by Hans Greimel of www.autonews.com
TOKYO -- The re-engineered 2017 Accord Hybrid delivers what Honda
calls class-leading fuel economy thanks to a tweaked two-motor hybrid
system that improves power and efficiency.
The updated sedan,
which goes on sale this spring in the U.S. and Japan, gets a version of a
new gasoline-electric drivetrain that debuted in February in the
Japan-market Odyssey minivan.
The U.S. Accord Hybrid achieves EPA
fuel economy ratings of 49 mpg city/47 highway/48 combined. Honda says
that makes it the most fuel efficient midsize hybrid sedan on the road.
The
ratings are calculated under new, more stringent requirements demanded
from the 2017 model year. The ratings represent a +1 mpg city/+2
highway/+1 combined increase over the 2015 Accord Hybrid, if that car's
ratings were calculated under the same method.
Banking on better
mpg, Honda expects North America to be the top market for the renewed
Accord Hybrid, Chief Engineer Koji Ninomiya said at a May 11 briefing.
Honda expects U.S. annual sales to double their previous high of 14,000
vehicles in 2014. In Japan, by contrast, Honda expects to sell 1,800 a
year.
By cutting the size and weight of key components such as
the battery and power control unit, Honda engineers upgraded the
two-motor hybrid system previously used in the Accord Hybrid. Honda dubs
the system the Sport Hybrid i-MMD powertrain.
The new hybrid
system's power control unit and electric motors are 23 percent smaller
than those in the outgoing Accord Hybrid, Ninomiya said. But the motors
deliver more torque and horsepower. The power control unit is also 27
percent lighter.
The intelligent power unit, which includes the lithium ion battery, is 33 percent smaller and 13 percent lighter.
The
battery is supplied by Blue Energy Japan Co., a battery-making joint
venture established in 2009 between Honda and Japanese battery company
GS Yuasa Corp.
Honda consolidated production of the Accord Hybrid
at its Sayama plant north of Tokyo for the current version, Ninomiya
said. The carmaker also had been making the Accord Hybrid in the U.S.,
but Honda ended output there last summer as part of an effort to boost
factory utilization rates in Japan.
Source;
http://www.autonews.com/article/20160606/OEM04/306069953/2017-honda-accord-hybrid-gets-more-power-efficiency
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