Showing posts with label better. Show all posts
Showing posts with label better. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2015

2015 Honda CR V Touring Review It Does Most Things Better

2015 Honda CR-V Touring rear Tufts Cove
The Honda CR-V was Canada’s best-selling SUV in each of 2015s final two months, just as it was in America in seven of the last eight years. (We’re using the term “SUV” loosely here in order to avoid constant delineation.) Canadian and U.S. CR-V volume increased to previously unseen levels in 2014.

American Honda reported 335,019 CR-V sales last year, 28,807 more than Ford managed with its second-best-selling Escape. Honda Canadas CR-V volume was up 9% to 37,684 units.

THE GOOD
• Bigger inside than outside

• LKAS is a wonder
• Nimble but stable
• Ride quality
• 185-bhp is sufficient
THE BAD
• Aggravating touchscreen
• Irritating buttons beside touchscreen
• Not a looker
• Real-world fuel consumption
• More power wouldnt go amiss

North American consumers look favourably upon Honda’s reliability reputation. The CR-V is also a long-established nameplate in a relatively fresh category. But there must be numerous other reasons for the CR-V’s wild success.

More specifically, there must have been numerous other reasons at the tail end of 2014, as a refreshed 2015 CR-V like the one Honda Canada sent to our driveway began to outsell not only all other SUVs with increasingly large margins but also all passenger cars, as well.

Clearly tens of thousands of consumers are willing to overlook the CR-V’s faults, few though there may be. 
2015 Honda CR-V Touring front Tufts Cove
2015 HONDA CR-V TOURING
Base Price: $ $27,785 *
As-Tested Price: $ 38,335 *
Engine: 2.4L DOHC 16-valve I-4
Transmission: continuously variable
Horsepower: 185 @ 6400 rpm
Torque: 181 lb-ft @ 3900 rpm
Curb Weight: 3642 pounds
Drive Type: all-wheel-drive
Length: 179.4 inches
Width: 71.7 inches
Height: 65.0 inches
Wheelbase: 103.1 inches
Tires: Michelin X-Ice
Tire Size: 225/60R18
Passenger Volume: 2873 litres
Cargo Volume: 1054 litres
Max. Cargo Volume: 2007 litres
EPA City: 26 mpg
EPA Hwy: 33 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 9.1 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 7.2 L/100km
Observed: 23.8 mpg
Observed: 9.9 L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $1795 in fees.
AWD CR-Vs start at $30,145.
MPG fuel economy ratings from the
Environmental Protection Agency.
L/100km ratings from the Canadian
Office of Energy Efficiencys new
5-cycle testing for MY2015 vehicles.
The CR-V’s new continuously variable transmission, implemented surprisingly well alongside the a 185-horsepower 2.4L four-cylinder, periodically allows revs to fall so low that an unnecessary amount of vibration enters the cabin. 

This Touring-trim CR-V is the full meal deal, but it lacks any form of power adjustment for the passenger seat. 

The interior, particularly at this lofty CAD $38,335 price tag, is mostly inoffensive but offers luxury only in terms of equipment, not in its materials or design flair. And the interior can certainly offend, with Lilliputian buttons accompanying a touchscreen which failed on all but one occasion to come to life before the five-minute mark of a morning drive. 

Speaking subjectively, the CR-V is not the prettiest girl next door – Paris’s Place de lÉtoile doesn’t have as many intersecting lines as the CR-V’s front end. We’re also left to wonder why Honda hires wheel designers whose efforts wouldn’t be good enough for Pontiac circa 2001.

However, the CR-V is near perfect where it counts. It’s less than 180 inches long but packs 2873 litres of completely usable passenger volume into the tidy package. Rear seat passengers enjoy a flat floor that makes three-across trips a distinct possibility. Rear seats up, the CR-V provides 1054 litres of cargo capacity. The Ford Escape is one inch shorter than the CR-V, bumper to bumper, but offers 8% less cargo volume, 3% less passenger space, and 4% less rear legroom. It feels like the dimensional differences are more distinguishable than those figures suggest, especially aft of the rear seat.

