Monday, May 30, 2016

Honda S660 Mugen RA revealed – only 660 JDM units

This car is not for North America....

by Gerard Lye of www.paultan.org

What you’re looking at here is the Honda S660 Mugen RA, a special edition of Honda’s pint-sized roadster, which was announced in prototype guise during the 2016 Tokyo Auto Salon back in January.

Unlike Mugen’s bolt-on parts for the S660, the RA is a lot less aggressive in terms of appearance. Exterior upgrades here include a carbon-fibre grille, ‘Mugen RA’ badging, a twin-pipe sports exhaust and lightweight forged aluminium wheels from BBS.

For the latter, they measure 15 inches at the front and 16 inches at the rear, wrapped with Yokohama Advan Neova AD08R tyres in 165/55R15 (front) and 195/45R16 (rear) sizes. Revisions to the chassis include a retuned suspension featuring adjustable Bilstein dampers.

Inside, the S660 Mugen RA gets red leather seats, a new leather steering wheel, contrast stitching, a ‘Mugen’ start button, ‘Mugen’ instrument panel, serial number plate and carbon-fibre trim pieces. A carbon-fibre gear knob is now fitted on the manual variant, while CVT versions get leather-wrapped paddle shifters instead.

If you’re expecting a bump in power, bad news. Due to Japan’s kei car class regulations that limits engine displacement to 660 cc with an output of no more than 64 PS, the S660 Mugen RA sees no change in output from its S07A 660 cc, turbocharged DOHC three-cylinder engine – 64 hp and 104 Nm.

Interested? Well, there’s a few things to take note. Firstly, the suggested retail price is 2,890,000 yen (RM107,002). Secondly, only 660 units of the Honda S660 Mugen RA will only be made. Thirdly, all of them will be exclusive to the Japanese market, with sales expected to start on October 3 later this year.

Source;
http://paultan.org/2016/05/30/honda-s660-ra-by-mugen/

Friday, May 27, 2016

First Serial Production 2017 Acura NSX Rolls off the Line at Performance Manufacturing Center in Ohio

First customer Rick Hendrick takes delivery of VIN 001 with proceeds from his $1.2 million winning bid going to two children’s charities
Acura today celebrated the highly anticipated line-off of the first serial production 2017 Acura NSX at the new Performance Manufacturing Center (PMC) in Marysville, Ohio. The PMC is the exclusive manufacturing home to Acura's next-generation NSX, the only supercar made in America.

"Today marks the realization of a big dream here at the PMC and the culmination of more than 30 years of manufacturing experience and expertise here in Ohio," said Clement D'Souza, engineering large project leader for the Acura NSX. "Our world class team of expert technicians, through their passion, has realized major innovations in the design and manufacturing of a next-generation Acura supercar that truly delivers incredible precision crafted performance."

The first customer, Rick Hendrick, earned the right to custom order the first production NSX with a winning bid of $1.2 million at the Barrett-Jackson auction in January. All proceeds from the sale went to the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation and Camp Southern Ground.  Hendrick drove his Valencia Red Pearl Acura NSX off the line. VIN 001 features exclusive interwoven wheels, carbon ceramic brake rotors, leather and Alcantara interior trim and carbon fiber upgrades including the engine cover, roof, and rear decklid spoiler.

"The NSX is a pure expression of the Precision Crafted Performance DNA and challenging spirit that defines the Acura brand," said Jon Ikeda, vice president and general manager of Acura. "We can't wait to give our clients a chance to experience this dream product, and will carry this day's momentum forward as we continue to invest in and grow Acura."

"Taking delivery of this first new Acura supercar and knowing the proceeds will benefit two remarkable organizations for children makes this a very special moment for me and everyone on our team," said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports and chairman of Hendrick Automotive Group. "It's especially rewarding to see this incredible supercar coming to life in the United States, which is a real testament to the company's commitment to innovation and manufacturing here."

The PMC was designed to blend human craftsmanship and advanced technologies to assure superior build quality and precision crafted performance. The PMC is home to master technicians who developed 12 patent-pending technologies and other advanced methods of producing a made-to-order supercar. PMC associates created sophisticated new manufacturing methods around the unique capabilities and specifications of Acura's next-generation NSX. Innovations to the NSX construction, painting, assembly and quality confirmation process include fully robotic MIG welding of the aluminum-intensive space frame, 14 hours of meticulous hand assembly by 16 highly skilled manufacturing technicians, and a dynamic performance testing and confirmation process drawn from the company's extensive race experience.

In nearby Anna, Ohio, at the company's largest engine plant, master builders hand assemble the NSX's 3.5-liter twin-turbocharged V-6 engine, which is then mated to its advanced 9-speed dual clutch transmission and rear direct drive electric motor.  Each NSX engine is machine balanced, bench tested and broken-in to the equivalent of 150 miles of service to ensure that every NSX engine is track-ready upon customer delivery.  The engine is installed at the PMC, along with its revolutionary front-mounted Twin Motor Unit, which enables electrically powered torque vectoring, a world's first capability in the sports car realm.

Development of the Acura NSX involved a global R&D team led by engineers at the Ohio Center of Honda R&D Americas, Inc. in Raymond, Ohio, roughly a mile from the PMC.  The final design was created at the Acura Design Studio in Torrance, Calif., based on an original concept from the Wako Studio in Japan.

About the Acura NSX
Created to bring a new experience to the supercar segment, the next-generation Acura NSX challenges conventional beliefs about supercars, with cutting-edge and world-first technologies. Much as the first generation NSX did a quarter century ago, the 2017 NSX breaks the mold through a first-of-its-kind Sport Hybrid Super Handling All-Wheel Drive power unit, a multimaterial body structure, advanced aerodynamics and a cockpit that supports performance driving on every level without sacrificing comfort. The 2017 Acura NSX is the only supercar designed, developed and manufactured in the U.S. and is produced exclusively at the Performance Manufacturing Center in Marysville, Ohio using domestic and globally sourced parts. The NSX engine is manufactured at the Anna, Ohio engine plant, also using domestic and globally sourced parts.

