Sunday, 5 November 2017

Honda Civic

Honda Civic

The Honda Civic is a line of small cars manufactured by Honda. Originally a subcompact, the Civic has gone through several generational changes, becoming both larger and more upmarket and moving into the compact car segment. EPA guidelines for vehicle size class stipulate a car having combined passenger and cargo room of 110 to 119.9 cubic feet (3,110 to 3,400 L) is considered a mid-size car, and as such the tenth generation Civic sedan is technically a small-end mid-size car, although it still competes in the compact class.[1] The Civic coupe is still considered a compact car. The Civic currently falls between the Honda Fit and Honda Accord.
Honda Civic
Honda Civic 2016.jpg
Overview
ManufacturerHonda
Production1972–present
Body and chassis
ClassSubcompact car (1972–2000)
Compact car (2000–2015)
Mid-size car (2016–present)
RelatedAcura EL
Acura CSX
Acura ILX
Honda Ballade
Honda Quint
Honda Civic Hybrid
Honda Civic GX
Honda Civic Type R
Honda Civic Si
Honda City (1996–2002)
Honda Concerto
Honda Domani
Rover 200 / 25
Chronology
PredecessorHonda N600
Honda Z600
The first Civic was introduced in July 1972 as a two-door model,[2] followed by a three-door hatchback that September. With an 1169 cc transverse engine and front-wheel drive like the British Mini, the car provided good interior space despite overall small dimensions.[3]Initially gaining a reputation for being fuel-efficient, reliable, and environmentally friendly, later iterations have become known for performance and sportiness, especially the Civic Type R, Civic VTi, Civic GTi and Civic SiR/Si.[4][5]
The Civic has been repeatedly rebadged for international markets, and served as the basis for the Honda CR-X, the Honda CR-X del Sol, the Honda Concerto, the first generation Honda Prelude, the Honda Civic Shuttle (later to become the Honda Orthia), and the Honda CR-V.
In Japan, as customers increasingly shifted to minivans and compact cars like Honda Fit, production of non-hybrid Civic ended in August 2010 when it no longer complied with Japanese Government dimension regulations in the width category.[6] However, the Civic was reintroduced into the Japanese market with the launch of the tenth generation model in 2017.[7]

Background

First generation (1972–1979) – SB1, SG, SH, SE, VB

Second generation (1979–1983) – SL, SS, SR, ST, VC, WD

Third generation (1983–1987) – SB3, SB4, AG, AH, AJ, AK, AT, EC

Fourth generation (1987–1991) – ED, EE, EF, SH

Fifth generation (1992–1995) – EG3, EG4, EG5, EG6, EG7, EG8, EG9, EH1, EH2, EH3, EH9, EJ1, EJ2, EJ3,

Sixth generation (1996-2000) – EK2, EK3, EK4, EK5, EK9, EJ6, EJ7, EJ8, EJ9, EM1

Seventh generation (2000–2005) – EM2, ES1, ES2, EP1, EP2, EP3, EP4, EV1, EU1, EU2, EU3, EU4

Eighth generation (2005–2011) – FD1 FD2, FD7, FA1, FG1, FG2, FA5, FN2, MK8

Ninth generation (2011–2016) – FB4, FG3, FB2, FG4, FB6, FK2

Tenth generation (2016–present) – FC1, FC2, FC3, FC4, FC5, FK4, FK7, FK8

International marketing and platform derivatives

Safety

Modifications and the enthusiast community

Awards

Racing

Sales

References

External links

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