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Insight to 2010 Honda Insight

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Looking towards the future means looking for something bigger, better, bolder and beautiful. We’re thinking innovation, creativity and safety, while combining the solidarity of the past, the technology of the today and the dreams for the future.

The 2010 Honda Insight is everything you’re looking for.

2010 Honda Insight Hybrid: Innovation, Technology and Style combined!

Efficiency

What does efficiency and innovation combine to make? The ECON Button! The ECON button is a genius little innovation that, with just a press of a button, will help you become a more environmentally-conscious driver. Push the button and the Insight instantly goes into ‘super economy’ mode – you’ll use less gas, get smoother acceleration, increase regenerative charging and even use less energy for air conditioning!

The 2010 Honda Insight is equipped with innovations to help you monitor your driving as well, by providing you with ECO scores when you turn off you car, and measuring your driving against Eco stages, which are determined by factors such as your braking and acceleration, vehicle speed, ECON button use and idle duration.

Performance

The Insight is decades of research and testing combined to keep your future needs in mind. The heart of the Insight is the i-VTEC engine, which combines fuel efficiency and light-weight qualities to give you smooth driving.

Honda's Integrated Motor Assist - this electric motor acts as a generator to charge your car while driving.

Honda's Integrated Motor Assist - this electric motor acts as a generator to charge your car while driving.

The Integrated Motor Assist, or IMA, works with the engine to contribute up to 13hp. Further, the IMA acts as a generator which captures kinetic energy to recharge your battery while you drive!

The insight drives so smoothly…you won’t even know you are driving a hybrid!

 

 

 Safety

Beauty doesn’t mean you have to sacrifice on safety. The 2010 Honda insight is not only equipped with dual-stage frontal airbags, but features Advanced Compatibility Engineering, in which the body structure of the car is designed to be more protective to you and your passengers, even in collisions with vehicles of differing ride heights. The Insight is also equipped with an Anti-lock brake system (ABS) and an electronic brake distribution which work together to prevent wheel lock-up which sophisticated sensors to enhance stopping. The Insight features safety while staying focused on efficiency and affordability.

Entertainment

The Insight is one of the most affordable hybrid, but don’t worry, you’ll get your fair share of luxury! This hybrid is equipped with a 160-watt AM/FM/CD system, with an auxiliary input for an MP3 player. You can control your MP3 player right from your steering wheel!

Bluetooth is also present in this fabulous car, to ensure you don’t ever have to talk with your eyes off the road or your hands off the wheel. The voice-recognition system allows you to make and receive calls safely while driving. 

Honda Insight Dashboard, fully equipped with Eco guide and ambient meter to ensure environmentally-conscious driving.

Honda Insight Dashboard, fully equipped with Eco guide and ambient meter to ensure environmentally-conscious driving.

Design

 The 2010 Honda Insight has more attractive credentials than just its environmental features. The design of the car is both sleek and aerodynamic, with an interior to fit five individuals comfortably. The driver is provided with a clear perspective of the two-tiered instrumental panel so that you have clear access to your music, navigation system and the road.

2010 Honda Insight

While shedding light on the Insight, we say this: the insight is a combination of innovative technology which works to protect the environment. It combines the best from the past and the present to provide leading car design and safety for the future.

Need more information? Check out –> http://www.hondabluesky.ca/

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(Insight)`Possibly worst new car money can buy’

( U.K columnist hates Insight’s CVT gearbox, and says Honda and the greenies get it all wrong)

OXFORD, U.K.–Much has been written about the Insight, Honda’s new low-priced hybrid. We’ve been told how much carbon dioxide it produces, how its dashboard encourages frugal driving by glowing green when you’re easy on the throttle and how it is the dawn of all things. The beginning of days.

So far, though, you have not been told what it’s like as a car; as a tool for moving you, your friends and your things from place to place.

So here goes. It’s terrible. Biblically terrible. Possibly the worst new car money can buy. It’s the first car I’ve ever considered crashing into a tree, on purpose, so I didn’t have to drive it any more.

The biggest problem, and it’s taken me a while to work this out, because all the other problems are so vast and so cancerous, is the gearbox. For reasons known only to itself, Honda has fitted the Insight with something called continuously variable transmission (CVT).

It doesn’t work. Put your foot down in a normal car and the revs climb in tandem with the speed. In a CVT car, the revs spool up quickly and then the speed rises to match them. It feels like the clutch is slipping. It feels horrid.

And the sound is worse. The Honda’s gas engine is a much-shaved, built-for-economy, low-friction 1.3L that, at full chat, makes a noise worse than someone else’s crying baby on an airplane. It’s worse than the sound of your parachute failing to open. Really, to get an idea of how awful it is, you’d have to sit a dog on a ham slicer.

So you’re sitting there with the engine screaming its head off, and your ears bleeding, and you’re doing only 37 km/h because that’s about the top speed, and you’re thinking things can’t get any worse, and then they do because you run over a small piece of grit.

Because the Honda has two motors, one that runs on gas and one that runs on batteries, it is more expensive to make than a car that has one. But since the whole point of this car is that it could be sold for less than Toyota’s Smugmobile, the engineers have plainly peeled the suspension components to the bone. The result is a ride that beggars belief.