Source;
http://www.hondanews.com/releases/first-serial-production-2017-acura-nsx-rolls-off-the-line-at-performance-manufacturing-center-in-ohio

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Review: 2017 Honda Ridgeline tackles a mountain trail and survives



In order to examine the new Ridgeline in person, I headed to Malibu, California and the Santa Monica Mountains to answer the following question: Can the 2017 Honda Ridgeline go off-road?

by Christian Wardlaw of www.nydailynews.com
Based on the same platform as the Acura MDX and Honda Pilot crossover SUVs, the redesigned 2017 Honda Ridgeline isn’t as ruggedly constructed a midsize crew cab pickup truck as its competition. In fact, you might be tempted to dismiss it as nothing more than a modern-day Chevy El Camino, a car masquerading as a truck.
In order to examine the new Ridgeline in person, I headed to Malibu, California and the Santa Monica Mountains to answer the following question: Can the 2017 Honda Ridgeline go off-road? Before we get to that, though, it is important to put the Ridgeline into perspective.

The Honda Ridgeline is a more competitive truck than you might guess

Aimed at the Chevy Colorado, GMC Canyon, Nissan Frontier, and Toyota Tacoma, the redesigned Honda Ridgeline is built for the do-it-yourselfer and the weekend warrior, the people who need a truck on weekends but don’t want to drive a traditional truck during the week.
The redesigned Honda Ridgeline is built for the do-it-yourselfer and the weekend warrior, the people who need a truck on weekends but don’t want to drive a traditional truck during the week.
That means the new 2017 Ridgeline foregoes traditional body-on-frame construction, necessary for maximum towing capacity, and includes a 4-wheel independent suspension, which improves ride and handling on the pavement where most pickups spend most of their time.

Ridgeline power, towing and payload ratings

A 280-horsepower, 3.5-liter V6 is tucked under the Ridgeline’s hood, but it doesn’t make as much torque as the competition (262 lb.-ft.), or as low in the rev range (at 4,700 rpm). This, in addition to its unibody construction, is a factor restricting the Honda’s towing capacity to 5,000 pounds, a ton less than a Chevy Colorado or GMC Canyon crew cab with a V6 engine.
The Honda can haul though, up to 1,584 lbs. of payload in its 64-inch cargo bed, a little more weight than a Chevy Colorado or GMC Canyon with a V6 can tackle. Loading the Ridgeline is easy, too, thanks to a dual-action tailgate that swings wide from right to left, or drops down like every other truck. The cab’s rear seat cushion also flips up and out of the way, providing a sizable amount of interior cargo capacity.
Ridgelines also come with a “trunk,” a locking 7.3 cubic-foot storage well beneath the cargo bed that includes a drain plug because it is perfect for use as a tailgate party cooler.
Ridgelines also come with a “trunk,” a locking 7.3 cubic-foot storage well beneath the cargo bed that includes a drain plug because it is perfect for use as a tailgate party cooler. A 115-volt power outlet is available for the bed, and a new “truck bed audio system” with six weatherproof transducers that turn the cargo box into a boom box (remember those?).

Available torque-vectoring AWD system

Purists might automatically discount the Ridgeline once they discover that it comes with front-wheel drive. Don’t worry. Get the available Intelligent Variable Torque Management (i-VTM4) all-wheel-drive system, which can deliver up to 70 percent of total engine output to either the left or right rear wheel as conditions warrant. It comes with an Intelligent Traction Management System with Normal, Mud, Sand, and Snow driving modes, too.
Ground clearance measures 7.8 inches. That’s less than any of the traditional body-on-frame trucks from the competition. Yet the Ridgeline’s approach, breakover, and departure angles essentially match or improve upon the Colorado and Canyon twins.

Can the 2017 Honda Ridgeline go off road?

I hopped into a Ridgeline RTL-E, engaged the “Sand” driving mode, and headed into the wilderness.
Calamigos Ranch is the site of an annual media event called Droptops and Dirt. Located in the heart of the Santa Monica Mountains, the property includes rugged terrain and trails that to showcase vehicle capabilities. Honda brought a Ridgeline to the 2016 event, put it on the more difficult of the two available trails, and turned journalists loose.
Naturally, I was curious. So I hopped into a Ridgeline RTL-E, engaged the “Sand” driving mode, and headed into the wilderness under the guidance of Honda public relations representative Davis Adams.
Freshly graded, the first part of the trail was essentially a dirt road, but as we climbed in elevation and took the fork leading to the more difficult portion of the route, the dips and bumps presented the Ridgeline with regular challenges. Though the truck rocked and rolled and occasionally put a wheel into the air, it remained resolute in its commitment to surpass obstacles, the i-VTM4 AWD system doing a fine job of meting out power to the wheels with the most grip.
Honda, your truck needs a hill descent control system.
Cresting a blind hill, I was impressed with the Ridgeline’s tenacity in the dry California dirt. But I knew that a steep descent studded with rocks, scarred with ruts, and paved with a loose surface lay in wait around the next turn.
I asked Adams: “Does this thing have hill descent control?”
“No,” he admitted. “It does not.”
With parts of me puckering by the second, I headed down the grade in low gear with a foot modulating the brake pedal. Cautiously, carefully, I chose my path down the hill, the truck sometimes sliding and slipping on its 245/60R18 all-season tires. We made it down the grade, scraping the underside once or twice but without shredding the front air dam or causing any leaks.
Honda, your truck needs a hill descent control system.

Honda offers the perfect truck for most of the people most of the time
To say that the new 2017 Honda Ridgeline might just be the perfect truck for most of the people most of the time is an understatement. It is.

To say that the new 2017 Honda Ridgeline might just be the perfect truck for most of the people most of the time is an understatement. It is.
But, in my opinion, the exterior styling is too soft. The Ridgeline looks like a Pilot modified by a guy with a Sawzall after drinking a case of Old Milwaukee. Which is almost like saying the Ridgeline looks like an Odyssey modified by a guy… You get the idea.
Not only has Honda ditched the old Ridgeline’s chiseled bodywork and flared fenders, the new truck’s Pilot-sourced interior eliminates one of my favorite things about the original model: the hose-me-out interior loaded with storage nooks, cubbies, trays, and bins. This new one is just too nice inside.
The old Ridgeline was rugged, practical, and filled with storage bins inside. The new one is just too nice.
According to J.D. Power studies, styling and design sell new vehicles. How a car, SUV, or truck looks on the outside and works on the inside is just as important as reliability when it comes to the consumer’s decision-making process.
So, while the 2017 Ridgeline represents a compelling package, Honda might just find that those do-it-yourselfers and weekend warriors are continuing to choose the more rugged-looking rigs offered by the competition. That’s too bad, because with the exceptions of towing capacity and extreme 4-wheeling capability, the new Ridgeline rocks.

