2019 Honda Fit Review
2019 Honda Fit Review The unique Honda Fit was a prodigy when it burst onto the U.S. vehicle scene as a 2007 model. By using a vivid personality, an athletic chassis, and stunning room efficiency, it instantly embarked on the charm campaign that will win comparison test soon after comparison test, likewise as being a Vehicle and Driver 10Best Autos trophy for seven consecutive many years, effectively into its 2nd generation. Alas, the latest Match continues to be fantastic if not fairly great, handsomer than ever but sorely lacking its predecessors’ eagerness, dynamic refinement, and user-friendliness. Our 40,000-mile long-term 2015 Match earned no shortage of complaints involving its unrelenting buzz at highway speeds, its tiny fuel tank, the fussy infotainment program that lacked a volume knob, and lessened enjoyable in contrast with its predecessors. Now a thorough mid-cycle enhancement for 2018 gives this third-generation Fit a 2nd likelihood to generate a initially impression.
Our initial drive from the 2018 Match was hosted at Honda Effectiveness Growth in California, the R&D and technical-support center for the company’s prolific racing programs (including the SCCA B-Spec racing series that Honda spearheaded back in 2010 with the Match race car or truck). It’s also where the Fit’s natty new HPD chassis and interior bits were developed, accessories that found themselves onto some of your check autos we drove.
For 2018, Honda aimed to hone the Fit’s chassis to quell bobbing, reduce noise levels, enhance the steering’s linearity, and elevate its overall sense of nimbleness. Honda added structural braces around and under the body, swapped the shell-style steering-pinion bearing for a solid one, and installed retuned dampers. It also used thicker acoustic materials inside the doors, wheel arches, and pillars, while new layers of soundproofing materials pad the dashboard and the floor. To reduce wind noise, the new Fit gets an acoustically insulating windshield and thicker front quarter-windows. Remarkably, despite these refinements, weight is essentially a wash between the new and old cars, according to Honda.
Without a pre-refresh Match on hand for comparison, it’s hard to measure the extent to which Honda achieved its ambitions. We can say, however, that the 2018 Match EX-L we drove felt focused and planted as we swept along the Santa Clarita Valley’s rolling two-laners. As we hurled the Match into tight corners, its body stayed calm and the 185/55R-16 all-season Firestone FR740 tires generally remained glued to the pavement before gently breaking away into predictable understeer at the limit. Little additional steering feel seems to have resulted from the updates, unfortunately, yet the Fit traced our intended line with utter precision. All the while, it rode with suppleness and composure, more like a Civic sedan than a stubby hatchback.
We didn’t need any measuring devices to deem the additional cabin insulation a success. While the quietness somewhat clarifies the bleating 1.5-liter inline-four’s engine note-still not our favorite sound, especially as it moans when working with the optional continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT)-its lower overall volume no longer deters drivers from revving it all the way to its 6800-rpm redline. That’s a excellent thing indeed, considering one must hit 6600 rpm before all of your powertrain’s 128 or 130 horses (depending on transmission) show up.
2019 Honda Fit Review - Interior:
Addressing two of our chief complaints is a new 7.0-inch Display Audio infotainment process that comes standard on Sport, EX, and EX-L models. Finally, it offers Apple CarPlay and Android Auto integration, and even better, the volume knob is back. While not all wrongs are righted with the 2018 Fit-the front seats still lack lateral support, and Honda wasn’t able to carve out any room for a larger fuel tank-there’s plenty to offset such woes. Along with a sophisticated-looking gauge cluster, there’s the Fit’s trademark 60/40 split rear Magic Seat, which lets you flip the lower cushion up to carry taller items or flop the seatback down, extending the Fit’s heroically low and flat cargo floor. Another big deal for the segment is the availability of your Honda Sensing driver aids, which include not just forward-collision warning, automated emergency braking, and lane-keeping assist, but also road-departure mitigation and adaptive cruise control.
Also among the updates is the return in the Fit Sport model. Don’t get too excited, as it’s not actually any sportier, being a Match LX that gets its own unique front spoiler and rear diffuser (both with orange accents), side-sill extensions, black 16-inch wheels, and a chrome exhaust tip. The Sport interior is accented with orange stitching on the leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob, plus the upgraded audio procedure found in the EX and above. Like the Fit LX, the Sport offers the Honda Sensing bundle of driver aids as an option; EX and EX-L trims get them standard.
Curious to see what unrealized potential HPD could tap into with its suite of bolt-on accessories, we hopped into a Fit Sport with the six-speed manual gearbox in full HPD drag, including a 0.4-inch lowering kit, side skirts, black 16-inch wheels with two red-painted spokes, and a chunkier rear spoiler cantilevered off the back. Aluminum HPD pedals, red floor mats, and a beautiful titanium shift knob added visual punch to the Fit Sport’s cabin, already a kicky place with its “cross-hatched” upholstery and that orange contrast stitching. A similar package will be offered on non-Sport Fits, too, we’re told.
2019 Honda Fit Review - Features:
Not surprisingly, the HPD enhancements produced flatter handling and what felt like greater lateral grip-we’d love to put this version through our testing regimen-and the slicker feel on the shift knob had us making unnecessary gearchanges just so we could manipulate it. Now that we know how the 2018 Fit feels when adorned with such finery, we can’t imagine getting one any other way. In fact, that has a bit more power, this could make a sweet halo model. Match Si, anyone?
