By on October 10, 2007

cr-z2.jpgBack when Honda was looking to launch their hybrid Accord in the US, the marketing mavens noticed that the gas – electric version was the fastest arrow in the company's quiver. They proposed pitching the gas – electric Accord as a green hot rod (skinny tires and all). Honda's top brass KO'ed the idea for failing the "if it's fun, it can't be good for you" PC test. The hybrid Accord went on to sell… very poorly. So it's no surprise that the AP (via the Detroit News) reports that Honda's showing-up at the Tokyo Motor show with a hybrid sports car concept. The CR-Z not only steals a letter from Nissan and displays a taffy pull version of Volvo's corporate nose cone, it also boasts "the essence of the sports car." The man behind the design-speak, Honda engineer Tetsuji Morikawa, says Honda will sell the CR-Z "in the near future" (about the time the Chevy Volt appears, presumably). The AP reporter clearly hasn't driven the hybrid Accord; he suggests that hybrids ain't got no torque and their greasy bits preclude pistonhead packaging. "The CR-Z comes with a new hybrid system developed by Honda whose breakthroughs allowed designers to get around such restrictions." Never mind the dressed-to-impress sheetmetal, we want to know about those breakthroughs…

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7 Comments on “Honda Re-Thinks Japanese (Hybrids)...”


  • avatar
    RyanK02

    This is a car I could get excited about. The torque and mileage of a hybrid, and sheetmetal that doesn’t look like it was formed in the posterior of a quadruped. I also love the throwback CRX cues. Now, about those breakthroughs..

  • avatar

    Why not bring back the CRX name? Maybe people will remember the original could push 60mpg with a carb and wonder why this super advanced hybrid can’t get 100mpg 30 years later…

  • avatar
    quasimondo

    Bringing back old names isn’t always effective (just ask Pontiac). If Honda were to resurrect the CRX, I would want them to bring back a vehicle that’s comparable in weight to the Lotus Elise. 60 mpg with a carb is easy when the car that it’s in is light enough to be pushed with one hand.

  • avatar
    dean

    Just bring back the CRX. Dust off the old drawings and build it as-was. I’d buy one.

    Of course it would fail the crash-test requirements miserably. (I ride a motorcycle – do I really care about crash test standards? Why shouldn’t I be able to buy a car that fails to meet standards?)

  • avatar
    Redbarchetta

    Yikes, Sci-fi mole-rat. I prefer the bland Honda styling I guess as compared to this.

    But I’m interested to hear whats under the hood.

  • avatar
    Nemphre

    I’d be more interested if you could get this with a K series engine and a 6 speed. My guess is that it uses the Civic’s hybrid system.

  • avatar
    Johnster

    I don’t see why Honda can’t build a new CRX off a shortened version of the Civic chassis.

    Pop in the Civic hybrid powertrain and you’d have an oh-so-much more civilized replacement for the Insight. The 1.8 four from the regular Civic would be a great bread-and-butter engine, with the 2.0 from Si offering more performance. And then a hybrid version based on the 2.0, who knows what performance they could wring out of it?

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