by Scott Evans of www.motortrend.com
If you've lost
track of the ongoing Honda Civic saga, I'll catch you up. The Civic was
redesigned for 2012, but received lukewarm reviews. Despite strong
sales, Honda decided an emergency refresh was in order, and it was out
for the 2013 model year,
but the sedan received most of the updates while the coupe soldiered on
relatively the same. Now, for 2014, the coupe received the big update
as well, and the sedan picked up a few more improvements still. Got it?
Good.
Let's start with the improvements both cars
received. The two biggest changes you're likely to notice will be the
new continuously variable transmission and the all-new infotainment
system. The CVT replaces the ancient and out-classed five-speed
automatic and does so in fine form. It's related but not identical to
the new CVT in the larger Accord, but behaves the same way. It's one of
the best CVTs on the market in my estimation, behaving somewhat
similarly to a standard automatic transmission in simulating shifts
rather than jumping to one RPM point and sitting there. Its greatest
advantage, bar none, is that it's much, much smoother than the old
five-speed. All of the jerkiness of the old gearbox at throttle tip-in
and during shifts is gone. Driven back-to-back against a 2013 model, the
whole powertrain feels smoother and more refined.
More good news: Honda estimates city fuel economy for the sedan
will improve by two mpg to 30, which will help push combined fuel
economy to 33 mpg from 32. Highway fuel economy holds at 39 MPG. If you
want more, the Civic HF is likewise improved, picking up two mpg city,
one highway and two combined for a total of 31 city, 42 highway and 35
combined. Numbers for the coupe haven't been announced yet, but they'll
likely be the same.
If the CVT has a drawback, it makes the Civic
feel slightly slower off the line. The aggressive first gear in the old
five-speed meant you got pushed back in the seat a little when starting
from a stop with moderate throttle. The CVT eliminates that surge, which
while smoother, feels as though the car
isn't pulling as hard from a stop. We'll have to wait until we can test
the car to see if there's any actual difference in acceleration, but I
doubt it. Beyond that feeling at launch, the new Civics feel no faster
or slower than last year's. Unless, of course, you drop it into Sport.
That's right. The automatic Civic finally has a
Sport mode and even paddle shifters. As you'd expect, Sport makes the
throttle calibration more aggressive and keeps the revs higher. The
result is a car that feels a bit more peppy and responsive. It frankly
makes the standard Drive mode feel a little lethargic by comparison. In
Drive, the emphasis is clearly on comfort and relaxation. The paddle
shifters, should you choose to use them, will treat the CVT like a
seven-speed gearbox and it shifts between those faux gears pretty
quickly.
Testing, as I said,
will have to wait for another day, but we can make an educated guess
here. The 2014 Civic matches its new CVT to the same engine, but sports a
new exhaust system that adds three horsepower and one pound-foot of
torque. As such, we can confidently guess that the zero-to-60 mph time
won't deviate much from the 9.1 seconds we recorded for a 2013 model. A
roughly 17-second quarter-mile is likely as well, as is the 119-foot
stopping distance we recorded last time.
The only performance metric that could change
would be the cornering grip, and that would be limited to the coupe.
It
gets new dampers, slightly stiffer springs and a stiffer rear anti-roll
bar, along with new 16-inch wheels and tires. Altogether, they may help
lift the coupe's skid pad and figure eight numbers slightly from the
0.81 average g and the 28.5-second lap at 0.58 average g we recorded on
that 2013 sedan. On our admittedly short test drive,
the new coupe's handling didn't seem drastically different than the
sedan's, with perhaps a bit better roll control when cornering and a
slightly stiffer ride. Both cars still feel pretty light and handle
reasonably well for the class.
The steering continues to feel light and
artificial, with no feedback from the road. Matches the relaxed
powertrain.
The other feature both cars share and will
definitely grab your attention is the all new "Display Audio" (Display
Audio+ if you get navigation) infotainment system. Completely replacing
Honda's outdated infotainment system, Display Audio(+) is a huge step
forward. Gone are all the little buttons around the edges, replaced with
four permanent, touch-sensitive buttons on the left side: Home, Volume,
Menu and Back. In a neat trick, the buttons disappear whenever the
option isn't available, such as when you're already on the Home screen,
and when the car is turned off. The large, display sports familiar
blue-on-blue Honda graphics, but is far more usable than before. The
Menu button is no longer a catch-all, but brings up a specific menu for
the screen you're on, be it audio, nav or other. The result is that
while you don't have immediate access to every function as you did with
all the hard buttons, the screens and menus are less layered and easier
to navigate.
Perhaps the greatest advancement of the new
system is its gesture recognition. All the swiping, pinching, sliding
and multi-tapping you do on your smartphone or tablet is recognized, and
unlike certain other systems (looking at you, CUE), it works quite
well. Scrolling through a list of, say, satellite radio stations can be
done with a simple flick of the finger. That also works when scrolling
on the map, which will zoom with pinches. Alternatively, just drag your
finger across the map to move it. The screen also functions as the
three-mode backup camera display and the LaneWatch display. Borrowed
from the Accord, it mounts a camera under the passenger-side mirror and
activates whenever you use the right turn signal and shows you what's in
your blind spot.
The system's one drawback is in its sensitivity.
A majority of the time, my inputs were recognized, but I found that if I
didn't push a virtual button quite long enough (and we're talking
fractions of a second here), it would light up, but wouldn't register
the input. It's not quite as responsive as your smartphone in that
regard. This was most prevalent and frustrating when trying to type in
an address, as the system was further slowed as it tried to narrow the
search while I was typing, which introduced a lag between when I hit the
button, when it recognized the next input and when the screen changed.
The system otherwise worked fantastically, and I would call it one of
the best on the market right now.
We've talked a lot about the changes to both
cars, but there are a few changes specific to the updated coupe. In
addition to the slightly stiffer suspension, the coupe also gets some
exterior cosmetic updates. The most notable is the new grille and
headlights, which are similar to that of the new Fit compact hatch.
We're not really sold on them. We do, however, like the more aggressive
lower fascia and the strong character line running over the tops of the
front fenders. Around back, new headlights and some dimples in the
bumper liven things up a little. The coupe also gets exclusive wheels.
Also receiving some updates is the Civic Si
coupe. It gets an exclusive grille design (which we like better than the
standard coupe's), a slightly different lower front fascia and
exclusive 18-inch wheels.
Out back, it picks up a faux diffuser down low
and a spoiler on the trunk. Inside, you get red inserts in all the
seats.
Under the hood, it gets a grand total of four more horsepower and
four more pound-feet of torque from an improved exhaust system. Here,
again, we'll take a guess and say its zero-to-60 mph time will be
unchanged from the 2013 Si coupe we tested. That means 6.1 seconds to 60
mph, followed by a 14.6-second quarter-mile at 95.6 mph. Skid pad
performance may improve slightly from the 0.87 average g we recorded, as
may the Figure Eight lap, which we clocked at 26.5 seconds at 0.66
average g. Fuel economy shouldn't change from the current 22 city/31highway
rating. We weren't able to drive the updated Si, so we can't say yet if
there are any noticeable differences in performance or handling on the
road.
All in all, the 2014 Honda Civic coupe and sedan
are minor refreshes of already-competent vehicles.
The updates to each
should help make the cars more attractive and more competitive against
an ever-more-cutthroat segment. They don't rocket ahead, but they're now
in no danger of quickly falling behind Given that Civic is already the
segment sales leader, this improved car should continue that.
Source;
http://www.motortrend.com/roadtests/coupes/1311_2014_honda_civic_coupe_and_sedan_first_drive/
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