Source;
http://www.nydailynews.com/autos/latest-reviews/2017-honda-ridgeline-off-road-article-1.2650047

Honda WRV Jazz based crossover rendered


The Japanese car-maker Honda will be introducing its new model Honda WR-V, which will be a crossover model of Jazz during the 2016 Sao Paulo Auto Show in November.


by Tony George of www.oncars.in

As per the pictures from QuatroRodas Brasil we have come across a few new renderings of the upcoming Honda WR-V, which will be a Jazz-based crossover. This new model is mostly expected to be introduced by the car-maker during the 2016 Sao Paulo Auto Show in November, what makes it more interesting for the Indian auto enthusiasts is the fact that this new jazz based crossover is rumoured to be in the pipeline for the Indian automobile market in 2017.

The company will drop off its “Fit Twist” nameplate for “WR-V”, so that the new model can stay away from the regular Honda fit/jazz. Honda will be giving WR-V a unique identity unlike its previous models which looked like a Honda Fit with rugged accessories. However there are certain features seen on the new WR-V that reminds us that this new car is based on the Fit, tail lamps and glasshouse design are a few to name.

Honda will offer the WR-V with a 1.5-litre i-VTEC FlexOne engine from the Fit, mated to either a 5-speed manual or a CVT unit. This engine develops a maximum power of 115 hp (petrol)/116 hp (ethanol) and 149 Nm (petrol)/150 Nm (ethanol) of torque in Fit. As per reports the wheelbase measures 2.60 meters long, this is 50 mm longer than the hatchback. Honda has recently made the grand launch of its seven seater SUV model BR-V to the Indian market; the Indian automobile market can expect WR-V by 2017.


Source;
http://www.oncars.in/car-news/honda-wrv-jazz-based-crossover-rendered/10694

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

2017 Honda Ridgeline Trims and Colours (for Canada)

Well, here we have it, getting closer to landing in dealerships across Canada. 

Here are the trim levels and colours;

2017 Honda Ridgeline LX-HS
White Exterior / Black Interior
Black Exterior / Black Interior

2017 Honda Ridgeline SPORT
White Exterior / Black Interior
Black Exterior / Black Interior
Silver Exterior / Black Interior

2017 Honda Ridgeline EX-L
White Exterior / Black Interior
Black Exterior / Black Interior
Silver Exterior / Black Interior
Grey Exterior / Grey Interior
Blue Exterior / Grey Interior

2017 Honda Ridgeline TOURING
White Exterior / Black Interior
Black Exterior / Black Interior
Silver Exterior / Black Interior
Grey Exterior / Grey Interior
Blue Exterior / Grey Interior
Red Exterior / Beige Interior

2017 Honda Ridgeline BLACK EDITION
Black Exterior / Black Interior (Special)

-I can only assume that the Ridgeline will only come in a AWD pkg, no FWD like in the US.
-Spec's, features, and prices to follow....

AutoSpies.com: LEAKED! The 2017 Mazda 3 Is Expected To Look Like THIS

According to the latest reports, the 2017 Mazda 3 will be receiving a modest refresh.
Considering it feels as though the Mazda 3 has been out for about three years, that sounds about right to us.

An image found of an all-new Japanese brochure clearly shows the updated face of the new Mazda Axela. While that name may not sound familiar to the US-based market, that is actually what the 3 is known as in the Japanese Domestic Market (JDM).

Looking closely at the brochure shot, it's clear that the updated 3 will receive some minor tweaks. Overall, it adds up to a much more sharp and aggressive looking 3. In fact, I think it makes the car look a bit more mean and a little less goofy.

Note the modified, three-dimensional grille, updated headights and new front valence.

While we only have one photo here, we assume that the 3 will get updated motors that have a slight bump in power and are more fuel efficient. In addition, we expect that its interior will receive a once over.

Source;
http://www.autospies.com/news/LEAKED-The-2017-Mazda-3-Is-Expected-To-Look-Like-THIS-88431/

Rumor Has it the S2000 Could Return for Honda’s 70th Birthday

by Justin Cupier of www.insidecarnews.com

The S2000 has been at the forefront of Honda fans’ minds ever since the automaker axed the roadster in the U.S. following the 2009 model year. Now, with the Honda S660 and the Acura NSX reigniting the Honda performance flame, the S2K chatter is getting louder than ever. According to a report from Car and Driver, this chatter may actually result in an in-the-flesh model just in time for the brand’s 70th birthday.

This report comes from an insider tip that leads C&D to believe that we could see the S2000 return in 2018. The site’s source told them all about what the brand will do to celebrate its 70th, and in this plan is a Miata-sized vehicle with “a lot more power” than the lightweight Mazda. This points to one likely result, and that’s the return of the S2000.

Many experts have laughed off the possibility of an S2K return by pointing out the fact that Honda no longer has a platform to support a new compact sports car. The insider, however, points out that neither the tiny S660 nor the NSX had platforms either and that Honda had to craft platforms specifically for them. Clearly, if the profit is there, Honda is certainly open to building dedicated platforms for low-volume vehicles.

As for the muscle behind the revived S2000, there is still a little cloudiness. Rumor has it that it would use a detuned version of the Civic Type R’s engine, which is a 2.0-liter four-pot that cranks out 306 horsepower and 295 pound-feet of torque. If I were a betting man, I would put my money on the S2000 falling somewhere in the 250- to 275-hrosepower range.

Again, these are still just unconfirmed rumors for now, but they are from a legit source, so there is likely some level of validity to them. Stay tuned for updates.

Source;

Pickuptrucks.com: 2017 Honda Ridgeline: Five Video Reviews

Posted by Mark Williams | May 23, 2016

The new 2017 Honda Ridgeline should make a pretty big splash in the midsize pickup truck segment due in large part to its car-like driving dynamics, significant number of performance upgrades, and several class-exclusive features. 

After a two-year hiatus, the new Ridgeline boasts a long list of unique selling points, distinguishing it from other midsize pickups. Make no mistake, this is a different type of option for midsize truck customers — one that will work for some, but not so well for others. 

Here are five videos we shot during the introduction of the 2017 Honda Ridgeline in San Antonio; they focus on some of the more interesting and controversial characteristics of the new midsize pickup. 

Check out this link to view the 5 videos;
1)  Off Roading
2)  Towing Capacity
3)  Boat Launch Traction
4)  Truck or Not a Truck?
5)  Cool Bed Features
http://news.pickuptrucks.com/2016/05/2017-honda-ridgeline-five-video-reviews.html

Thursday, May 19, 2016

2017 Honda CRV Front End?

Comparing this to the spyshots, looks legit.