Even last year’s slightly dulled Match was easy for us to recommend to family and friends looking for real utility at an entry-level price, and this year’s upgrades make doing so easier. Is the new motor vehicle excellent enough to earn the same adulation as the to start with two Fits? We’ll need to spend more time with it to find out.
2019 Honda Fit Review
Our initial drive from the 2018 Match was hosted at Honda Effectiveness Growth in California, the R&D and technical-support center for the company’s prolific racing programs (including the SCCA B-Spec racing series that Honda spearheaded back in 2010 with the Match race car or truck). It’s also where the Fit’s natty new HPD chassis and interior bits were developed, accessories that found themselves onto some of your check autos we drove.
For 2018, Honda aimed to hone the Fit’s chassis to quell bobbing, reduce noise levels, enhance the steering’s linearity, and elevate its overall sense of nimbleness. Honda added structural braces around and under the body, swapped the shell-style steering-pinion bearing for a solid one, and installed retuned dampers. It also used thicker acoustic materials inside the doors, wheel arches, and pillars, while new layers of soundproofing materials pad the dashboard and the floor. To reduce wind noise, the new Fit gets an acoustically insulating windshield and thicker front quarter-windows. Remarkably, despite these refinements, weight is essentially a wash between the new and old cars, according to Honda.
Without a pre-refresh Match on hand for comparison, it’s hard to measure the extent to which Honda achieved its ambitions. We can say, however, that the 2018 Match EX-L we drove felt focused and planted as we swept along the Santa Clarita Valley’s rolling two-laners. As we hurled the Match into tight corners, its body stayed calm and the 185/55R-16 all-season Firestone FR740 tires generally remained glued to the pavement before gently breaking away into predictable understeer at the limit. Little additional steering feel seems to have resulted from the updates, unfortunately, yet the Fit traced our intended line with utter precision. All the while, it rode with suppleness and composure, more like a Civic sedan than a stubby hatchback.
We didn’t need any measuring devices to deem the additional cabin insulation a success. While the quietness somewhat clarifies the bleating 1.5-liter inline-four’s engine note-still not our favorite sound, especially as it moans when working with the optional continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT)-its lower overall volume no longer deters drivers from revving it all the way to its 6800-rpm redline. That’s a excellent thing indeed, considering one must hit 6600 rpm before all of your powertrain’s 128 or 130 horses (depending on transmission) show up.
2019 Honda Fit Review - Interior:
Addressing two of our chief complaints is a new 7.0-inch Display Audio infotainment process that comes standard on Sport, EX, and EX-L models. Finally, it offers Apple CarPlay and Android Auto integration, and even better, the volume knob is back. While not all wrongs are righted with the 2018 Fit-the front seats still lack lateral support, and Honda wasn’t able to carve out any room for a larger fuel tank-there’s plenty to offset such woes. Along with a sophisticated-looking gauge cluster, there’s the Fit’s trademark 60/40 split rear Magic Seat, which lets you flip the lower cushion up to carry taller items or flop the seatback down, extending the Fit’s heroically low and flat cargo floor. Another big deal for the segment is the availability of your Honda Sensing driver aids, which include not just forward-collision warning, automated emergency braking, and lane-keeping assist, but also road-departure mitigation and adaptive cruise control.
Also among the updates is the return in the Fit Sport model. Don’t get too excited, as it’s not actually any sportier, being a Match LX that gets its own unique front spoiler and rear diffuser (both with orange accents), side-sill extensions, black 16-inch wheels, and a chrome exhaust tip. The Sport interior is accented with orange stitching on the leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob, plus the upgraded audio procedure found in the EX and above. Like the Fit LX, the Sport offers the Honda Sensing bundle of driver aids as an option; EX and EX-L trims get them standard.
Curious to see what unrealized potential HPD could tap into with its suite of bolt-on accessories, we hopped into a Fit Sport with the six-speed manual gearbox in full HPD drag, including a 0.4-inch lowering kit, side skirts, black 16-inch wheels with two red-painted spokes, and a chunkier rear spoiler cantilevered off the back. Aluminum HPD pedals, red floor mats, and a beautiful titanium shift knob added visual punch to the Fit Sport’s cabin, already a kicky place with its “cross-hatched” upholstery and that orange contrast stitching. A similar package will be offered on non-Sport Fits, too, we’re told.
2019 Honda Fit Review - Features:
Not surprisingly, the HPD enhancements produced flatter handling and what felt like greater lateral grip-we’d love to put this version through our testing regimen-and the slicker feel on the shift knob had us making unnecessary gearchanges just so we could manipulate it. Now that we know how the 2018 Fit feels when adorned with such finery, we can’t imagine getting one any other way. In fact, that has a bit more power, this could make a sweet halo model. Match Si, anyone?
Also read: 2018 Honda Ridgeline ReviewHonda declined to tell us how much its accessory packages will cost at this point. But we do know that the 2018 Fit’s sticker prices are between $100 and $160 higher than last year, depending on trim: Base LX models start at $17,065, Sport models come in at $18,375, and EX models cost $19,035-all with the manual transmission. Another $800 will equip any of those which has a CVT automatic, while the Honda Sensing driver aids will cost LX and Sport customers another $1000. As mentioned, Honda Sensing is included on the Fit EX (even with the stick shift) too as on the $21,395 EX-L model, the latter offered only with the CVT.
Even last year’s slightly dulled Match was easy for us to recommend to family and friends looking for real utility at an entry-level price, and this year’s upgrades make doing so easier. Is the new motor vehicle excellent enough to earn the same adulation as the to start with two Fits? We’ll need to spend more time with it to find out.
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