2021 Honda Civic - Refreshingly Revolutionarily Retro

 editors images 1636073306228 CivicReviewCover featured

 

Japanese saloons tend to follow a fairly standard recipe. Designed for affordability and efficiency, these saloons seem to package a 1.5-litre engine, with a CVT transmission and front-wheel drive, all wrapped up in a mid-sized saloon shell.

The net result is a car with bulletproof reliability, sensibility, and overall frugality. Whilst these are desirable traits in any car, you get the sense that other positive traits, such as the ‘fun-to-drive’ factor, have been neglected.

 

editors images 1636073387076 CivicRear1

 

Their small engines and CVT transmissions point to their one true purpose, as a bread-and-butter car to shuttle small families going about their business. On paper, the new Honda Civic seems to very much fall into this category.

 

Do Not Judge A Book By Its Cover

 

editors images 1636073350042 CivicJapaneseSaloon

 

Honda Civics, much like its other Japanese compatriots, are ubiquitous on our roads. Whilst they possess the same basic formula as their rivals, they often promise a more youthful, and even ‘sporty’ ownership experience.

This is why previous generation Civics have always, anecdotally anyway, sold better towards a younger audience than its equivalent rival offerings. Also, Honda is the only manufacturer in this category to have created a hotted-up version of their bread-and-butter saloon. The base chassis has to therefore be competent for this souping-up to work out.

 

Times Are Changing

 

editors images 1636084448604 CivicEngine

 

This new Honda Civic’s engine is lifted almost wholesale from the previous generation. But that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It is a 1.5-litre inline four-cylinder engine with VTEC, though you are unlikely to hear the high RPM VTEC scream old Hondas are famous for.

Whilst clearly not built or marketed as an ‘eco car’, global emissions regulations mean that even Honda isn’t immune to forced induction in the pursuit of efficiency. The sound-killing turbocharger does pay dividends in other markets though, with close to 190bhp on tap.

 

editors images 1636084513163 CivicTurbo

 

However, to keep the car competitive in a local context, Honda has had to restrict its maximum output to 129bhp to keep it within the Cat A COE bracket. But more on the overall driving experience later.

 
On The Outside

There’s a sense of deja vu if you are hardcore into your Hondas. The Civic has grown physically over the years, but the current generation car really looks a lot larger than any of its predecessors. The styling very clearly apes that of the Accord, with a butch front end, and an aggressive crease in the metalwork on the side.

 

editors images 1636084206895 Civic1

 

We appreciate the effort in standardising their design language across their saloon offerings, but can’t help but feel that there is a sense that something is missing upfront. Perhaps this has something to do with the vast expanse of plastic between the grilles and the bonnet.

 

editors images 1636084313495 Civic2

 

We appreciate the effort in standardising their design language across their saloon offerings, but can’t help but feel that there is a sense that something is missing upfront. Perhaps this has something to do with the vast expanse of plastic between the grilles and the bonnet.

 

editors images 1636073437253 CivicDashboard

 

A retro-looking aluminium mesh runs the width of the dashboard and conceals the aircon vents. They can be adjusted with joystick-like attachments. It is surrounded by a gloss black plastic trim for some added retro-coolness.

A prime example of blending old and new would be their execution of the aircon switchgear. The overall design reeks of classic goodness, but with the displays and LED backlight on the centre of each knob, it really reminds you that you aren’t in any mere commuter car, but instead, is in something that celebrates a bygone era.

 

editors images 1636073505790 Dials

 

The gauge cluster consists of an analogue speedometer and a digital tachometer that mimics the former. The screen allows Honda to display a plethora of information, such as driving modes and fuel economy.

 

editors images 1636073488716 Infotainment

 

To round the interior experience off, a chunky steering wheel and soft-touch plastics across the cabin makes you feel that you are in a plush and premium car that could have come from Europe. 

Fit and finish is generally excellent, save for a squeak from the infotainment screen on rougher terrain, and door cards that are a touch flimsy.

 
The Drive

As mentioned above, Honda built the Civic not necessarily with efficiency, or with eco-consciousness in mind. No electrified, polar bear-friendly technology here, the Civic has a good old fashioned 1.5 litre, turbocharged four-banger under the bonnet.

 

editors images 1636073306228 CivicReviewCover featured

 

We need to give props to Honda’s CVT technology. Whilst other Japanese CVT transmissions ruin the driving experience, Honda’s system is very clear as to what it needs to do and when it needs to do it. 

There are pre-determined ratios for each ‘gear’, and when the throttle is depressed, it recognises you need the power in an eerily double clutch-lite way.

 

editors images 1636084573416 CivicTheDrive

 

But a sporty-feeling car isn’t just about the way it goes in a straight line. The car has to be good in the twisties too. The Civic doesn’t disappoint on this front. There's enough heft and precision in the steering rack, that we'd have no qualms saying it effectively has a MINI-lite (i.e go-kart-like!) sort of steering feel on turn-in.

We preferred the heft of the steering in eco-mode, though it did dull the throttle response and exacerbated the power issue. Sport mode does crisp up the throttle, though the steering then became too light and sharp. 

Unlike dedicated sports cars, there’s no option for a customised driving mode. We left the car in eco-mode for most of the test just for the steering feel alone.

 

editors images 1636084886819 CivicSteering

 

There’s then its suspension. It is as stiff as you can realistically go, without compromising day-to-day comfort. This does mean it isn’t as compliant as other offerings in its class. Still, it's a tradeoff that is worth it, as it offers an old world-esque charm about the way it conducts itself.

 
Overall Thoughts

The new Honda Civic has a fantastic chassis, and the lack of power doesn’t actually detract from the experience if you’re just driving it as a commuter car. 

The latter means that even if traction control is off and with liberal use of the loud pedal, you are unlikely to get wheel slip or be going quick enough to lose your licence.

 

editors images 1636084081393 CivicClosingThoughts1

 

That isn’t to say the car lacks oomph. In the lower ratios, the Civic is perfectly capable of keeping up with traffic. It’s as you are getting towards the upper ratios that you start to feel the effects of the artificial restriction.

 

editors images 1636085050967 CivicFinalThoughts

 

Throughout our test, we returned an average of 11.5km/l. This was a good mix of low-speed city driving, expressway driving, as well as stopping for photoshoots. 

We then did a more realistic, economy-type run. The aircon was still on for this - we only opted to lift-and-coast, and not accelerate at all unless we were absolutely certain we didn’t have to stomp on the brakes again.

 

editors images 1636084728775 CivicClosingThoughts2

 

The result? A little over 16km/l, which actually exceeds the rating Honda claims the car would do! For a car that really isn't economy-oriented (no hybrid or even start-stop here!), that is a really impressive figure!

A sporty driving saloon that is well made and good on petrol sans electrification - is this quite possibly what a modern petrolhead's dreams are made of?

 

Credits: Motorist Author: Low Jek Ray

Original Source: https://www.motorist.sg/article/1086/mreview-2021-honda-civic-refreshingly-revolutionarily-retro