Montreal Gazette

2018 HONDA ACCORD DOES IT RIGHT

Redesigned, 10th-generation Accord easily the best family sedan from Honda in years

- DAVID BOOTH Driving.ca

One of the backhanded compliment­s often foisted on mainstream automobile­s, like Honda’s Accord, is that they’re so reliable they’re boring, the implicatio­n being that dependabil­ity must, perforce, always preclude passion. Well, I’ve got some news for you. My dear old dad still speaks well oft his long-gone 1990 Accord EX-R.

Yes, it was reliable — in its 15-year tenure in the Booth family, it needed but an oxygen sensor and a CV joint to run as smooth as a top for 200,000+ kilometres — but that alone cannot account for the soft spot he retains for the boxy little Honda almost two decades since it passed from his hands to my son’s.

My dad also loved the little white sedan because it was sophistica­ted — it came with an audio equalizer — stylish and he found it stupendous­ly luxurious.

Which means that he’d love the new 2018 Accord 1.5T Touring. For one thing, that seemingly too small engine — only 1.5 litres in a car that weighs about 1,500 kilograms — is plenty peppy. It is turbocharg­ed and produces 192 horsepower and 192 pound-feet of torque. It’s an efficient little beast, especially mated to the continuous­ly variable transmissi­on, stout enough for more than ample accelerati­on. It feels noticeably more powerful than the normally aspirated, 2.4-L four-cylinder it replaces, and is in a completely different league than the little 2.2-L four that powered my dad’s old Accord.

Yet, it’s frugal enough to all but match Transport Canada’s fuel economy rating. It is rated at 6.8 L/100 km, and I achieved 6.9 on the highway despite my 120 km/h cruising speed. I couldn’t match the overall 7.6 L/100 km for combined urban and rural driving, but the car’s actual 8.2 overall average was nonetheles­s not too darn shabby.

There’s also that solidity of chassis that dad liked so much after his previously steady diet of soggy American sedans. An excellent combinatio­n of control and compliance, there’s more than enough roadholdin­g for the intended purpose — a family sedan — and more importantl­y provides a ride not far removed from, say, an Audi A4.

The last item that would impress dear old dad is that the new Accord, in Touring guise at least, really is a cut above. Leather abounds and the top-of-theline model is fairly loaded with gadgets and goodies. First among those has to be the huge screen for the infotainme­nt system. Though not fully emulating a convention­al tablet, it is iconbased and a doddle to revise. Other highlights include a TFT-screen gauge set that looks surprising­ly analogue and a bunch of on-board safety gear such as blind-spot monitoring, lane-departure mitigation and adaptive cruise control. Downsides are few. The heated steering wheel speaks to a fear of a McDonald’s-like scaldingst­eering wheel lawsuit. Seriously, even with bare hands, I could feel little warmth. Those of especially long legs might find there’s not enough front-seat travel. As well, the aforementi­oned lane-departure system doesn’t feel particular­ly sophistica­ted, wandering between the white lane lines like a drunk doing the perp march. Ditto the adaptive cruise control that performs a complete capitulati­on every time a car cuts into your lane while the computer is monitoring your speed. At least the Touring model’s adaptive cruise control has a Low-Speed Follow function that lets it crawl through traffic without the driver having to prompt it.

However, my biggest question were I considerin­g an Accord, especially the Touring model, would be whether to move up to the top-of-the-line 2.0-L version, which replaces the previous generation’s 3.5-L V-6. Like the 1.5 L, it is turbocharg­ed, and it boasts 252 hp and 273 lb-ft of torque. But that’s not the reason I’d opt for the bigger engine; I was plenty satisfied with the 1.5T. Rather, it is the 10-speed automatic transmissi­on to which the bigger engine is connected that I covet. The CVT works well in moderate driving and in its Econ mode, but in Sport mode or when accelerati­ng hard onto an onramp, it causes the transmissi­on to drone on a little.

In the end, though, CVT and other minor foibles notwithsta­nding, the 2018 Accord is another area where my dad and I would now see eye-to-eye. He no longer drives, so I will take up the mantle of Accord worship in his stead. The 2018 is the best Accord in many a year, perhaps even since that fourth-generation beauty my dad loved so. Certainly, it’s head and shoulders above Honda’s most recent efforts.

As to whether it’s the best family sedan in the segment is a contention the Toyota Camry would forcefully dispute. Nonetheles­s, the new Accord is the best family sedan from Honda in more than a decade. Overview: A vastly improved Honda Accord Pros: Turbocharg­ed engine, interestin­g exterior, stylish interior, excellent chassis Cons: Overly cautious driver’s aids, wimpy steering-wheel heater Value for money: Good

What I would change: Healthier steering wheel and seat warmers

How I would spec it: Despite the adequacy of the base 1.5-L engine, I think I’d still move up to the 2.0 L just to get the more traditiona­l 10-speed automatic transmissi­on

 ?? CHRIS BALCERAK/DRIVING ?? The 2018 Honda Accord 1.5T blends a stylish interior with an eye-catching exterior on an excellent chassis.
CHRIS BALCERAK/DRIVING The 2018 Honda Accord 1.5T blends a stylish interior with an eye-catching exterior on an excellent chassis.
 ??  ?? For the full rating breakdown, visit Driving.ca
For the full rating breakdown, visit Driving.ca

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