Suzuki admits to improper (gas) mileage tests; Mitsubishi president stepping down

by Minami Funakoshi, Maki Shiraki, and Chris Gallagher of www.bnn.ca

Suzuki Motor Corp said it had used improper fuel economy tests for its cars in Japan but that proper testing subsequently had shown the mileage data did not need amending, in a widening of a scandal that has already engulfed Mitsubishi Motors.

Mitsubishi, which admitted last month that it had manipulated fuel economy for four minivehicle models, said on Wednesday its President Tetsuro Aikawa will step down to take responsibility for the scandal.

The admission prompted the automaker to agree to sell a one-third controlling stake to Nissan Motor, and Japan's transport ministry to ask domestic automakers to re-submit fuel economy readings on all their vehicles by Wednesday.

Suzuki, Japan's No.4 automaker, said 2.1 million vehicles were affected but Chief Executive Osamu Suzuki told reporters that his workers did not intentionally use improper data.

"The company apologizes for the fact that we did not follow rules set by the country," he said.

Shares in Suzuki ended down 9.4 per cent after the company said it had used improper tests but before it briefed media. At one point, they fell as much as 15 percent to their lowest level since November 2013.

Suzuki specializes in minivehicles, which have engines of up to 660cc and get preferential tax treatment under Japanese law. It commands roughly one-third of the country's minivehicle market.

The automaker said it plans to continue sales of its cars given that new readings had not deviated much from those previously submitted, adding that it did not see much impact on earnings for now.
The impact has been much greater on Mitsubishi.

Mitsubishi said on Wednesday that "shortening of time spent on R&D, and expectations that high fuel-efficiency be achieved" led to data manipulation.

"There was no direct order from top management in this incident," Mitsubishi Chief Executive Osamu Masuko told reporters.

"But top management did not have a firm grasp on the proceedings at the R&D department," he said, adding there were several chances to stop its workers from using improper testing methods but that they did not stop.

Emissions and fuel economy have come under increasing scrutiny from regulators globally after Germany's Volkswagen admitted last year that it used "defeat devices" on 11 million diesel vehicles to lower emissions during tests.

France, which ordered tests on a random sample of about 100 diesel cars last year, said last month some vehicles made by Renault, Fiat, Mercedes, VW, PSA Peugeot Citroen, Nissan, Opel and Ford failed to comply fully with its emissions regulations.

South Korea, which has tested 20 diesel vehicle models, said on Monday it would punish Nissan with a fine and a recall of its Qashqai diesel sport utility vehicles, accusing it of manipulating emissions. Nissan denied the allegation.

In the United States, the Justice Department is investigating Daimler, the maker of Mercedes vehicles, over emissions testing.

Source;
http://www.bnn.ca/News/2016/5/18/Suzuki-admits-to-improper-mileage-tests-Mitsubishi-president-stepping-down.aspx

Second Generation Automated Acura RLX Development Vehicle Revealed in California


Acura has revealed its second generation automated development vehicle in California, a modified version of the RLX Sport Hybrid SH-AWD™ luxury performance sedan.  The RLX has been fitted with a new suite of radar, Lidar, camera and GPS sensors, complemented by higher performance CPUs and GPUs, and improved cabling, heat management and circuitry.  These enhancements have been combined with new, more intelligent software algorithms to support more complex testing scenarios.

The development vehicle is designed to achieve high reliability by fusing overlapping information together from various sensors.  This concept, known as sensor fusion, allows test engineers to validate information from each signal with a higher degree of accuracy than can be obtained from any one of the sensors independently.  For example, the vehicle's radar sensors are adept at detecting the relative position and velocity of off-board objects with pinpoint accuracy, while the camera system is best suited to help detect and identify objects based on size and shape.  This same concept is applied in the AcuraWatch™ safety and driver-assistive suite available on all model year 2016 Acura sedans and SUVs.

The vehicle will be tested by Honda Research Institute USA at GoMentum Station, a 5,000-acre automated and connected vehicle proving ground in the San Francisco Bay Area.  GoMentum Station contains 20-miles of paved, city-like roadway grids, buildings and other urban infrastructure, providing a realistic environment that will help accelerate the development of automated and connected vehicle technologies.  This testing program is aligned with the company's goal to introduce automated driving technologies around 2020.

About Acura Active Safety
Safety performance has been a core element of Acura's commitment to excellence since the brand was founded three decades ago.  All model year 2016 Acura sedans and SUVs are available with AcuraWatch™, one of the most advanced suites of safety and driver-assistive technologies in the class. AcuraWatch includes Adaptive Cruise Control, a Lane Keeping Assist System, Road Departure Mitigation and a Collision Mitigation Braking System™ (an AEB technology) with pedestrian-sensing capability.

About Honda Research Institute USA
Honda Research Institute USA (HRI-US) conducts research in the areas of computer and materials science, and develops strategic partnerships with public and private institutions to foster innovation. HRI-US was founded in 2003 and is headquartered in Silicon Valley. 

Source;
http://www.hondanews.com/releases/second-generation-automated-acura-rlx-development-vehicle-revealed-in-california

Monday, May 16, 2016

Automotive News: Honda's Ridgeline lesson: Looks matter

Bye-bye, buttress: The new Honda Ridgeline ditches the old polarizing design for the more standard cab/bed style.
by David Undercoffler of www.autonews.com

ANTONIO -- The shadowy teaser image Honda released in late 2013 said very little about the second-generation Ridgeline that's due to go on sale in June. But it did reveal the most important element the automaker was intent on fixing: its styling.

Honda needed only a silhouette to show that the polarizing "flying buttress" profile of the original Ridgeline was gone, replaced on the forthcoming 2017 model with the conventional cab/bed style found on nearly every pickup built in the last 100 years.
Honda learned the hard way with the original Ridgeline -- on sale from 2005 through 2014 -- that you can be innovative with the features and bones of a truck, but not the design. It took that lesson to heart while developing the latest model, going to extraordinary lengths to get the visual details right.

The effort started early in the second-generation Ridgeline's design process. Honda held clinics in California and Texas with pickup buyers and showed them a variety of trucks without their brand labels.

The research found that buyers made assumptions about toughness and payload based on the gaps in the wheel arches between the tire and the truck body, and the height of the bed. If a pickup had a trailer hitch, people assumed it could tow more.

