I’m Driving A Honda Civic Type R For Six Months: What Do You Want To Know?
Our encounters with the then-new Honda Civic Type R last year left us impressed, but one niggling doubt remained: what would it be like to live with long-term? After all, it’s a particularly extreme car, so there’s always the worry that over a longer period of time you’d grow to be annoyed with the hard suspension, the spectacularly sporty seats and the yobbish styling.
To find out, and to do all the things we wanted to do with the Type R last time around but didn’t have time for, the ladies and gents at Honda UK have lent us one for a whole six months. It’ll ‘replace’ the XE S in our long-term fleet, which CT Features Ed. Darren has taken for the car’s final few weeks before it heads back to Jaguar.
‘Our’ Type R is a Milano Red example fresh from Honda’s UK factory, and is the higher spec ‘GT’ model. That means you get extra bits like sat-nav, parking sensors, dual zone climate control and a range of safety warning systems which may or may not end up being irritating - we’ll let you know. As a reminder, it puts out 306bhp from a turbocharged four-cylinder engine, making 0-62mph possible in 5.7 seconds. Oh, and it’ll do 167mph at the top end…
Now, we’ll be doing all of the obvious things like pitting it against the new Ford Focus RS, sending it off on road trips (it’ll be going to our big Nurburgring meet within days) and giving you living with updates, but as ever, we want to know what you want to see.
Perhaps you’d like to see if we can fit Alex in the under-floor storage bin in the boot, want to know a very specific detail about the car or have something else in mind entirely.
Whatever it is, let us know in the comments and we’ll see what we can do!
Comments
Can you fit in the boot?
Will MOOG be happy with that car?
I always wanted to know what these new hardcore hatches feel like on a longer road trip.
Maybe you could do one to the Nürburgring or something.
How does a front-wheel drive car with that much power behave outside track? Especially when its wet
Cos even my Golf has some torque steering (I know that Honda has some system against that - is it effective?) and also wheelspin is a problem too especially when wet
why dont i just go out and buy an ep3, ek9 etc?
How does it compare to the other hot hatches?
Does it give you a good and a bad side as in the commercial?
Runing costs during the 6 month period and reliability? (I know it’s an honda and everything should be fine)
Does it feel quicker than the XE-S on the go?
How does the steering feel while cornering?