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PHOTOS:
Honda’s
CR-V was not the first small car-based SUV. Following Toyota’s RAV4 by a couple
of years, it arrived in the U.S. in 1996 as a ’97 model. But the CR-V — which
means “Comfortable Runabout Vehicle” according to the latest Honda explanation —
soon emerged as a top seller in the fast-growing class now widely known as
crossovers (CUVs) and one of Honda’s best sellers here and abroad.
Propelled by its strong balance of
attributes — compact size, utility, fuel economy and affordable price — it has
become Honda’s most widely distributed vehicle with more than 2.5 million sold
in 160 countries. Despite its age, sales of the ’02-’06 Gen II CR-V have
continued to climb as the segment has grown. In 2005, it was third behind Jeep
Liberty and Ford Escape and still on the rise as of spring,
2006.
Still, no one would argue that
Honda’s practical and popular CR-V was the prettiest, quickest, or most agile in
its class. Those are the areas on which project leader Mitsuru Horikoshi
concentrated in designing and developing this new third-generation
CR-V.
In addition to improving the
interior’s comfort, convenience, and quietness, he asserts, “we also decided to
take the CR-V in a more advanced and emotional direction.” That led to the
concept direction of “COOL CR-V,” which translates, he says, to “emotional
styling,” fun to drive,” and “fun to use.”
“Our
concept buyer was a stylish young mom,” Mr. Horikoshi adds.
The egg is
born
Maybe it’s that young-mom bent
that explains the CR-V’s noticeably ovoid new shape. Honda calls it dynamic and
sporty — and as such, also fitted the new CR-V with a new double grille, an
arching roofline and rugged-looking lower body cladding. It sits lower on
slightly wider (+1.2 inches front and +0.8 in. rear) tracks. And the previous
model’s tailgate-mounted spare is tucked away under the rear floor. To our eye,
the new face has a big, flat proboscis, and the nearly flat rear roof that
preserves usable headroom and cargo space conflicts with the stylishly arched
window line. Different? You bet.
Dimensionally, the new CR-V is
about three inches shorter than the ’06 (because the exterior spare is gone), an
inch and a half wider, and roughly the same height on a 0.2-in shorter
wheelbase. Its ground clearance is nearly an inch lower (it’s no serious
off-roader) and it weighs some 90 pounds more thanks to a stronger structure and
increased content.
Inside, the look is tidy and
stylish if slightly trucky, with metallic-look vertical and soft horizontal
surfaces. The fits are tight, and the soft plastics are grained for a quality
appearance. The mid-range EX and top-line EX-L sport a handsome two-tone with
the lower dash and doors matching the seats. The large, round tachometer and
speedometer are clear and precisely marked, the switches and controls are
ergonomically easy, and the shifter has been moved down to a more rightful place
below the HVAC controls.
Spirit
injection
“Our goal,” Mr. Horikoshi says,
“was to make it solid and tight and evolve from an SUV to a more sedan-like
feel. We were able to achieve this through three main goals: lowering the center
of gravity, making a more rigid body structure and improving the driving
performance.”
The
lower center of gravity — accomplished mostly by lowering the powertrain and
relocating the spare tire — and stiffer structure combine with wider tracks and
larger wheels and tires to move the new CR-V’s handling most of the way toward
where the engineers wanted it. Beyond that, they redesigned the (front
MacPherson strut and rear multi-link) suspension geometries and beefed up the
rear stabilizer bar. It’s no sports sedan, but we can attest that this works
pretty well without detracting from ride quality on rougher surfaces.