Honda even included the first-generation Ridgeline with a spray-painted piece of cardboard covering up the flying buttress in the design clinics. Even that was well-received by potential buyers.

"Those things were honestly kind of "aha' moments or big surprises to us as a project team," Jim Loftus, a Ridgeline engineer, said at the media launch here in early May. "And of course, we went back and incorporated all of those messages into the next-generation Ridgeline."

Engineers tilted the Ridgeline up about half a degree from back to front to make the bed look like it was sitting higher. They also increased the gap between the wheel arch and tire by lifting up the chassis by about an inch.

"Based on the understanding that people are going to make some assumptions just visually, we said, you know what, we need to raise this up just to convey that image," Kerry McClure, chief engineer on the Ridgeline project, told Automotive News.

A trailer hitch is now standard on all new Ridgeline models, not only to convey a sense of toughness (all-wheel-drive models can tow 5,000 pounds), but also because the structural elements needed for a hitch were already in place.

The first-generation Ridgeline, for all of its segment-busting innovation and carlike ride and handling, never landed on many shoppers' lists because of how it looked.

The flying buttress style was partly due to a desire -- especially among executives in Japan -- to make it visually obvious that the Ridgeline was different and not a traditional body-on-frame truck.

There was also evidence at the time that a new school of truck design was emerging -- think Ford Explorer SportTrac or Chevy Avalanche. When the recession walloped the auto industry, buyers shied away from the unconventional, and Ridgeline sales plummeted.

"I think the challenge we faced with the old Ridgeline, part of it was the styling that wasn't so well-accepted," Jeff Conrad, general manager of Honda, said at the Ridgeline launch.

"And when the market did turn, it was very difficult to sustain that or get it back."

With the changes in place on the new version and a laundry list of segment bests (fuel economy, passenger volume, crash ratings, cargo room in bed), Honda is bullish on the Ridgeline's prospects.

The company hopes annual sales will work their way up to the previous version's peak of 50,193.

But Honda is realistic about the kind of buyers it's going to attract. "We're not going after the buyer that is looking to take this vehicle and climb rocks up the side of the mountain," Conrad said.

2017 Honda Ridgeline 
 
Honda is returning to the midsize pickup market with the 2nd-generation Ridgeline, which uses the same unibody platform as the Pilot crossover and the upcoming Odyssey minivan. By avoiding the traditional body-on-frame construction, Honda can deliver a smooth, comfortable ride and nearly all the capability midsize-pickup buyers look for. The biggest change is the styling, which ditches the much-hated “flying buttress” look for a more conventional design. Honda hopes to reach annual volumes of around 50,000, citing estimates that 20 percent of Honda owners also have a truck in their garage. But if demand does hit that level, Honda could face capacity constraints because the Ridgeline will be built at the same Alabama plant that is currently maxed out building the Pilot.
  • Powertrain: 3.5-liter, V-6 engine, 6-speed automatic transmission. Front-wheel drive is standard on all but the highest trims; all-wheel drive is a $1,800 option.
  • Technology: Optional 8-inch touch screen with navigation and real-time traffic updates, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity, Apple's Siri Eyes Free voice commands
  • Safety: 6 airbags, standard backup camera, optional blind-spot monitoring, pre-collision warning and braking, lane-keeping assist, rear cross-traffic monitor
  • Target: 50,000 units a year
  • Competitors: Nissan Frontier, Toyota Tacoma, Chevy Colorado, GMC Canyon
  • Strengths: Carlike ride, handling and interior comfort; excellent cabin space, class-leading fuel economy, unique in-bed storage space and dual-action tailgate
  • Weaknesses: Doesn't project the tough image some truck buyers seek; low ground clearance; unibody construction not as hardy as body-on-frame
  • Bottom line: Over 2 days of on- and off-road testing outside San Antonio, the Ridgeline proved why Honda is eager to show off this truck. The interior space, comfort and handling make you forget there's a bed in back. The powertrain is smooth and robust, even when towing. It has enough off-road chops to meet the needs of all but the truest off-road warriors. Now that the styling isn't a turnoff, Honda has a truly innovative vehicle that's a contender for buyers who are honest about what they need from their truck.
 2017 Ridgeline 2WD2016 Toyota Tacoma V-6 double cab 2WD
Wheelbase125.2 in.127.4 in.
Length210 in.212.3 in.
Width78.6 in.74.4 in.
Height70.2 in.70.6 in.
Curb weight4,242 lbs.4,230 lbs.
Engine3.5-liter V-63.5-liter V-6
Horsepower280 @ 6,000 rpm278 @ 6,000 rpm
Torque, lbs.-ft.262 @ 4,700 rpm265 @ 4,600 rpm
Tow rating3,500 lbs.6,700 lbs.
Ground clearance7.3 in.9.4 in.
EPA mpg19 city/26 hwy.19 city/24 hwy.
Base price*$30,375$28,885
   
*includes shipping

Source;
http://www.autonews.com/article/20160515/OEM04/305169938/hondas-ridgeline-lesson-looks-matter

Friday, May 13, 2016

Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles need ‘one more step’

Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles and pure EVs are the key to Honda's future, reveals CEO and president Takahiro Hachigo
by Steve Cropley of www.autocar.co.uk

In the nine months since Takahiro Hachigo, 55-year-old Honda ‘lifer’ and senior engineer, was unexpectedly appointed president and CEO, good fortune and tough challenges have crowded his agenda in equal measure.

In Europe, Honda is doing better than for many years as new models (which Hachigo oversaw as R&D boss in Europe) promise to drive 2016 volume past 160,000 cars and towards a 200,000-unit target. In January and February, sales in Europe climbed by a third.

Farther afield, quality issues, some poorly resolved US models and inward-looking management mean Honda has failed to capitalise on Toyota’s recent troubles and is in danger of conceding sixth place among world car makers to Nissan.

Through it all, Hachigo, with his engineer’s eye, looks to a day 30 years from now when Honda’s hydrogen fuel cell and pure EVs will be “dominant”. Here, in an exclusive interview, he reveals his view of the future.

Honda used to be described as the world’s greatest maker of engines. What are its priorities now?
“We are still making very advanced engines and will continue to do so for some time to come. As an example, we have developed a new range of downsized 1.0-litre and 1.5-litre turbocharged engines that will sell in our cars throughout the world. But we are also working hard on all other important technologies, concentrating especially on electrification, which will become a core Honda technology.

