by Jean Jennings of www.automobilemag.com
You
would think Honda has been quietly seething about the trash talk the
enthusiast press has been heaping on its bland lineup of perfect cars
for the past decade. You know, like: We want a CR-Z like that 1990 CRX.
Could the Accord be any more boring? Why can't Honda bake a little
excitement into the Civic along with all that reliability and ridiculous
resale value? Even Consumer Reports went off on Honda's brand-new 2012
Civic, calling the interior "dismal" and pulling its coveted
"Recommended" rating. Whoa.
We don't like boring cars at Automobile
Magazine. But here's a shot of reality: Times have been tough. Honda saw
a recession coming and pulled in the reins on frivolity when it
designed the subdued 2012 Civic. "We thought the market would be more
value driven," explains American Honda executive VP John Mendel. "It has
been, but not at the cost of content."
Well, of course
not! We're Americans, for heaven's sake. But was the 2012 Civic really a
mistake? Honda had a jazzy redesign in the works soon after its
introduction. Before it could act, Consumer Reports struck. Yet Honda
sold 317,909 "dismal" Civics in 2012, making it the third-best-selling
car in the U.S. The Accord (you know, the previous stodgy one) was the
second-best seller at 331,872. The CR-V was the best-selling
SUV/crossover at 281,652. We should know in our hearts that when times
are tough, Americans buy Hondas.
Says Mendel: "Here's the conundrum for any
mass-market brand building three vehicles that each sell 300,000
examples a year. You have to be edgy yet not offensive. It's like a red
suit; you say, 'Wow! But it's not for me.' The number-one ice cream sold
in the world is still vanilla. It's horrible to say, I suppose, but you
can't be so polarizing. It's a nightmare for designers and engineers.
We want to be fun, yet we want to be safe, but we also want to be out
there.
"It tweaks me when I read that Honda has
lost its way. No one sweats what the customer thinks more than we do. An
old friend at Ford used to say that at the end of the day, you have to
pass the pub test. You throw your keys on the bar. When you do and
people see them, you don't have to explain yourself. Honda has always
passed that test."
Still, the 1990s were the end of hot Hondas
as we knew them. That's when chief engineer Nobuhiko Kawamoto, the
brilliant father of the world's first aluminum production car, the 1991
Acura NSX, became president and, sadly, transferred control from the
wild-eyed engineers to the responsible manufacturing and marketing guys.
Although he had been a racing mechanic himself, he pulled Honda out of
Formula 1. By doing so, Kawamoto saved his company from the serious
threat of a takeover by Mitsubishi Motors (imagine that). Honda then got
down to the business of building sensible Civics and Accords with a
vengeance. Mister Kawamoto retired in 1998, and we still miss talking
with him.
Fortunately, the racing heads in the company
did not go away. In 1993 they became Honda Performance Development,
keeping the pilot light burning as a subsidiary of American Honda. Now,
on the eve of the Acura NSX's return to production, it is fitting that
the HPD guys might be building the successor to the CRX of our dreams --
a hot CR-Z very much like the HPD concept we spied at the 2012 SEMA
show in Las Vegas. The concept has a 185-hp, supercharged four-cylinder
engine, a sport suspension, a trick exhaust, big brakes, and
eighteen-inch wheels. These HPD guys have pretty good credentials: since
2006, some ninety-eight IndyCar drivers have done business with
HPD-prepared racing engines and have completed more than a million miles
of practice, qualifying, and racing with only six in-race engine
failures.
You may want to begin a letter-writing
campaign to Honda and put the hot CR-Z on your wish list. Meanwhile,
there might be another Honda you can fall in love with. We have driven
the new 2013 Honda Accord, and it is magnificent. Two weeks ago, most of
the staff abandoned the office for a unique, bracketed, head-to-head
test of eight mid-size cars, arguably the finest group of family sedans
ever on the market at one time. Go to automobilemag.com or download our
May iPad issue to read the report. I will tell you one thing: the 2013
Honda Accord blew everyone away. It's been a long time coming.
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