Thursday, February 8, 2007

Our new Honda Odyssey

So I know what you're saying, the nonexistent amount of people that are probably even reading this blog, ... a minivan? Yes, a minivan. I tried and tried and tried to convince my 58 year-old dad to get something other than a minivan to replace his minivan. He grew up in the hot-rod age for one thing and he is too old for a minivan. Sure there's the utilitarian aspect of being able to haul 7 or 8 people one day, stuff the next day, while still getting 20+ mpg, but come on...if you're gonna throw caution and responsibility to the wind, this is the age you do it. Don't get a minivan. But, to no avail, he got one. But, if you have to get a minivan ... if you can't live without one, the Honda is the one to get. First impressions, it's roomy, it's well put together, it will store almost anything you could possibly have in a minivan and it does it with low emissions and great gas mileage for a 4000 lb behemoth of a car. When you stack it up against the competition, there really is no other choice. For comparison's sake, you have the Toyota Sienna. Sure it's nice, and Toyota is just as reliable as Honda, but it's top of the line is 7 grand more than the Honda top of the line. It has less room...at least it feels like it does to a 6 foot 4 guy like me, and it just doesn't look as cool as the Honda. The Nissan just plain looks weird. It's plasticky, dull on the inside, and too spaceship on the outside. Outside of the big 3 of Japan. There isn't much to choose from.

Back to the Honda. Now that I have driven one and my family now owns one, I can see what so many other minivan buyers have seen in this superbly well-thought-out van. The slightly boxy space of the cabin is completely functional for creating a very roomy traveling space with ample head and shoulder room even in the back seats, great knee room almost everywhere, and enough room to store things under the floor and in every nook and cranny available. This situation is sweetened with available Honda Satellite linked Navigation which is actually quite useful for settling the decision of where we go to dinner. Just ask the navi to sort out restaurants in ascending order of distance and go through until you find the one. Then it will take you there. If your choice is Zagat rated, it will give you its rating as well as the average meal price. The menu is intuitive and well laid out for easy use for even the most unsavvy of users. The selling point for us was that it included a backup camera which saw my own feet under the bumper in a test. With all of the new grandkids running around (i.e. one grandkid) it was decided that having the camera would make it easier to not run the kid over. This also includes XM radio which makes for clear sound and an almost dizzying array of music choices available anywhere in the lower 48. Adding the DVD system in back lets rear passengers listen to a different input than the front passengers such as DVD, Radio, XM, or CD's in the changer. This is all broadcast over the two included pairs of wireless headphones and has the ability to add two more wired headsets through the headphone jacks in the driver's side rear armrest. Oh, and the pop-out remote for the system is rad, too. Fit and finish overall is spectacular. The leather is soft and supple, the seats are well-cushioned and supportive, and the panels fit with precision. All the switches have a nice, cushioned resistance to them as well as chrome accents on the climate control switches. The instrument panel lights up in a cool ambient white-blue with red needles. You feel like you are in a much more expensive car. Er...minivan.

In terms of driving characteristics, the Honda still edges out a win easily over the competition. Its double wishbone setup in front allows for a flat, steady feel in turns as well as superior absorption of bumps. Riding through the dips that used to shudder the whole chassis of our Dodge seem to disappear in the Honda. Acceleration is brisk consider the weight of the van and cruising is as quiet as they come due the Active Noise Cancellation system as well as the solid construction. In conjunction with the noise cancellation system, the engine has the option to run on 3 cylinders in light engine loads and coasting. The noise cancellation system is always on, but especially noticed when the "ECO" light comes on to indicate 3 cylinder operation. Any harshness or vibration from 3 cylinder operation is effectively drowned out. This also aids in the 18/27 EPA gas mileage ratings.

In summary, if a minivan is in your future, you can settle your curiosity with some test drives, but I feel confident that you will come back to the Odyssey.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Motor Trend Show (cont.)

Still one of the most impressive lineups of vehicles still comes from Honda. They are not necessarily knwon for producing the most exciting vehicles in terms of looks, but their flawless ergonomics, clean and simple design parameters, great gas mileage, and seemingly infallible reliability onle serve to solidify it's place in my mind as one of the greatest car makers out there. I was skeptical of the new Civic at first because its design seems too polarizing for one of their best selling cars. However, once I had a chance to familiarize myself with some of the Civic's improvements over last generation's model, I was very impressed. By upping the engine displacement by one tenth of a liter, the horsepower climbed from 127 to a respectable (at least in the economy market) 140. In addition to adding much needed power, Honda engineers also reduced the emissions, extended the gas mileage, and created a wonderfully intuitive 5-speed automatic that combines with the new engine for 30 mpg city and 40 mpg highway. This is up from the previous manual trans./1.7 liter I-4 combo of 30/38 mpg. Say what you will about driving an automatic, but this auto is a gem. I used to hate the thought of having to drive an automatic. My newer car is an auto and I appreciate it in times when I would just rather do what I'm doing (e.g. listen to the radio, drink my drink, etc.) than have to row through the gears. I appreciate a good stick as much as the next guy, but the 5-speed auto on the new Civic is a very nice alternative to the stick-shift of the enthusiast. It is compact and smoothly driven, especially when asked to perform with a quick downshift or crisp upshifts while accelerating. My favorite feature is that, at highway speeds, the automatic holds the rpms in the quieter 2400-2600 range compared to the 3000+ range of the manual. This translates into an overall more serene driving environment, something that most economy cars lack or fall short of. The engineering in this department alone is reason enough to seriously consider the Civic over any other car in its class. Even the love it/hate it two-tier dash that so many editors can't decide on really becomes a nice addition when driving at night. It makes you feel like you're on Tron, but in a good way.

