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Honda's Great Gas Mileage Blunder
by Matt Timion

Published on this site: October 9th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

From its inception, Honda Motor Co. has been more concerned with fuel
economy and emissions than any other manufacturer. This has been evident
since Honda entered America's automobile market in 1971 with the "n600."
This was a 2-cylinder car that easily achieved 45 miles-per-gallon. They
have repeatedly had at least one model of automobile, per generation that
has superior gas mileage. These range from the CVCC, the CRX HF, the Civic
VX, and most recently the Insight Hybrid.
In the last decade, however, Honda appears to have departed its small
car and gas mileage roots in search of bigger profits. The change coincides
with the death of Soichiro Honda, the founder of Honda Automotive. When
Soichiro Honda died in 1991, an observable change in Honda's business
model and priorities surfaced.
With the change of priorities, the economical cars by which Honda was
known vanished, only to be replaced by giant trucks, vans, SVUs, and luxury
cars that would make our grandparents jealous. The company that was once
known for making "those little cars" became the company that
made "those big cars." The new Honda appeared to be in direction opposition of what the old Honda
was about.
When Honda was busy making giant money-makers, Toyota decided to take
a chance and develop something truly amazing: the full-sized hybrid. While
Honda later followed suit with a smaller commuter vehicle, it was too
late. Toyota had the hearts and minds of people who cared about fuel economy,
emissions, and safety. The name Honda reminded people of the giant Odyssey,
or the once small but now large Civic. Toyota, on the other hand, sparked
images of the clean, efficient Prius and the all electric RAV4.
Honda is now trying to clean up its image, by producing a version of the
Civic that runs on natural gas, and even introducing the first commercially
available hydrogen-powered vehicle. While these are all giant steps in
the right direction, Honda still has a long way to go to make up for a decade of
bad decisions.
Honda jumping on the big car bandwagon proved to be a mistake, one which
has affected Hondas market share ever since. Profits may be up, but consumer
confidence is down, at least compared to Toyota. The history and good
name of Honda will definitely help it get back on top of the efficiency
game, assuming that they still want the honor. It will prove difficult,
however, to win the back the hearts and minds of people after such a disappointing
blunder.

Matt Timion - owns and operates http://www.gassavers.org
. An avid Honda and gas mileage ethusiast, he owns and maintains a number of Honda automobiles,
including a class Honda n600.


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