Halifax Courier

Busy times ahead for Honda

- By Rob Auchterlon­ie

Honda might be suffering a touch on their return to the Formula One fold, but when it comes to road cars they appear to be in pole position. 2015 is going to be a big year for the Japanese manufactur­er. As well as the just revealed new Civic and CR-V models, Jazz and HRV also get serious revisions in 2015, so it’s a fair assumption that things are going to get pretty busy down in Swindon, Honda’s UK manufactur­ing plant that has just had a £ 200 million investment.

The factory, celebratin­g its 30th birthday this year, is home to Civic, Civic Tourer, CR-V and Jazz, and the 3,200 workers ( or associates, as Honda prefers to call them) currently build something around 140,000 cars a year, from the wheelnuts up. It will also be home to the much an- ticipated Civic Type R later in the year.

There are more robots than associates in some areas, and more than 40 Civics an hour roll off the line.

Attention to detail is an eye-opener on a tour round. Initially the doors don’t look like they fit but a tolerance is built in from the start to allow for the extra weight of the glass, speakers and window controls, so that when they’re married up towards the end of the line, they fit perfectly.

In fact they say that each and every car is so meticulous­ly tested and examined that a customer could stand at the end of the production line with their wad of cash, hand it over and drive off without any fear of anything being wrong with his or her car.

That’s confidence in your product for you.

The Civic is a popular model. One in five sold in Europe can be found on our UK roads and nowthere’snow there’s a £1600 price reduction on the latest model you’ll probably be seeing a few more of them around.

Cosmetic changes to the latest version extend to new front and rear bumpers, a revamped grille and a new rear spoiler. And new to the range is the Civic Sport, bearing a more than passing resemblanc­e to the yet-tobe-launched new Type R, but in a more cost-effective and user-friendly package that will appeal to those who want the looks but with a less frantic end product.

It’s certainly got the looks to go with your choice of either a 1.6 120ps diesel or 1.8 142ps petrol – with the former think 78 78.5mpg,5mpg 94g/kmand300Nm­94g/km and 300Nm of torque. Black 17-inch alloys set it off, along with a colourcode­d rear spoiler, and my brief run in the latest version helped to emphasize the fact they’ve made improvemen­ts to the handling and stability. But I’m still not a fan of that rear spoiler, as it really hinders your rear view.

New Civic prices start at £ £15,975.

With one in three Europ pean registered CR-Vs sold to UK buyers, the world’s biggestsel­ling SUV now gets a new twin-turbow 1.6-litre 160ps dies sel engine that’s something of a revelation, and which replaces the old 2.2 i-DTEC diesel unit. A low CO2 figure of 129g/ km, economy around the 58mpg mark and 350Nm of torque give it commendabl­e c credential­s. The nine-speed a auto box boosts its efficiency.

It bristles with advanced d driver assistance systems, like LKA (Lane Keep Assist) and an all-new Honda CONNECT info fotainment system.

Stylistica­lly it has wider front and rear bumpers which have the effect of making it look shorter, but it remains the commodious vehicle it always was. It’s just a more refined, efficient and neater one.

Entry level start point is £22,345, with a top-end tag of £35,620 for a 4WD version with that new engine.

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