Friday, January 12, 2007

The Motor Trend Auto Expo

The Motor Trend International Auto Expo brings together most of the world's automakers into one huge arena once a year in Sandy, Utah. Personally, I have looked forward to this day for a long while. I have missed it the last two years because if friends talking me into going somewhere for the Martin Luther King Day long weekend. This time, I beat the system and did my round as the kid in the candy store. Nothing is quite like getting a hands-on look at virtually all of the cars on the market. Even the cars that you pretend aren't there even though someone keeps buying them (cough cough, GM). So here we go, a play by play of my own walk through the Auto Show.

We strolled into the expo center not twenty minutes after the doors had opened. I had convinced myself that it was because I didn't want to have to deal with the crowds, but really it was because I didn't want to wait any longer than I had to. After all, I had been counting down the days for the last three weeks at least to my family and girlfriend, who were probably just as relieved that I went as I was just so they would not hear about it anymore. The transition from the 18-degree winter chill outside to the blast of leather, rubber, and the noxious mix of adhesives that make up the automotive aphrodisiac "new car smell" was a welcome experience. There's nothing like the smell of a new car. Times that by a few hundred cars and you have veritable Cheech & Chong's basement of olfactory overload. And let me tell you, it rocks.

We started in the area of the lackluster carmakers, mainly just to get them out of the way. We walked from one Chevy to the next only to be reminded that no matter how mediocre they look now, their value in six months will be even worse. Not to mention that the American automakers are in a serious funk of quality, design, and reliability. The GMC Yukon Denali stuck out first off. With a $60k plus price tag, you still get the fake wood dash and garbage can plastic trim that the bottom of the line Cobalt gets. The only variation on that product line was the aptly nicknamed "3-ton Mullet" Cadillac Escalade EXT. Which adds a couple grand to the price, but deletes the garbage can plastic. The interior accents there were tasteful and soft to the touch, but the driving position is one of my biggest gripes. High seat, low dash, big steering wheel. Then it was on to Saturn. I was pleasantly surprised by the design of the new Aura and Sky, which were nicely adorned on their interiors compared their GM brothers. Higher quality leathers and plastics made their way into both models while the majority of the Saturn lineup remains static and rather boring.

This is where we took a brief journey into the Japanese segment with the Subaru models. While I'm still unimpressed by Subaru's combination of all-wheel-drive, boxer engines, bland interiors, sub-par materials, and inflated pricing, they still look pretty nice when they're new and on the showroom floor. This was most noticeable with the Impreza WRX STi. It has zing and some real rally flavor amidst the soccer mom crowd usually buying Subaru Legacies and Foresters. This is the one niche that Subaru has nailed. Everything else I could do without.

Upon entering the huge room of the expo center, one would be hard pressed to miss the Ford setup, which was next on the route. Not only did it have the loudest microphones attached to those neat little headsets that the product people wear, but they also had an interactive talking robot that was answering questions. It's a good thing they are spending their money on that down at Ford and not on say ... making a profit! Ford is beyond deep in the financial red and this was just stupid. It will be years before they ever make another dime and they are spending money on robots. This faux pa is evident in their lineup for this year. The most tasteful and well-made thing they have going is the Fusion. Everything else seems dated, cheap, and unrefined. Ford focused (no pun intended) on making a scene, not making a splash. The recent introduction of the Ford Edge was supposed to signal a turnaround for the company, a signal of bigger and better things to come. Surprisingly, the Edge did not make its way onto the floor at the show, but somehow the robot did.

Next up on the list was Lexus. I had been eyeing so many of the new Lexus models I almost didn't know where to begin. Ok, that's a lie. I went straight to the LS. Who couldn't? By now we've all heard about the car that parks itself or the 8-speed automatic. Me? I wanted to see the steering wheel leather that had been buffed hundreds of times more than any other wheel and the headlamps fashioned after glass tumblers and the 19-speaker Mark Levinson audio system. That was just the start. The last LS was a masterpiece in my book. It was beautiful, comfortable, elegant, and just oozed quality with everything you touched, smelled, or heard. The new LS did not disappoint. In fact it outdid the previous generation by a longshot. The gauges were ultra-precise, the plastics were soft and formed perfectly around every edge. The seats were a new standard in comfort and the semi-aniline leather were as smooth as butter. The shifter, the radio controls, the HVAc controls, and the console placement seemed to be in perfect harmony with one another. I was particularly impressed with the 19-speaker audio system that had me counting again and again to really see all 19 of them. Apparently, the rear seat is the place to be. With separate midrange and tweeters in the doors, woofers behind your head and another component speaker directly above your head, there is no way to miss any of the music pumping out of them. And with an interior noise level of 63 db at 70 m.p.h., you could barely miss a pin drop let alone your favorite CD.
This attention to detail and almost overwrought sense of luxury goes well beyond the inside of the LS and extends to almost every car in the Lexus line. The cherry red pearl on the ES was striking in its depth and color as was the fit and finish of the RX, GS, IS, LX, GX, and SC.