What kinds of electrification do you favour? Do you believe hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, such as your Clarity FCV, can ever suit the mass market?
Building zero-emission vehicles is our ultimate goal, both fuel cell vehicles and pure electric vehicles. But we still have important technical issues and infrastructure problems to overcome with both. In the meantime, we think the plug-in hybrid will become the mainstream.

How long do you believe that the plug-in hybrid electric vehicle period will last? Two or three model cycles?
This period will be highly dependent on technical progress with fuel cell vehicles, with the development of a [hydrogen] fuelling infrastructure and, of course, the cost of these things. We see the PHEV as a necessary step but not the goal.

Your rival Toyota talks of hydrogen FCVs as it once talked of its Prius hybrid, which now sells in millions. Do you feel the same?
Yes, we hope FCVs will spread around the world as quickly as possible, but to do that they must progress on two fronts — with the way electric power is used to propel cars and in finding an efficient source to generate and distribute the hydrogen.

How suitable are today’s FCVs for big-scale manufacturing?
The main component in any hydrogen fuel cell car is the stack and as far as manufacturing technology goes, I think this needs to make one more big step. Without that, it’s difficult to visualise building FCVs at a rate of one car a minute, as we do with petrol cars. So as well as the problems with infrastructure, we have this to overcome.

How long will it take to achieve these things?
We believe that by 2030 EVs and FCVs should make up about 15% of total Honda sales. By 2050, we think these cars will be dominant in the mix of models we build. That would be our ideal, at any rate, and it is what we are working towards.

What about product positioning? Does Honda have a desire to move upmarket?
We believe our products are correctly positioned. Instead of worrying about premium talk, we should focus on the customers who know us now and study how our products will bring them greater joy. As you know, we make motorcycles and power products as well as cars, which means we reached no fewer than 27 million customers last year.

In the UK, we’re always concerned about the future of Honda’s Swindon plant. Can you describe its place in your global plan?
We’ve invested €3 billion [£2.4bn] in Swindon since it began, and just signed off another €270m [£210m]. Swindon is going to be the global production hub for the Civic. We divide our global business into six regions, aiming to optimise the efficiency of all plants to complement one another, depending on the ebb and flow of demand. Within that framework, Swindon will play a very important future role in Honda’s global structure.

Source;
http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/hydrogen-fuel-cell-vehicles-need-%E2%80%98one-more-step%E2%80%99

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors forge strategic alliance; Nissan to take 34% stake in Mitsubishi Motors for 237 billion yen


YOKOHAMA and TOKYO, Japan – Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., (“Nissan”), and Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, (“MMC”) announced that they have signed a Basic Agreement today to form a far-reaching strategic alliance between the two Japanese automakers.
Following an MMC share issue, Nissan will take a 34 percent equity stake in MMC for 237 billion yen.
The strategic alliance will extend an existing partnership between Nissan and MMC, under which the two companies have jointly collaborated for the past five years.
Nissan and MMC have agreed to cooperate in areas including purchasing, common vehicle platforms, technology-sharing, joint plant utilization and growth markets.
Carlos Ghosn, chief executive and president of Nissan, said: “This is a breakthrough transaction and a win-win for both Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors. It creates a dynamic new force in the automotive industry that will cooperate intensively, and generate sizeable synergies. We will be the largest shareholder of MMC, respecting their brand, their history and boosting their growth prospects. We will support MMC as they address their challenges and welcome them as the newest member of our enlarged Alliance family.”
Osamu Masuko, chairman of the board and chief executive of MMC, said: “Through its long history of successful partnerships Nissan Motor has developed a deep knowledge of maximizing the benefits from alliance partnerships. This agreement will create long-term value needed for our two companies to progress towards the future. We will achieve long term value through deepening our strategic partnership including sharing resources such as development, as well as joint procurement.”
Under the terms of the transaction, Nissan will purchase 506.6 million newly issued MMC shares at a price of 468.52 yen per share. The price per share reflects the volume weighted average price over the period between April 21, 2016 and including May 11, 2016. Nissan will become the largest shareholder of MMC on closing.
MMC and Nissan expect Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Mitsubishi Corporation and The Bank of Tokyo – Mitsubishi UFJ to maintain a significant collective ownership stake in Mitsubishi Motors, and to support the strategic alliance.
The transaction is subject to the signing of a definitive Alliance Agreement, expected by the end of May 2016, the signing of a shareholders agreement with the current Mitsubishi Group shareholders of MMC and regulatory approvals. It is expected to close by the end of the year.
The decision by Nissan to acquire a strategic stake in MMC marks the latest expansion of its Alliance model, built around a 17-year cross shareholding arrangement with Renault. Nissan has also acquired stakes or signed partnerships with other automotive groups including Daimler, and AvtoVaz.
On closing, MMC will propose Nissan nominees as board directors in proportion to Nissan’s voting rights, including a Nissan nominee to become Chairman of the Board.

Jalopnik: Here's How The 2017 Honda Ridgeline's Trick Off-Roading Modes Work

Wow, best article I've seen that explains how Honda's AWD works....
by Andrew P. Collins of www.jalopnik.com

Nobody expected the 2017 Honda Ridgeline to be a hardcore off-roader. It simply lacks the low gearing and solid axles typically suited to crushing rocks. But Honda’s new pickup still holds its own over rough terrain, and here’s how. Call it “better off-roading through science.”

The Ridgeline is a novelty among American-market trucks because of the way it’s built. Pickup trucks and truly tough SUVs like the Jeep Wrangler, Mercedes G-Class, Toyota 4Runner and Land Cruiser are traditionally made by slapping a body and cargo box onto a solid steel frame.

Their main drive axles are robust straight-sticks. They also generally run part-time 4WD system manually engaged with a “low range” reduction gear providing tremendous power at very low speed.

The big benefits to that kind of configuration are durability and economy. You get great resistance against hitting rocks and strength for the twisty crucible of a heavy load or an off-road trail. It’s also cheaper to build trucks that way.

The Ridgeline has the opposite of all that.

A Most Unusual Pickup

Honda’s new truck is made with unibody construction. It’s not literally “one piece,” but the shell and body and undercarriage are all part of a holistic structural system. That theoretically makes the ride smoother through minimized vibration and better balance, reduces weight and generally provides a more stable driving experience.

The Ridgeline also runs an all-around independent suspension, which means each wheel can bounce up and down on its own with little driveshafts poking into them on angles as opposed to one thick bar running between the rear wheels.

