Handy Overseas HR-V Needs Go to Match Show

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Honda
Spacious, clever, practical Honda HR-V cries for extra poke.

Honda’s HR-V SUV first hit the road ad a neat three-door soft-roader way back in 1998. Then it disappeared for a few years, before returning as a slightly more sober crossover. This perhaps bolder third one now takes over and follows the latest SUV craze of pretending to be a coupe. Escaping reality, so to say.

Now this is also not the US version of the HR-V. It’s the one they sell across the pond.
That’s because Honda of America believes that US owners want a bigger HR-V than this European spec car. Tso, this one is based on the Fit supermini, while the North American HR-V is built on the latest Civic platform and grows substantially in size, and slightly in price.

HR-V

Smaller in the Flesh Than it Appears in Pictures

Wide and low, our bold new Cherry Red Metallic HR-V seems smaller in the flesh than it appears in pictures. The completely reimagined HR-V benefits Honda’s contemporary minimalist design philosophy. That pops even more thanks to this Executive model’s gunmetal 18” alloys that bring a certain Touring Car racer zest to the party.

Step aboard to an upmarket, spacious, and minimalist cabin. Conventional, its pleasant and comfortable enough up front. There’s plenty legroom all round, and some cool touches. It’s a bit of a job to find the right driving position though. And while it’s chunky and pleasant to hold, the multifunction steering wheel isn’t quite as telescopic is it should be.

Moving to the back row, the versatile fold-flat and flip-up Magic Seat gains an additional two-degrees recline. That said, headroom is limited for adults back there. And the roof-mounted seat belt mount gets in the way of the right rear passenger’s head.

HR-V

HR-V Has a Spacious, Upmarket Cabin

There’s also a hands-free Power Tailgate with Walk Away Close. That automatically shuts the gate on a wide, accessible boot when proximity key moved away from the car. Don’t talk to it while it’s moving though, or it will get confused and stop. The 11.2 cu-ft boot might lack a few cubes versus some rivals, but that Magic seat certainly is a bonus.

The new Honda HR-V has a CarPlay, Auto and Bluetooth rich high resolution 8” touch-screen infotainment screen. It’s neatly integrated into the dash and backed by two USB sockets up front and two more in the back. There’s also a handy wireless charging pad ahead of a large center cubby.

Somewhat sci-fi, Honda’s ‘man-maximum, machine-minimum’ approach happily means that there are still real buttons for the all the major climate and audio controls. But many other functions are buried deep in HR-V’s private cyberspace and will only operate when the car is in park.

HR-V

Does it Have the Go to Match the Show?

The HR-V has unique Air Diffusion System climate control. L-shaped dash vents deliver a natural breeze to all aboard. Controlled by a tactile dial, this air curtain cools occupants in summer and keeps them cosy in winter. And it certainly works impressively well. All that under a Low-E glass tech panoramic roof, which reduces infrared by 75%.

Look around the steering wheel to find the start button to fire up the new HR-V’s old school 120 HP 107 lb.-ft 1.5-litre DOHC i-VTEC 4-pot gas engine. Honda calls it powerful. But that’s not quite true. In reality, this aspirated lump struggles in coastal climes. We’d hate to know how it goes at high altitudes. It turns the front wheels via a CVT ‘automatic’ gearbox.

It is reasonably efficient. But then again, several modern turbo rivals will handily beat this HR-V’s 39 mpg consumption. Pity. Honda has some really cool new generation turbo engines that would make this car a class-leading all-rounder.

Honda

Honda HR-V is Big on Safety

The new HR-V has disc brakes all round. Ventilated up front, solid discs at the rear. Add Vehicle Stability, Brake, Hill Start and Brake Hold assistants, and Hill Descent Control for the first time. Just in case you ever you find yourself slipping down the hillside in your front-wheel drive HR-V.

New HR-V is also big on safety. Its Advanced Compatibility Engineering shell is packed with six front, side, and curtain airbags. Honda’s Sensing active safety suite detects road surfaces and traffic day and night. To assist with the Adaptive Cruise Control, Lane Keeping, Road Departure and Collision Mitigation Braking assistants and Auto High-Beam.

The new Honda HR-V is ordinary, but purposeful to drive. Which fits the crossover bill more than it does those bold styling suggestions. Its safety nannies can get your goat because they get in the way of spirited driving and are too difficult to extinguish. But it’s pleasant in the road.

HR-V

Just One Small Step Away from Greatness

Spacious, comfy, clever, and practical, this bold coupe-like Honda HR-V certainly does hark back to its surfer-cool roots. It packs many a thoughtful touch, without any undue gimmicks, in a mature, sensible, and decent all-round package.

However, as bold, functional, and practical as it is, this local model suffers from a lack of grunt and sophistication under the bonnet. Not that there’s much wrong with that. But it does lack versus some snappier, sharper tacks in this market box, even if this Honda beats them is a good many other areas.

 

ROAD TESTED: Honda HR-V 1.5 Executive
Engine: 120 HP 107 lb.-ft 1.5-litre gas I4 
Drive: CVT FWD
TESTED: 
0-40 km/h:                        5.54 sec
0-100 mph:                       11.62 sec 
0-100 mph:                       34.38 sec 
¼-mile:                  18.3 sec @ 83 mph 
50-75 mph:                        8.11 sec
75-200 mph:                      16.90 sec 
CLAIMED: 
VMax:                              110 mph 
Fuel:                               39 mpg 
RATED:                                   7


Photography: Giordano Lupini

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Once a handy engine and chassis tuner, and a combative racer and rally driver, Michele took up the pen to express his passion for cars, racing and motoring over 30 years ago. He published South Africa’s go-to enthusiast motor magazines Cars in Action and Bakkie — some say against all odds — for a quarter century. In that time, Michele had a hand in nurturing many of South Africa's motoring media leaders. Today Michele keeps himself busy with his a range of international motoring media duties alongside his own theauto.page. And a little racing on the side.


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