For young families who might have sought out an Accord in a previous era, the 2015 CR-V’s space efficiency, easily accessed seat-folding levers, low load floor, and semi-lofty ride height form a winning ticket.
2015 Honda CR-V Touring interior
Fortunately, it drives nicely, as well. There is nothing sporty here, although the steering is well weighted and the brake pedal is nicely modulated. The CR-V accelerates more swiftly than you might expect for a 3642-pound high-rider: Car & Driver says 0-60 mph takes 8.2 seconds. Especially as revs rise to a more Honda-like level, the CR-V doesn’t require more power, but don’t take that as an indication that the CR-V will adequately satisfy your urge to scoot up off-ramps like your fellow hockey parents in their Santa Fe Sport 2.0Ts and Forester XTs. It won’t.

The CR-V may not ride quite as sweetly for MY2015 as it did before the refresh, but overall refinement is still the name of its game. Of greater consequence is the fact that the 2015 CR-V continues to marry subdued ride quality to a nimble chassis. Honda engineers crafted an SUV that feels decidedly compact in routine driving and one which remains rather level-headed through corners, seemingly treading the middle ground between the mature Nissan Rogue and the enthusiastic Mazda CX-5.


• Historical Monthly & Yearly Honda CR-V Sales Figures
• 2013 Toyota RAV4 LE Driven Review
• 2014 Honda Accord Hybrid Driven Review
• 2014 Mazda CX-5 GT Driven Review
• 2014 Nissan Rogue SL Driven Review


2015 CR-V Tourings include most of the features from Honda’s storehouse: all-wheel-drive, navigation, LaneWatch (right side only, of course), keyless access, perforated leather seating, power tailgate, sunroof, and a bevy of safety abbreviations from ABS, EBD, and VSE to CMBS, ACC, LDW, and LKAS, the final being a semi-autonomous steering function that helps to reduce driver fatigue on long highway stints.
2015 Honda CR-V Touring touchscreen
CR-Vs start at $27,785 in LX trim. All-wheel-drive adds $2360 to the price of an LX-trim CR-V but power is sent to all four wheels in each of the upper trim levels: the $31,685 SE, $33,685 EX, $35,685 EX-L, and the $38,335 Touring. We averaged 9.9 L/100km over the course of a week with the CR-V Touring AWD, which tips the scales with 145 extra pounds compared with the base all-wheel-drive CR-V. Cold temperatures, winter tires, frequent snow coverage, and a disproportionate amount of time spent in the city caused the CR-V’s observed fuel economy to come up short of the official Natural Resources Canadas 9.1 L/100km city rating.

The CR-V is certainly not the most exciting small utility vehicle on the market today, nor is it the only one capable of cramming a shocking amount of humankind and stuff into a small space. But it does most things better than most of its potential competitors. There are a couple of niggling issues Honda could quickly resolve, but clearly no issues Honda needs to resolve in order to keep the CR-V at the top of the sales leaderboard.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

2015 Chrysler 200S AWD Review You Could Have Made Me Better

2015 Chrysler 200S AWD blue
I just spent a week with the all-new, all-wheel-drive 2015 Chrysler 200 S. It was one of Chrysler Canada’s press cars, priced at $38,815.

Yes, $38,815. And that’s not the top of the range. I know this because there are three conspicuous, dare I say ostentatious, blanked-out switches placed on the steering wheel, an owner’s most frequent touch point.

THE GOOD
• Cabin layout

• Lots of power
• Big trunk
• Tasty styling
• You wont pay this much
THE BAD
• 9-speed isnt fully baked
• Its a very heavy car
• Rear seat isnt that big
• Interior mish-mash
• Major league price tag

The steering wheel is what you grasp for the duration of your 35-minute commute each morning after you’re done grasping a toothbrush, a spouse, a child, a bagel, and a set of keys. It’s an intimate connection, even private.

