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New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport

January 12, 2008

Every modern car is the most complex and powerful mechatronic system average consumers purchase.  I know I’m young, but I think I can still positively say automotive technology has come a long way in the past decade.  It could be because I’ve primarily driven a 1994 Chrysler Concorde since I got my license, but driving a 2008-model car is an entire new experience.

After a couple days of shopping and test-driving the Toyota Matrix, Subaru Impreza 2.5i 5-door, Mazda3 5-door, Pontiac Vibe and the Honda Fit Sport, I was relatively tired and sick of car shopping.  Following a pushy salesperson turning me off to one dealership, I went to a Honda dealership expecting to see a car that was too small for what I needed – the Honda Fit.  Yes, out of the variety of cars I looked at, it is by far the smallest car with the smallest engine, but moreover, it also has the lowest price, and ultimately it’s the car I chose.  The car has front, side and curtain airbags, ABS, and the handy features like power locks and windows, fuel door open indicator – and I left out many for brevity, but amazingly these are all standard on the base model.

No doubt it’s a complex system, but then consider the standard Honda Drive-by-Wire system – your gas pedal is an electronic position sensor throttle control, rather than the normal mechanical cable or even newer hydraulic control of the throttle.  A novel feature of the automatic transmission on the Sport model is the paddle shifters (yes, paddle shifters) located on the steering wheel.  Switching gears doesn’t require any movement of the gas pedal. Simple tap into a different gear and with near no delay the car adjusts the throttle as necessary, changes gear and returns to the best match of how far your foot is depressing the gas pedal.  To be honest it’s very mindless (good or bad), and I always think, when will car makers ditch the pedals and steering wheel all together?  How about a joystick?  At a whole different level, how about only inputting your final destination?  I know we’re getter closer with autonomous vehicles like those in the DARPA Urban Challenge (like the GM-sponsored Carnegie Mellon vehicle).

Imagine controlling a car with a Windows PC: throttle, valve timing, speed, stability, position, and more.  “Oh no, a BSOD while driving on the highway!”  (Most current cars use firmware-based engine control units for this and other reasons.)  Albeit potentially scary, I think it’s pretty cool that a computer will help me drive safer and more efficiently.

Posted by Stefan Wolpert on January 12, 2008 | Comments (7)

August 23, 2009
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
Dustin commented:

I take my fit down somepretty rough country roads,its not just a city car


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
warren commented:

my 2008 fit automatic seems to be rough getting out of 2nd. I was playing with the paddle shifter's and i am concerned i might have screwed up the shifting senors by down shifting at too fast a speed. Is this possible?


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
Jeff Moore commented:

Well, my mom got a Fit Sport last spring (she digs the blue color) and she loves it. Her biggest regret is that she didn't get it with a manual transmission, mostly because the car is jumpy, and does shift to a higher gear at quite the wrong times. The interesting point of course being that she can still (seemingly) do a better job than the computer using just her training and intuition. I wonder if there will always be mechatronic systems for which it is better to leave it to the user…


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
Rich commented:

The Fit is a gem around town. It was designed as a city car, and always will be. A little gem that really harks back to Honda's roots. Bravo!


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
Andre commented:

A word of warning: the Honda Fit 5sp manual has very different gearing than the automatic box. The 5sp manual has very short gear ratios, and the 5th gear runs the engine on high RPM's, for instance 3500rpm @70mph and 4000 @80mph! Comfortable highway speeds on 5th gear are 65-70mph due to increased engine noise at higher RPM's. Rewing the Fit engine well above 3000 rpm probably wont translate into stellar gas mileage either. The Honda Fit base model has 14 inch wheels, and installing 15 inch rims would lower rpms by 7%


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
Jeff Moore commented:

Well, my mom got a Fit Sport last spring (she digs the blue color) and she loves it. Her biggest regret is that she didn't get it with a manual transmission, mostly because the car is jumpy, and does shift to a higher gear at quite the right times. The interesting point of course being that she can still (seemingly) do a better job than the computer using just her training and intuition. I wonder if there will always be mechatronic systems for which it is better to leave it to the user…


July 29, 2008
In response to: New Wheels: 2008 Honda Fit Sport
John Dodge commented:

Stefan, Nice post. I was just at the Detroit Auto Show and cars are getting hopelessly complex and sophisticated.

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