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The previous model’s 2.4-liter
i-VTEC four-cylinder carries on with improved valve timing and manifold tuning
that yield ten more horsepower (to 166) and one more lb-ft (to 161) over a more
linear torque curve, plus one additional EPA highway mpg. That slightly enhanced
efficiency — despite the added width and weight — results from a ten-percent
reduction in aerodynamic drag and a new standard five-speed automatic
transmission with a taller top gear vs. the ’06 four-speed automatic. The
previously standard five-speed manual has been discontinued. Performance is
noticeably improved but far from exciting, and there’s no available V-6 to
counter the RAV4 and others in the class.
Besides
utility, one thing that sets a so-called crossover apart from the average car is
availability of all-wheel or four-wheel drive. In the CR-V’s case, it’s an
improved real-time system that cooperates with the standard Vehicle Stability
Assist (VSA) to sense impending instability and shifts torque where it’s needed
to prevent it.
Fun to
use

Rick Wagoner head shot
The CR-V is mostly about utility
and versatility but it handles comfort and quietness well. For starters, a new
tilt and telescoping steering wheel combines with increased seat travel and
height adjustment range to provide a comfortable position for just about any
driver. Rear room and comfort is surprisingly good, and NVH (noise, vibration,
and harshness) is significantly improved throughout.
A new standard trip computer
offers fuel economy and range. Ambient lighting is cool blue, and all switches
are illuminated with transparent blue LEDs. Usable storage includes two separate
gloveboxes, ample cupholders, an overhead sunglasses holder (with an integrated
“conversation” mirror), an underseat storage box, and a retractable center tray
or (in EX-L models) a center console box.
The
rear seat has a 60/40-split cushion, but the backs are divided 40/20/40 so each
section can fold separately. They flip and fold forward to increase cargo room
but not flat into the floor. Young parents (a key CR-V marketing target) can
attach a child seat in the center or one on each side, then slide the seats
forward for better “communication.” The low-effort top-hinged tailgate opens
high, and an available foldable or removable rear shelf can create two separate
cargo spaces.
Safety laden,
slickly

Freeman Thomas head shot
Consistent with Honda’s mantra of
“safety for everyone,” the ’07 CR-V gets the full package, including six air
bags (side curtain, front side, and dual-stage and dual-threshold front), active
head restraints, and an Advanced Compatibility Engineering (ACE) body structure
designed to spread frontal crash energy more evenly between vehicles of
different sizes. “Our goal is best-in-class safety from impacts in any
direction,” Mr. Horikoshi says.
On top of the impressive list of
standard features in the base LX, the mid-range EX adds the two-tone interior, a
power moonroof, a security system, rear privacy glass, steering wheel audio
controls, the dual-deck cargo shelf, alloy wheels, and an upgraded six-speaker
audio with a six-disc CD changer. The EX-L piles on leather upholstery with
heated front seats, XM Satellite Radio, a rearview camera (and the option to add
a $2000 navigation system with voice recognition), and seven-speaker premium
sound with a six-disc CD changer in the center console.
This new CR-V’s bolder, more
modern look may not appeal to every stylish minivan mom or sport-utility dad,
but most should agree it’s a major improvement over the bland little box it
replaces. Same for the driving dynamics, comfort, quietness, and utility, though
the automatic-only four won’t run with the competition’s available
V-6s.
With seemingly everyone moving to
small and mid-size crossovers from larger trucks and SUVs above or smaller cars
below, this segment is forecast to grow from 2005’s 1.5 million U.S. units to
2.5 million by 2010. And with prices starting in the low $20k range, Honda
should easily move the 160k-plus 2007 CR-Vs they’re planning this year, and
beyond.
Base price: $21,500 (est.)
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Engine: 2.4-liter
DOHC i-VTEC four, 166
hp/161 lb-ft
Transmission: Five-speed automatic, front or
four-wheel drive
Length x width x height:
178.0 x 71.6 x
66.1 in
Wheelbase: 103.1 in
Curb weight (2WD/4WD): 3389/3501
lb
Fuel economy (EPA city/hwy):
23/30 (2WD); 22/28 (4WD) mpg
Major standard
features: Keyless
remote; cruise control; tilt/telescoping steering wheel; power windows, locks;
power folding side mirrors; air conditioning with air filtration; AM/FM/CD
four-speaker audio with MP3 capability; trip computer
Safety features: Anti-lock brakes with EBD and
Brake Assist; stability and traction control; dual front, side and curtain
airbags; front active head restraints; daytime running
lights
Warranty: Three years/36,000
miles