Jeremy Clarkson calls the Honda Insight “biblically terrible”

Clarkson has a way with cars and if you’ve followed his rants on Top Gear you’ll know he’s never taken too kindly to anything green. Dare he say anything nice about the environment. Anyway, he went on a spin with the new Honda Insight and… well… the petrol fiend wasn’t very impressed.
His gripe, very quickly, is that other cars with very similar fuel (German diesels cough cough) economy are available for significantly less. He didn’t write it, but I’m sure Clarkson thinks hybrids are made for tree hugging, momma loving, over sized sun glasses wearing, girly men.
Honda Insight 1.3 IMA SE Hybrid
By Jeremy ClarksonMuch has been written about the Insight, Honda’s new low-priced hybrid. We’ve been told how much carbon dioxide it produces, how its dashboard encourages frugal driving by glowing green when you’re easy on the throttle and how it is the dawn of all things. The beginning of days.
So far, though, you have not been told what it’s like as a car; as a tool for moving you, your friends and your things from place to place.
So here goes. It’s terrible. Biblically terrible. Possibly the worst new car money can buy. It’s the first car I’ve ever considered crashing into a tree, on purpose, so I didn’t have to drive it any more.
The biggest problem, and it’s taken me a while to work this out, because all the other problems are so vast and so cancerous, is the gearbox. For reasons known only to itself, Honda has fitted the Insight with something called constantly variable transmission (CVT).
It doesn’t work. Put your foot down in a normal car and the revs climb in tandem with the speed. In a CVT car, the revs spool up quickly and then the speed rises to match them. It feels like the clutch is slipping. It feels horrid.
And the sound is worse. The Honda’s petrol engine is a much-shaved, built-for-economy, low-friction 1.3 that, at full chat, makes a noise worse than someone else’s crying baby on an airliner. It’s worse than the sound of your parachute failing to open. Really, to get an idea of how awful it is, you’d have to sit a dog on a ham slicer.
So you’re sitting there with the engine screaming its head off, and your ears bleeding, and you’re doing only 23mph because that’s about the top speed, and you’re thinking things can’t get any worse, and then they do because you run over a small piece of grit.
Because the Honda has two motors, one that runs on petrol and one that runs on batteries, it is more expensive to make than a car that has one. But since the whole point of this car is that it could be sold for less than Toyota’s Smugmobile, the engineers have plainly peeled the suspension components to the bone. The result is a ride that beggars belief.
There’s more. Normally, Hondas feel as though they have been screwed together by eye surgeons. This one, however, feels as if it’s been made from steel so thin, you could read through it. And the seats, finished in pleblon, are designed specifically, it seems, to ruin your skeleton. This is hairy-shirted eco-ism at its very worst.
However, as a result of all this, prices start at £15,490 — that’s £3,000 or so less than the cost of the Prius. But at least with the Toyota there is no indication that you’re driving a car with two motors. In the Insight you are constantly reminded, not only by the idiotic dashboard, which shows leaves growing on a tree when you ease off the throttle (pass the sick bucket), but by the noise and the ride and the seats. And also by the hybrid system Honda has fitted.
In a Prius the electric motor can, though almost never does, power the car on its own. In the Honda the electric motor is designed to “assist” the petrol engine, providing more get-up-and-go when the need arises. The net result is this: in a Prius the transformation from electricity to petrol is subtle. In the Honda there are all sorts of jerks and clunks.
And for what? For sure, you could get 60 or more mpg if you were careful. And that’s not bad for a spacious five-door hatchback. [Finish reading this article at the Times Online]










I read that. You know sometimes he makes no sense. In his review, he says the Prius is better in some aspects. He hated the Prius and even blasted on for the show. His reviews can be read for a good laugh, never to be taken seriously.
Jesus Christ drove a Honda…!
He was in Accord with his disciples…!
(that was a joke by the way)
That was too slanted for me to take too seriously … he seemed to want to be more dramatic than fair. Not saying that the Inisight is a good car but it is hard for me to take any review that is that biased towards one side or the other seriously.
Jeremy Clarkson is a brilliant entertainer.
He’s not a good driver, nor is he really technically minded. He’s only good at entertaining. Thus, I wouldn’t listen to everything he says.
For example:
In his Top Gear TV car show (season 6 episode 1) he says HE WOULDN’T BUY A DIESEL RANGE ROVER… “…That’ll be like getting your mother to give you a lap dance…”
But in his Times article:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/driving/jeremy_clarkson/article5902399.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2
(see paragraph
…has just revealed, (paragraph 8 on page), “…BECAUSE I HAVE JUST BOUGHT A 15,000-mile TDV8 Vogue SE on a 57 plate” (that’s a diesel Range Rover, by the way!)
I rest my case!
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