You don’t allow anybody else to hold your toothbrush, your bagel, your spouse, or your child first thing in the morning. Similarly, you don’t hand your keys off to a random acquaintance and say, “Yeah, take’er out for a rip.”

You know the stitching of the heated steering wheel’s leather. You know how to find the big cruise control buttons without looking. You and the steering wheel share secrets, like the location of volume controls on the back of the middle spoke. The Bluetooth hang-up button, well, it doth fall readily to thy hand.

Yet all the while, the steering wheel in this rather costly Chrysler 200 tells you, nay, it screams at you: “I could have been better! You could have made me better! Am I not worth it? Did you need to order an unfulfilled version of myself?” And all the while, you’re left to stare at three pieces of glaring evidence every single day. After dropping $38,815 on a Chrysler 200, you’re still $2350 shy of possessing a fully equipped Chrysler 200.

Oh, who are we kidding? You didn’t spend $38,815 on a new Chrysler 200.

2015 models have only recently arrived at dealers, yet my local Chrysler store has 200s prominently parked out front with “Save $4000” stickers plastered across the doors and updated stickers on the windshield declaring $5295 discounts. 
2015 Chrysler 200S steering wheel
All Photo Credits: Timothy Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
Click Any Of These Images For A Larger Slideshow View
Even with an eye-catching design and a vastly improved interior, a new midsize car trades on the reputation of its predecessor, which in this case was too strongly connected to a product line Chrysler would probably prefer to forget. Thus, Chrysler dealers already know consumers aren’t going to pay top dollar for this car, even if it is now a worthy contender.

2015 CHRYSLER 200 S AWD
Base Price * (CAD): $33,290
As-Tested Price * (CAD): $38,815
Engine: 3.6L DOHC 24-valve V6
Transmission: 9-speed automatic
Horsepower: 295 @ 6350 rpm
Torque: 262 lb-ft @ 4250 rpm
Curb Weight: 3795 pounds
Drive Type: all-wheel-drive
Length: 192.3 inches
Width: 73.6 inches
Height: 58.7 inches
Wheelbase: 108.0 inches
Tires: Nexen Classe Premiere CP671
Tire Size: 235/40R19
Passenger Volume: 2871 litres
Cargo Volume: 453 litres
EPA City: 18 mpg
EPA Highway: 29 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 12.8 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 8.1 L/100km
Observed: 21.0 mpg
Observed: 11.2 L/100km
* includes $1795 of fees
200 base price: $24,290
200 V6 base price: $28,790
200 V6 AWD base price: $33,290
MPG fuel economy ratings from the
Environmental Protection Agency. 
L/100km ratings from the Canadian
Office of Energy Efficiencys new
5-cycle testing for MY2015 vehicles.
Pricing aside, the blanked-out switches can only be an affront because of their high-profile positioning. Many more costly cars feature such buttons, as well, only with less distinguished placement. The only other reason the would-be adaptive cruise control blanked-out switches merit a mention is because of the way they symbolize the 200’s indecisive interior.

At $38,815, the 200 S better be slick inside, and for the most part it is. But the cupholder slider which covers a massive bin between the front seats jiggles about in its tracks. The blue “wood” applique strewn across the dashboard is ghastly. 

The upgraded Alpine audio system can’t cope with moderate increases in volume and caused many an interior part to quiver long before maximum output was called upon. It is not at all about that bass.

In a mostly hushed cabin, the amount of wind noise when the panoramic roof’s sunshade is open is shocking. The passenger’s seat is not powered. Shift paddles which grow out of volume and tune buttons on the back of the steering wheel are a bit dorky.  

Rear seat space is not midsize-like, and the bench would still be deemed uncomfortable even if there was real Camryesque capacity. 

