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Preview: 2010 Honda Insight

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Tideland Prius, Jan 17, 2009.

  1. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Phoenix, Ariz. - I hope Honda is right about this. Its entire premise for the new Insight is that the demographic most interested in driving green - 20-to-35-year-old Gen X/Yers - are the least likely to be able to afford the hybrid-powered vehicles that promote clean driving.


    Honda's challenge, then, is to deliver the first hybrid that is not only frugal on fuel but also cheap to buy.

    The specific question the Insight will answer - and this is one hybrid naysayers have been asking for for almost a decade - is whether a gasoline/electric car can be affordable enough to compete with conventional cars on a simple value-for-the-dollar basis.

    Preview: 2010 Honda Insight hybrid


    It's a two-part article with the first two pages written by David Booth and the second half written by Graeme Fletcher.


    Officially, it's rated at 4.8/4.5 which is worse than the HCH's rating of 4.7/4.3. Why? I don't know. However, Graeme managed to get an average of 3.83L/100km!! (That's 61.5mpg)
     
  2. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    The name of the game is low entry cost even the FE is lower.
    "You pay for fuel economy" IOW, you pay more for life time ownership for higher FE.
    Does it make sense?
     
  3. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I know the purpose was to provide a very affordable hybrid but why would it be less than the HCH if it's the same system on a (supposedly) lighter vehicle?
     
  4. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    It is a matter of trade offs. There are many parameters and devices to improve FE, but they cost money. It order to lower the manufacturing cost, some of these devices will be thrown out.

    For example, in the G2 Prius there is the thermal bottle and the exhaust heat recycler for G3, they cost big dollars. I have no idea what Honda threw out from the HCH. Only thing I know, the Insight has a smaller battery/motor and it will require the ICE to run harder and longer at high rpm.

    We know that the G3 will cost more for a 10% increase in FE. There is no free lunch as I stated before.

     
  5. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I guess it'll also give people incentive to move up to the HCH.
     
  6. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    If I want to go up to the HCH, the G2 Prius is a better buy for better FE and more bang for the buck. That's why it is not selling well.
    The IMA will never match the FE of the HSD, but much cheaper to make.

     
  7. icebird144

    icebird144 New Member

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    Just an interesting (yet maybe a bit off-topic...) thought

    In the US the HCH is more expensive than the Prius (base price wise)

    However in Canada the HCH is cheaper than the Prius.

    So I'm actually very interested in seeing the price of the Insight. I think the American will see a huge "price drop" than HCH, that actually gives some more interest in the HCH than Canadian.
     
  8. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Honda Canada is looking at a price between $19,000 and $25,000 so we'll see.
     
  9. joe1347

    joe1347 Active Member

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    Is it reasonable to assume that there is a reasonably large demographic that strongly prefers Honda (over Toyota) and even though the Insight looks to be somewhat inferior to the Prius, this Honda demographic will still buy an Insight?
     
  10. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Not necessarily. If it handles well, then yes but I think those people would rather have a Civic cause it's a well-known marque.
     
  11. bob_ninja

    bob_ninja New Member

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    I have 2 Honda's albeit I wouldn't categorize myself as having a strong preference for Honda's. I have been following Prius and I am a big fan of HSD and Toyota's hybrid tek. The major barrier to me getting a Prius already was simply price. I try to keep an open mind and see both Honda and Toyota as great companies.

    Prius price was over $30K couple of years ago and now is just under, I think around $27K. At one point C$ was actually higher than US$, yet the Canadian Prius was almost $10K more expensive. I sent an e-mail to Toyota Canada and got no reply. So given there are plenty of convnetional cars around $20K and below and given the economic turmoil around the world, I just don't see much sense in spending $30K+ on a new car of any sort today.

    To be fair hybrid Civic is not much cheaper, so same issue. No new hybrid Civic for me.

    While in the US pricing is much tighter and differences between hybrids or hybrid vs conventional are much smaller, in internation markets prices are often higher and so are differences magnified.

    Thus you can easily see how a cheaper hybrid could have a wider appeal and sell in more expensive international markets where Prius is out of reach for most people. In that sense Insight and Prius are not even in competition as they appeal to different markets.

    Now that range as rather wide. I wouldn't consider $25K a big improvement. It wouldn't sell as most people would pay $2K more for a Prius (speaking of Canada). On the other hand if it were in the lower range say around $20K then it would be around $7K cheaper which is a big difference, for sure.

