely to purchase cars from a bankrupt manufacturer.

The loan deal also requires the companies to quickly reduce their debt by two-thirds, mostly through debt-for-equity swaps, and to reach an agreement with the United Auto Workers union to cut wages and benefits so they are competitive with those of employees of foreign-based automakers working in the United States.

The debt reduction and the cuts in wages were central components of proposal by Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee, who tried to salvage the bailout legislation.

Those talks had deadlocked on a demand by Republicans that the wage cuts take effect by a set date in 2009, while the union had pressed for a deadline in 2011 after its current contract expires.

The plan announced on Friday by Mr. Bush offered a compromise between those positions, by making the requirements non-binding, allowing the automakers to reach different arrangements with the union, provided that they explain how those alternative plans will keep them on a path toward financial viability.

To gain access to the emergency loans, G.M. and Chrysler must agree to a range of concessions, including limits on executive pay and the elimination of their private corporate jets.

Under the plan, Mr. Bush essentially handed off to President-elect Barack Obama what will become one of the first, most difficult calls of his presidency: a political and economic judgment about whether G.M. and Chrysler are financially viable. Ford is not seeking immediate government help.

If, by March 30, the two companies cannot meet that standard — and clearly they could not meet it today — the $13.5 billion in Treasury loans would be “called” for immediate repayment, with the government placed in priority, ahead of all other creditors.

To avoid that fate, the companies will need to complete negotiations with the unions, the creditors, the suppliers and the dealers by March 30. Any judgment on the accords they reach with those groups will inevitably be both economic and political.

Mr. Obama and his economic team will have to make a convincing, public case that the wage cuts, plant closings and creditor agreements so change the landscape of the industry that the carmakers can turn profitable in short order.

But Mr. Obama will be under tremendous political pressure as well, because if his new team concludes that the automakers have not struck the right deals, it would mean a move to bankruptcy court, and likely widespread layoffs that would ripple far beyond the companies themselves.

Mr. Obama was elected partly with the enthusiastic support of the unions, who liked his talk of protecting jobs by renegotiating trade agreements. Now, in his first months, he will be asking them to give back gains they have negotiated over decades.

For the rest of the article, follow the link;
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/20/business/20auto.html?_r=1&ref=business&pagewanted=print


Honda Cars : Honda Cancells Acura NSX | 2013 New Honda Car Reviews 0

Unknown | 7:14 AM

Honda has cancelled the new NSX as part of a radical restructuring of its car making business.
The V10-engined supercar, which was a direct challenge to Ferrari and Porsche, would have been the most powerful production car that the company had ever produced.
Honda CEO Takeo Fukui announced the move in his end of year speech, saying that all development of the car would be cancelled. The company has also withdrawn its plan to introduce the Acura brand to Japan in 2010.
The Honda boss had previously emphasised the importance of the NSX to Honda's brand, unequivocally telling Autocar at the end of last year: "The new supercar is necessary for Honda."
Fukui had decided to concentrate on Honda's environmental credentials. He believes that hybrid drivetrains offer "the most realistic path for CO2 reduction at this moment". This means that Honda will focus its energy on developing hybrid technologies and "achieving mass market penetration as soon as possible".
The cancellation of the Honda NSX will come as a bitter disappointment to fans of the old model, which finally went off sale in 2005, after 15 years in production.

Source;
http://www.autocar.co.uk/News/NewsArticle.aspx?AR=236594