Instead of a traditional 4WD kit with a mechanical locking differential, Honda uses advanced traction control and AWD to keep their new truck moving through muck. This is where things get interesting.
Honda calls its system “Intelligent Variable Torque Management” (i-VTM4) and explains it pretty concisely in the brochure:
“Honda i-VTM4 progressively distributes optimum torque between the front and rear axles and dynamically distributes engine torque between the left and right rear wheels, with the capacity to overdrive the outside rear wheel by 2.7 percent to create a yaw moment that improves cornering precision.”
Basically that means it maximizes efficiency by putting power to the wheel that can get the most motion out of it. As Honda continues:
“By rotating the outside rear wheel faster than the front wheels while cornering, Ridgeline’s AWD system uses torque vectoring to create a yaw moment to help turn the vehicle through the corner—reducing understeer and improving controllability. With cornering forces more evenly distributed between front and rear tires, overall cornering power is increased in all road conditions.”
Now how does the Ridgeline know how to do that? Its Vehicle Stability Assist (VSA) sensors and ECUs are constantly monitoring wheel speed, steering angle, how fast the steering angle is changing, lateral G-forces, vehicle yaw rate (slide speed), and hydraulic clutch pressure for the right and left rear axle shafts.

That hydraulic clutch, by the way, can differentiate power between the left and right rear wheel or lock them together for soft-sand type situations.
That host of motion-monitoring tech is on all the time, and theoretically optimizes the Ridgeline’s tractability on pretty much any reasonable road surface in “normal” mode.

The idea is to be completely automatic. As I wrote in my review of the whole truck, think of it like your iPhone– don’t worry about what’s behind the technological curtain, just enjoy the ease of use from the front end.

Driving Modes

However, Ridgelines with AWD will also get three dedicated off-road modes to somewhat override the system manually, activated from a button below the shifter. There’s one for “snow” (available on 2WD trucks) one for “mud” and one for “sand.”

Here’s how the driving parameters change in each mode:
Snow: The idea here is to minimize pedal travel and make launching easier. The throttle input via Drive By Wire (DBW) is made less aggressive, particularly where you first tip-in the pedal. That basically means you’re giving it less gas than you think.

Mud: “Mud” mode has an emphasis on maintaining momentum. Gain increases as you tip the throttle. Torque vectoring is shut off and more power is sent to the rear wheels. The transmission delays upshifts and traction control allows for more wheelspin.

Sand: Basically the same as “mud,” but with all the needles moved even more aggressively. It has maximum rear-bias (a Honda rep told me 70 percent) and an electronically “locked” rear differential.
How does it work in real-life? Pretty well, if you use it appropriately.

Stopping in soft stuff and then turning on “sand” mode made it a lot easier to self-extract than continuously plodding along with my foot on the floor. But if you think putting it in rear-biased “sand,” and turning off traction control as much as you can will turn the Ridgeline into a power-slider you’re mistaken.

Try to “drift” the truck like you would any other pickup; turn the computers off, saw the wheel and give it too much gas, and the Ridgeline just gets annoyed with you. It drags its face around like an overladen wheelbarrow.

But use the mode meant for the surface you’re driving on and the experience becomes remarkably idiot proof. This is what I meant when I described the truck as “another step closer to autonomous off-roading.”

Is Honda’s system a solution for hardcore rock crawlers? No way. But you knew that. If your main objective is to get from Point A to the end of your adventure without worrying about how to drive through mushy stuff, the Ridgeline’s tech will really boost your confidence.

Just don’t expect your newfound “skills” to work as well in a more primitive pickup.

So you can pretty much draw the same conclusion about the new Ridgeline’s AWD system as you can about the whole car: technologically impressive, overbearingly user-friendly, and aggressively practical. Which will hopefully help more people get out and into the world already!

If you’ve not sufficiently nerded out on this tech, I invite you to read the massively in-depth Powertrain press release Honda published this week. Until then, I’m just waiting on a longer-term Ridgeline rental so I can see just how far the system will take us.

Source;
http://truckyeah.jalopnik.com/heres-how-the-2017-honda-ridgelines-trick-off-roading-m-1775651261

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Car & Driver: 2017 Honda Ridgeline first drive review


 

2017 Honda Ridgeline

Honda's next crack at the civilized pickup looks more pedestrian—and promising.

by Jared Gall of www.caranddriver.com
 
First Drive Review
It’s not as if the first-generation Honda Ridgeline was ahead of its time. It made its debut in 2005, just as gas prices were transitioning from “Whoa, this is getting a little expensive,” to “WTCrap is going on here?!” Not only was it not ahead of its time, it was one of the timeliest automotive introductions in history. There could not have been a better occasion to bring out a more civilized, more efficient pickup. We named it a comparison-test winner, then ordered one for 40,000 miles of fawning.
That Honda’s reimagined pickup seated five far more comfortably than any of its crew-cab contemporaries and rode incomparably better should have kick-started a revolution. And it nearly did. In barely over a month at the beginning of 2008, Toyota and then GMC debuted similarly conceived unibody pickup concepts. GMC’s erstwhile chief told us then that he expected the entire compact-truck market to go unibody.
But after the tumult of that year, the automakers backpedaled to the safety of familiarity. Toyota continued churning out the Tacoma, General Motors kept on building the Chevrolet Colorado and the GMC Canyon, and the Ridgeline faded into obscurity, tumbling from 50,193 sales in 2006 to a low of 9759 in 2011 before getting canned after the 2014 model year.

Good Idea, Weird Idea

But the Ridgeline was a good idea—a good idea packed with weird ideas: the dual-action tailgate, the in-bed trunk, the flying-buttress cab, and the dramatically sloping edge topping each bedside. Many of those good and weird ideas remain in the new generation, but Honda reversed course significantly on the one that it most blames for the Ridgeline’s subpar sales: exterior design. What used to be adventurously overstyled now looks far more conventional, a Pilot with the roof lopped off aft of the second row.
The structure is shared with the Pilot crossover—and related to the underpinnings of the upcoming next-generation Odyssey—but nearly every major component is beefed up to handle pickup duty. Engineers tell us the front structure is 17 percent stronger than that of the Pilot, while the rear is 31 percent sturdier. The Ridgeline’s maximum payload of 1584 pounds virtually ties that of the segment-leading and recently redesigned Colorado, while its 5000-pound tow rating brings up the rear of the class. (And that’s only for all-wheel-drive models; front-drivers are rated to tow 3500 pounds.)