Visibility for the driver is severely impinged upon by a thick, steeply raked A-pillar and the coupe-like roofline all around. Likewise, the trunk’s 453 litres of capacity is crowded by long goosenecks.

Ergonomically, however, the quad-knob layout liberally spread out beside the driver for volume, scrolling, climate, and gear selection is ideal. UConnect is brilliantly straightforward, faster than most equivalent systems, and its touch screen never felt too far away. As much as I want to remain true to convention and call for a traditional gear lever, this third meeting with a rotary dial shifter made for three occasions in which it felt perfectly natural.

There are niggling little nitpicky issues inside the Chrysler 200, but poor visibility and a somewhat tight rear seat are the only characteristics capable of overriding the elegant simplicity encountered by the driver via the oft-used infotainment unit.
2015 Chrysler 200S AWD blue
In this S-is-for-Sport variant of the new 200, ride quality remains comfortable despite low-profile 19-inch rubber. The 200 S is firm on 235/40R19s, but it’s not busy or crashy. The composed ride doesn’t really pay dividends in terms of outright handling ability, as the all-wheel-drive 200 is simply too heavy for athletics. Chrysler’s all-wheel-drive system has a the ability to disconnect the rear axle, but because it can’t discard and recoup the rear axle on a whim, it adds 322 pounds to a V6-engined 200 S.

At 3795 pounds before options – and before adding you, you bagel-eating glutton, you – the 200 S AWD weighs about 100 pounds more than the last all-wheel-drive midsize sedan I drove, Subaru’s Legacy 3.6R. (The weight gap between the 200 S AWD and Ford’s lighter Fusion Titanium AWD is greater.)
2015 Chrysler 200S AWD interior
As a result of all that girth, 295 horsepower doesn’t feel quite like 295 horsepower. The 200 is undoubtedly a quick car, but it takes some prodding. Toss the 200 into a corner with its weighty but slow steering and it remains nicely level, but it’s not terribly willing to quickly change direction again. Powering out of the corner with haste will require a firm press of the throttle, though, and you might see a kickdown of two or three gears when a single kickdown would have been effective. (At least the intense growl of the engine is musical.)

Indeed, the nine-speed automatic operates much more like it ought to when you demand quicker progress from the car. Meandering about, this 200 was of a mind to shift economically but couldn’t make those shifts happen with alacrity, hanging on to revs before finally falling into second, then third, then fourth. There’s some hunting around in the higher register, though you’ll rarely, if ever, see ninth. But that hunting is more evident in the digital read-out than in sound or sensation. The nine-speed is certainly not what I’d call a good transmission, but those less sensitive to the differences between a great modern eight-speed like ZF’s (or the Ram pickup’s) and this nine-speed likely won’t be bothered.


• Historical Monthly & Yearly Chrysler 200 Sales Figures
• 2014 Ram 1500 Laramie Crew Cab 4x4 EcoDiesel Driven Review
• 2013 Ford Fusion SE EcoBoost AWD Driven Review
• 2015 Subaru Legacy 3.6R Limited Driven Review


In our house, the nine-speed’s suboptimal shift quality couldn’t make up for the 3.6L’s appeal. The poor visibility detracts from what could be an otherwise pleasant interior. At 21 miles per gallon in our mix of city and highway driving, the 200 wasn’t exactly thrifty, either.

Still, going back a number of months, few cars in the affordable realm have appealed to my neighbours and friends as much as this 200. They were enticed by an attractive car which, with a boatload of features and space superior to that of their current compact, can be had at an alluring price they saw on the back of the newspaper they were perusing while waiting to get their flu shot.
2015 Chrysler 200S rotary dial shifter
With a front-wheel-drive V6 S adding just $2000 to the price of a four-cylinder S, it’s easy to see why they could be seduced.

All-wheel-drive, on the other hand, is only available with the V6 and adds $2500 to the cost of a 200 S V6 or 200 C V6. The subsequent weight increase isn’t worth it when good winter tires will accomplish more.