    I guess the main point is that few people are dedicated Honda customers. Instead, most people buy Honda's because we look for a good value and don't mind missing a few features. Toyota is also a good value, just focused more on higher end. That is all.

    Thanks for thr link BTW
     
  12. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

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    The Insight has scaled down battery and motor, and I can't see any innovations on it.
    I would like to say Insight is poor man's HCH. :)

    OTOH, 2010 Prius has more powerful engine and motor to increase performance with increasing fuel economy.
    I see a lot of innovations on it.

    Ken@Japan
     
  13. edmcohen

    edmcohen Member

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    The cone-and-belt CVT transmission seems like a drawback to me. I would expect Honda hybrids to age far less well than Toyota ones because those transmissions will wear poorly. The Toyota system seems elegant. The Honda one does not.
     
  14. KMO

    KMO Senior Member

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    The Insight is slightly more efficient than the Civic Hybrid, in European measurements, according to Honda (UK)

    Insight 1.3 IMA CVT SE = 64.2mpg (4.4l/100km), 101g/km CO2
    Insight 1.3 IMA CVT ES/ES-T = 61.4mpg (4.6l/100km), 105g/km CO2
    Civic 1.4 IMA CVT = 61.4mpg (4.6l/100km), 109g/km CO2

    (The mpg figures are derived from the l/100km figures, meaning they're really only precise to 2 significant figures).

    They must be a bit gutted about the Insight SE - if they'd managed to get 100g/km CO2, they'd have gotten it into the lowest UK tax band...
     
  15. bob_ninja

    bob_ninja New Member

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    Could you provide some links about Insight's CVT? Could you comment on the cost/reliability of Insight's "cone-and-belt" as opposed to the more sophisticated Prius'? thanks
     
  16. bob_ninja

    bob_ninja New Member

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    Sure, poor man's HCH or poor man's HSD, they are all fine descriptions. Indeed, that was their design goal, so seems they succeeded. Most Prius fans here seem to deride Insight for being cheaper and scaled dow version of older brothers. While Insight itself may not have any earth shattering innovations, nevertheless it may play a significant role in hybrid development. Note how hybrids as part of overall car market stalled around 3% give or take. Insight could be the key element to going over that barrier (no talking about 4% or 5%, but more like 10% and higher). As an example, consider personal computers when mainframes ruled. Event today people swear by the technology in mainframes and how personal computers didn't really have any innovations - mainframes did it all decades before PCs. However, as well all know PCs took computers to another level and spawned a number of other revolutions, perhaps less technical and more social. I won't bother enumerating here ... The point is that cheaper scaled down hybrid - Insight - while lacking technical innovation may in fact generate other large scale changes, such as social changes like mass move to hybrids, making hybrid dominant, etc. If anything Insight will *HELP* Prius by enlarging the market for hybrids. Once hooked on hybrids via cheap Insights, many people will look to upgrade to a Prius. So you should stop looking at cheaper simpler Insight as a bad thing and start thinking of it as a fantastic things. Just because Fits and Corollas and many other compacts or sbcompacts are smaller and cheaper doesn't mean that they don't sell and they are not good cars for their specific market.
     
  17. JSH

    JSH Senior Member

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    Here is a good link: CVT - what the Continuously Variable Transmission is and how CVT works

    I wouldn't worry about CVT reliability. They are much simpler than conventional automatic and mechanical transmissions. When they first came out CVT's were only used on low-power engines due to the rubber belt. Now CVT's use multi-link steel belts so this is no longer a problem. Automotive CVT's have been used for decades but they only became popular with major manufacturers in the US around 2000.

    This link has a good automation: HowStuffWorks "Pulley-based CVTs"
     
  18. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I believe the Civic IMA is 1.3 litres.

    True but if it's cheap and people will buy more hybrids, then we can get more people into hybrid technology, right?
     
  19. Per

    Per New Member

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    I'm surprised the Insight has lower EPA estimates than the HCH. Smaller car with less power should equal better MPG. They must have left something out--perhaps the engine shutdown when coasting? The main saving grace is the hatch and lower price. Only time will tell if this is enough to draw new buyer into the hybrid fold.
    The new Prius on the other hand has some significant improvements, and I'm looking forward to getting a closer look. We're going to an auto show in Houston next weekend--hope they have one there!
     
  20. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Yeah but take note that the press has been getting 60mpg plus