There’s more. Normally, Hondas feel as though they have been screwed together by eye surgeons. This one, however, feels as if it’s been made from steel so thin you could read through it. And the seats, finished in pleblon, are designed specifically, it seems, to ruin your skeleton. This is hairy-shirted eco-ism at its very worst.

However, as a result of all this, prices start at $23,900 – that’s $5,300 or so less than the cost of the Prius. But at least with the Toyota there is no indication you’re driving a car with two motors. In the Insight, you are constantly reminded, not only by the idiotic dashboard, which shows leaves growing on a tree when you ease off the throttle (pass the sick bucket), but by the noise and the ride and the seats. And also by the hybrid system Honda has fitted.

In a Prius the electric motor can, though almost never does, power the car on its own. In the Honda the electric motor is designed to “assist” the gas engine, providing more get-up-and-go when the need arises. The net result is this: in a Prius, the transformation from electricity to gas is subtle. In the Honda, there are all sorts of jerks and clunks.

And for what? For sure, you could sip less than 5 L/100 km if you were careful. And that’s not bad for a spacious five-door hatchback. But for the same money, you could have a Golf diesel, which is even more economical. And hasn’t been built out of rice paper to keep costs down.

Of course, I am well aware that there are a great many people in the world who believe that the burning of fossil fuels will one day kill us all and that something must be done.

They will see the poor ride, the woeful performance, the awful noise and the spine-bending seats as a price worth paying. But what about the eco-cost of building the car in the first place?

Honda has produced a graph that seems to suggest that making the Insight is only marginally more energy-hungry than making a normal car. And that the slight difference is more than negated by the resultant fuel savings.

Hmmm. I would not accuse Honda of telling whoppers. That would be foolish. But I cannot see how making a car with two motors costs the same in terms of resources as making a car with one.

The nickel for the battery has to come from somewhere. Canada, usually. It has to be shipped to Japan, not on a sailing boat, I presume. And then it must be converted, not in a treehouse, into a battery, and then that battery must be transported, not on an ox cart, to the Insight plant in Suzuka. And then the finished car has to be shipped, not by Thor Heyerdahl, back to you in Canada, where it can be transported, not by wind, to the home of a man with a beard who thinks he’s doing the world a favour.

Why doesn’t he just buy a Civic, which is made from local components, just down the road? No, really – weird-beards buy locally produced meat and vegetables for eco-reasons. So why not apply the same logic to cars?

At this point you will probably dismiss what I’m saying as the rantings of a petrolhead, and think that I have my head in the sand.

That’s not true. While I’ve yet to be convinced man’s contribution to the planet’s greenhouse gases affects the climate, I do recognize that oil is a finite resource and that as it becomes more scarce, the political ramifications could be dire. I, therefore, absolutely accept the urgent need for alternative fuels.

But let me be clear that hybrid cars are designed solely to milk the guilt genes of the smug and the foolish. And that pure electric cars, such as the G-Wiz and the Tesla, don’t work at all because they are just too inconvenient.

Since about 1917, the car industry has not had a technological revolution – unlike, say, the world of communications or film. There has never been a 3G moment at Peugeot nor a need to embrace DVD at Nissan. There has been no VHS/Betamax battle between Fiat and Renault.

Carmakers, then, have had nearly a century to develop and hone the principles of suck, squeeze, bang, blow. And they have become very good at it.

But now comes the need to throw away the heart of the beast, the internal combustion engine, and start again. And here’s the kicker. That’s exactly what Honda has done with its other eco-car, the Clarity. Instead of using a gas engine to charge the electric motor’s batteries, as happens on the Insight, the Clarity uses hydrogen: the most abundant gas in the universe.

The only waste product is water. The car feels like a car. And, best of all, the power it produces is so enormous, it can be used by day to get you to 190 km/h and by night to run all the electrical appliances in your house. This is not science fiction. There is a fleet of Claritys running around California right now.

There are problems to be overcome. Making hydrogen is a fuel-eating process, and there is no infrastructure. But Alexander Fleming didn’t look at his mould and think, “Oh dear, no one will put that in their mouth,” and give up.

I would have hoped, therefore, that Honda had diverted every penny it had into making hydrogen work rather than stopping off on the way to make a half-arsed halfway house for fools and madmen.

The only hope I have is that there are enough fools and madmen out there who will buy an Insight to look sanctimonious outside the school gates. And that the cash this generates can be used to develop something a bit more constructive.

Jeremy Clarkson, Toronto Star

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What do you think? Leave us comment!

 

Looking towards the future means looking for something bigger, better, bolder and beautiful. We’re thinking innovation,
creativity and safety, while combining the solidarity of the past, the technology of the today and the dreams for the future.
 

 

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  • torontohondaguru: Really? Hmm, thats interesting. I wonder why the branding is so forceful ... maybe luxury models do better when there is no connected association?
  • Stacey Ison (Vice President Toronto Honda): Did you know that Nissan and Infinity are connected as well?
  • torontohondaguru: Its interesting, but for a long time, I had no idea Toyota and Lexus were connected, or Acura and Civic. In my opinion they are promoted seperately en

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