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Originally Posted by zenren Only advantage I can see from that change is that the length of rear door has decreased. With the new design, I guess the rear door can be opened a bit more in tight parking spots since the edge of the door is more inwards with this projection avoided.
I'm not sure how bad the situation was with previous generation. As an owner, you might have a better idea if it was a nuisance or whether it didn't matter at all. |
I don't think the length has decreased much. The door
seems to be of the same size/shape from all angles. I think the design engineers rounded out the lines which sloped down from the front by providing that extra black bit so that it looks stretched and complete from a distance. My grouse is with the black bit itself - they should have provided a complete body panel instead of that one small bit and let the sloping lines be, without a taper-off. That way it would have looked better and slightly more premium. Makes you wonder how much did they save by excluding a proper body panel and sticking a black plastic bit in that space.
The current one has seen no complaints from the occupants of the rear seat so far. It opens wide enough, ingress/egress is good even in tight spots, only slight problem is the "sitting-down" inside, since it's not a tallboy. Visibility isn't a problem either. The window and the quarter glass provide excellent visibility and bright ambience in the rear area.
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Originally Posted by veyron_head But looking at the features and the new diesel engine, and above all, knowing Honda and their ridiculous pricing, the cost of this car will hover on the civic territory. That would push all their models to the next segment. Civic diesel when it arrives may touch 20 lacs OTR. |
The rumors of the next-gen Civic not coming to India are proven by this launch. Honda has targeted two segments with this new City (and with the upcoming Vezel, I am sure). The looks, features on offer and the diesel engine would mean a pricing strategy which overlaps the Civic's pricing. The testing of the next-gen Civic might have merely indicated the diesel engine testing. Honda is completely mum on bringing the Civic back, but has been a bit vocal on bringing in the diesel CR-V at some stage (once the rupee recovers a bit more).
Now they have a car which can cover the 9L-13L section in the petrol segment, and 10L-14L section in the diesel segment (OTR).
The present-gen City was being sold at 10.2L ex-showroom for the top Sunroof model, so it's safe to assume that they will be targeting at least 11L for the VX petrol variant, which is ~12.2L OTR. Which means the AT, currently pegged at 10.95L ex-showroom, should touch 13L OTR easily.
For diesel, they should command a premium of at least 1.25L over the VX petrol. So that means a price of around 12.25L ex-showroom for the VX diesel. That's almost 14L OTR (15L in places like Bangalore).
It's safe to assume that the Civic is no longer in their India plans. The Vezel might come in and be slotted slightly above the City, targeting the Duster, Terrano or maybe even the XUV.
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Originally Posted by av8er I know people who blindly would buy it and I literally mean, without a test drive or without even looking at it. "Arey Honda hai aur Deezal bhi, tho kyun nahi".
As I am typing a friend just called and confirmed he is booking on already even without knowing the price or looking at the car. |
Yep, they really meant it when they said they were going to take Honda "mainstream" in India a couple of years back. Brio, Amaze, the new City and the Mobilio all point in that direction.
They are getting into the pulse of the Indian car-buying public and providing them with what they want. Honda is playing it's cards to become a future volume seller in India. Let's hope that their compromise on quality doesn't extend to their technologies. As long as the plastic bits are average, nobody will complain.
It's a Honda, it's a diesel, it's got all the gizmos you can think of. What more can one want? Like someone said, the life of the car driver is spent behind the wheel. As long as he's happy, all is well and good. A pretty average car with a dynamite diesel engine has been selling volumes (the Amaze), and an average handler with a dynamite list of features has been selling volumes (the Verna). It's pretty safe to assume that the City will bring in the numbers as well.
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Originally Posted by CARDEEP Coming to interiors, I do like the overall dash design & spaciousness that is clearly more than old City, but the central console consisting of 5-display & other controls, looks unfinished, as if they had just put few things for the sake of having the car ready for display on 25th Nov. Even the rear AC somehow looks un-Honda-ish. I sincerely hope these few quirks will be sorted by the time car is on sale, & if possible, by the '14 Auto Expo. |
Which makes one think if this new 2014 City wasn't a hurried, half-baked product, fast-forwarded to the launch to keep the City's numbers and legacy going?
Honda might be playing smart and safe here. They might have realised that if they launched the Jazz and the Mobilio before the City, the City might not rake in the numbers as it has been in the recent past. Admit it or not, the Amaze has cannibalised some of the sales of the City in the past seven months. Get two more VFM offerings and they might have found no takers for an overpriced City overlapping two segments. Hence they brought in a super-quick, under-developed product, using a lot of bits of the existing City, merged a bunch of features in it, and launched it.
There are so many similarities with existing products which makes one think of Honda ever went back to the drawing board for this new 2014 City at all. Interior = same, side profile = same, front = Civic-ish, rear = all-new, steering = Fit, speedo = C-Rider, dash = same, boot = same, front bonnet = almost same, front grill = Modulo. Looks like the only place where any work or thought went was with the rear tail-lamp section, and even that resembles the YL1/Altis/Elantra/BMW design.
The concept designs looked stunning and promised a great product, and maybe it would have been one if it had gotten more time (maybe another year, end-2015?). I bet there are still a lot of quirks with this 2014 City, and that's why it's important to see how's the fit and finish of this car. I am eagerly waiting for the Team-BHP comprehensive review. That should give us a perfect idea of what to expect from this 2014 City, quality-wise.