Engines of Change

Our experience with the nine-speed automatic transmission in the Honda Pilot hasn’t been entirely satisfactory. So we were pleased that Honda has employed a six-speed in the Ridgeline. With the nine-speed, shifts vary in quickness and smoothness as speed builds, whereas the six is consistently swift and seamless. With 280 horsepower and 262 lb-ft of torque, the 3.5-liter V-6 tops the outgoing truck’s engine by 30 horsepower and 15 lb-ft. It’s smooth and unobtrusive, a perfectly acceptable if uninspiring engine for a mid-size pickup. Honda predicts best-in-class acceleration, but we’ll see. The Ridgeline is proof that unibody doesn’t mean light as much as sturdy means heavy. The company claims—and our experience so far bears out—that the Ridgeline is stiffer than its competition, but the result is a curb weight of 4500 pounds, heavier than the GM twins, the Nissan Frontier, and the Toyota Tacoma. The last Chevy Colorado we tested was a touch lighter and carried 25 more horsepower.
Honda claims best-in-class fuel economy of 19/26 mpg city/highway and 22 combined for front-drivers and 18/25 city/highway and 21 combined for models with all-wheel drive. But that requires interpreting the class as omitting GM’s gasoline and diesel four-cylinders, both of which better the Honda V-6.

Got Baggage? Ridgeline Has Cubbies

As before, the interior of the Ridgeline positively embarrasses the competition. It feels enormous and comfortable front and rear. The flip-up rear seat remains, providing yet another yawning, weather-protected storage cavity when raised and hiding up to 2.9 cubic feet—enough for at least one golf bag—beneath seated passengers. The primary storage location, the bed, now is four inches longer than before, at 64 inches, which makes it longer than those of the crew-cab Tacoma and the short-bed Colorado but 10 inches shorter than a long-box Chevy. And the Ridgeline is the only truck in the class that can take a four-by-eight-foot sheet of building material (or a four-by-eight-foot medieval triptych) laying flat between the wheel wells. Of course, you’ll have to drop the tailgate to accommodate an eight-foot load, so invest in some good plastic wrap.
It’s also the only truck in its class with a bed that doubles as a giant speaker. In top trim levels, six so-called “exciters” are mounted behind the bedsides. If you think of these as speaker magnets that use the panels to which they’re affixed as cones, you’re pretty close. The upside is that they’re waterproof and impact proof. The downside is that the sound quality is a little low-fi, and bass is nonexistent. Which, if you have any friends who tend toward techno, is not a downside at all. But for doing what one does with a truck bed—standing around leaning on it—it’s a good means of reproducing country music. Honda expects that you’ll use the 400-watt power inverter that upper trims have in the truck bed to power a big-screen TV at tailgate parties, during which the bed speakers should wow all of your inebriated neighbors.

Different Blokes

Neither does any competitor have the Ridgeline’s clever tailgate that either drops like a regular truck’s or swings open to the driver’s side like an old-fashioned station wagon’s. Nor do they have the Ridgeline’s in-bed trunk beneath the load floor. And most important, none of them come anywhere close to the Ridgeline’s ride quality. All it takes is one bump in the Honda to realize that GMC guy from 2008 should have been right. According to Honda’s research, less than 10 percent of mid-size truck buyers ever tow more than 5000 pounds. Therefore, less than 10 percent need anything beefier than a Ridgeline.
The Honda Ridgeline enjoys a ride that no live-axle, body-on-frame vehicle could dream of. It’s all lightness and composure, carlike body control and smoothness. Here, too, the distinction between light-truck-duty Ridgeline and even-lighter-duty Pilot is appreciable. Whereas the Pilot can wallow and feel a little sloppy, the Ridgeline’s firmer tuning gives it a more controlled ride. The soft brake pedal and light steering are perhaps a little too smooth, but at least their operation is progressive. And in this segment, vague controls are a norm that only the Colorado and Canyon deviate from.
Listening to Honda’s engineering team rattle off their list of best-in-classes, we couldn’t help but detect a hint of exasperation in their voices. They might as well have said, “For the love of God, people, buy our truck!” Tech features are another area in which the Ridgeline’s more civilized roots place it ahead of the class’s top sellers. Adaptive cruise control, forward-collision warning and automatic braking, lane-departure warning and assist, and blind-spot monitors are all available. There’s also Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, but no matter how much tech you pack in, we’re a long way from accepting Honda’s touchscreen infotainment system, which is organized about as logically as the tiles on your Samsung Galaxy’s home screen when you turned it on for the first time in the store.

The March of Profits

The 2017 Ridgeline will go on sale this June. The RT, RTS, Sport, RTL, and RTL-T trim levels are offered with either front- or all-wheel drive (an $1800 upcharge), while the RTL-E and Black Edition are strictly all-wheel drive. For $30,375, the entry-level RT includes a rearview camera, keyless start, a tilting and telescoping steering column, and a seven-speaker stereo with Bluetooth, auxiliary device, and USB connectivity. At $32,415, the RTS adds keyless entry, remote start, and tri-zone climate controls. The $33,915 Sport nets black exterior trim, red footwell lighting, and gray-painted wheels.
Luxury starts creeping in with the $34,680 RTL, which gets leather seats (heated in front), with 10-way power adjustability for the driver and four-way for the passenger. An acoustic windshield cuts interior noise to let occupants hear those little motors work.
Tech begins to arrive at $36,830 in the RTL-T. That one includes an 8.0-inch touchscreen navigation/infotainment system with Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, satellite radio, a second USB input for the front and two USB charging ports for rear-seat passengers, and Honda’s LaneWatch blind-spot camera system. But the full complement of safety tech doesn’t come into play until the $42,270 RTL-E. Here, the Honda Sensing system includes adaptive cruise control, lane-departure prevention, blind-spot monitors, and automated emergency braking. Additionally, you get blue ambient lighting, a heated steering wheel, a sunroof, a power-sliding rear window, and truck-bed audio, plus eight traditional speakers and the 400-watt in-bed power inverter. Like the RTL-E, the $43,770 Black Edition is fully loaded. But it’s as sinister as a Ridgeline can look (until accessory lift kits become available), with black paint, exterior trim, and wheels as well as a black headliner and red ambient lighting.
No matter how it’s outfitted, the Ridgeline is a no-brainer of a truck: unmatched in smoothness and comfort, and full of innovation well beyond its unibody construction. It deserved far more sales than it netted in its inaugural generation. Here’s hoping this one realizes its full potential.
Source (with a bunch more photo's);