Honda’s stylish SUV still on a charge

2021 CR-V MMC

Honda CR-V Hybrid

By Bill McCarthy


When it comes to design and best-selling cars, Honda knows a thing or two. The Civic has been for decades one of the best selling cars worldwide but received a radical, futuristic new look in 2006. 

The CR-V is the same. It has not been around as long, a mere 26 years, but it too has a radical look and is a best seller. In fact, both sit in the world’s top 10 best-selling cars. 

It is also the first hybrid SUV from Honda as the firm aims to offer a fully electrified range by 2025.

It also offers eye-catching design while retaining the practicality of an SUV, with its high stance off the ground and multi-folding seat capacity.

It is all sharp angles and contours, featuring diamond-cut alloys, swooping profile, privacy glass and smart light clusters flanking the familiar Honda badge on the grille. Just a discreet hybrid badge distinguishes it from combustion-powered siblings.

It is packed with creature comforts and safety technology. Five adults can be accommodated in relative comfort, four in real comfort. 

The interior is high end and dominated by a seven-inch central touchscreen which controls major functions like navigation, entertainment and Smartphone connectivity.

Heated leather seats and ambient lighting to footwell and handles add to a premium feel.

The hybrid system uses intelligent Honda’s Multi-Mode Drive technology (i-MMD) combining two electric motors, an Atkinson-cycle petrol engine, lithium-ion battery and a fixed-gear e-CVT transmission.

On the road, the car is quiet, refined and quick off the mark, with this model capable of hitting 60 in just over eight 8.8 seconds.

Drive selection is via a novel push button set up and the default mode is electric, with hybrid kicking in when extra power is needed.

Honda’s Driver Information Interface (DII) in the binnacle, gives the driver feedback as it monitors driver and engine hybrid management information.

Paddles behind the wheel can control rate of deceleration, with regenerative braking, pumping energy back to the battery.

The Drive, Park and Neutral functions require the button push, while reverse requires a pull-up action. Pure EV mode is also available providing a zero-emissions range of around 2km (1.2 miles) depending on the driving conditions and battery charge.

A clever touch is the hands-free powered tailgate on this model enables convenient loading access and can be programmed to stop at a certain height to avoid contact with low ceilings.

Single-action 60:40 split-fold seatbacks also enable faster, easier loading, and a completely flat surface for larger items including, says Honda, a 19.5-inch frame bicycle. 

Even the entry level model has high levels of equipment, with further bells and whistles as you move up the range.

It’s a Honda so it is safe and includes as standard across the range Honda Sensing, with active safety and driver-assistive technologies, combining radar and camera information to assist the driver.

Factfile

Honda CR-V 2.0i Hybrid SR 2WD

Price: £35,780

Mechanical: 184 bhp, 1,993cc, 4-cylinder petrol engine and electric motor driving front wheels via CVT automatic transmission

Max Speed: 112 mph

0-62mph: 8.8 secs

Combined MPG: 53.3

Insurance Group: 25e

C02 emissions: 120 g/km

Warranty: 3yrs/90,000 miles

VW Amarok takes on the world

No matter whether it be in South Africa or Australia, pick-ups represent an approach to life and without them certain tasks would be impossible to master. When faced with large loads, challenging country tracks or off-road terrain, everyone is happy to have a pick-up they can rely on.

The Volkswagen Amarok has thus, for example, been used for wildlife preservation in South Africa since way back in 2011, and Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles is a partner of the Wilderness Foundation Africa (WFA) in its important rhinoceros protection work. 

Completely new vehicle with “clear Volkswagen DNA”

Looks good, and is highly capable: the new Amarok not only has a completely new appearance inside and out, but in future will also have even more extensive equipment on board. “The Amarok makes possible what in many places appears impossible at first sight: it makes things easier for its users by assisting them in their work and everyday lives,” says Dr Lars Krause, Brand Board of Management Member for Sales and Marketing at Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles. “That’s because the Amarok provides solutions that enable our customers to achieve their goals – especially when things get difficult.” 

Now in its third generation, the new vehicle has significantly more driver assistance systems and will impress customers with its connectivity. The Amarok will, from 2022, feature innovations that have not been seen before in this segment. And it will still, of course, not be deterred by any rough terrain. 

As Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles’ all-rounder, the new Amarok impresses with its compelling lines and its overall appearance. “The striking front, and above all the defining X design clearly distinguish the new Amarok and emphasise its claim to be leading the way,” confirms Albert-Johann Kirzinger, Head of Design at Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles. “We’ve given the strength and power of the new Amarok an unambiguous expression – with clear Volkswagen DNA, inside and out.” This shows the confidence of the model. 

Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles’ Amarok has been in series production since 2010. The premium pick-up used to be made in Hannover and will continue to be built in Pacheco in Argentina. The newest version will also be built in future in the South African city of Silverton. Over the last decade, more than 800,000 vehicles have been sold globally, solving challenges for their owners and drivers on many continents. 

In the southern hemisphere, the vehicle – the only one to date with V6-cylinder diesel engines to make a name for itself in pick-ups’ so-called B segment – is still going strong. In Europe it will again be possible to order the Amarok as a new vehicle from late 2022.

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