Irish Independent

Honda’s little 1-litre petrol deserves Civic reception

- Eddie Cunningham, Wicklow

ALL through the motor industry now there is an expectatio­n that diesel is going to get a wallop in the Budget. It may not happen. But then again . . . A price increase at the pumps will shift perception of diesel cars a little more. But so many people need and use them that they will continue to buy in significan­t numbers – unless the Government does something outrageous at short notice.

A previous government did (when our car taxation basis shifted to emissions from engine size in 2008). Here’s hoping for common sense. In the longer term, there are all sorts of doomsday forecasts on diesel, with some countries undertakin­g to ban the fuel altogether within a decade or so because of perceived and proclaimed health risks in urban areas especially.

I think there is a shift, but I don’t think diesel’s days are as acutely numbered as some would have you believe.

Of course manufactur­ers have sniffed the shift for some time so now we are increasing­ly seeing the fruits of technologi­cal developmen­ts which more equally pit petrol engines against diesel.

As it happens I drove two of the new breed of petrol this week: a 1-litre in the Honda Civic and a 1-litre in the Audi Q2 (see Page 3).

This was my first taste of the Civic in Ireland – I drove it extensivel­y abroad.

I’m glad to report my initial judgment hasn’t changed much.

It’s even better looking from behind than I thought, although I’ve heard criticism of the design being too fussy. I think it looks the part.

I’m not going to go back over old ground with you on a test-drive report that more or less confirmed what I found previously to be the case. So, suffice to say the following: The 5dr hatch costs from €23,750 exworks (I’ll come back to that). It is much bigger inside. The 127bhp 1-litre i-VTEC turbo will be joined by a 180bhp 1.5 i-VTEC turbo next month and a 1.6-diesel, currently being upgraded, later this year.

There will be a TYPE R early next year – it looks wonderful.

There is a 6spd manual gearbox and an ‘automatic’ CVT (Continuous­ly Variable Transmissi­on – €1,600 more than manual).

The really important bit, for me, is that they have a standard package of safety systems called ‘Sensing’. I find it impressive.

It includes intelligen­t adaptive cruise control, forward collision warning, Collision Mitigation Braking (stops the car if it senses a front-end crash is unavoidabl­e), lane departure warning, lane keeping assist system, road departure mitigation, Intelligen­t Speed Assistance (adjusts speed to that indicated by the last road sign), low speed following – keeps distance at low speeds and traffic sign recognitio­n.

That list partly explains why the car’s price starts at €23,750.

And I’m all for that: give people a good spread of safety and comfort and charge a reasonable price.

I’m sure if they tried they could have had an entry-level version for a few grand lower, but what would that acheive? Few people buy basic any more.

The cabin is smart, comfortabl­e and a nice height.

We took off for Wexford on a bright, spring day. The new multi-link rear axle gave the Civic a bit more handling zest, but the engine took the honours. This is a big car now, but the 1-litre showed no shortcomin­gs on torque or power. They claim consumptio­n of 4.8l/100km (110g/km, €190 road tax). The figures for the CVT are: 106g/km (still €190) and 4.7l/100km – it is not nearly as nice a drive. The 1.5 litre 4cyl (133g/km, €280) has a claimed 5.8l/100km with its impressive CVT at 139g, €280 tax, 6.1l/100km.

They say the 1.5-litre will be in demand for sportier drivers and orders are reflecting such interest. But for most of us the 1-litre is going to make sense.

I’d stick with it. Given how things are going, it is another significan­t marker for our use of petrol in the years ahead.

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