Login

Forgot your password?
Font size: A- A+
Become a Member FREE

Join around 100,000 monthly visitors and 72,000 members: daily games, discussions, contribute articles, make new friendships, GrownUps-only offers & more...

Register Free Now!
Notices
WIN a Globus California Classics Tour for Two!
WIN a Globus California Classics Tour for Two!
This year you could be taking a $9400 trip for two to California
Soothe Worry & Tension
Soothe Worry & Tension
...while enhancing your libido (men and women)
Sports & Travel Survey
Sports & Travel Survey
Complete the survey and be in to win a $100 Westfield voucher
Let's Chat Over Lunch
Let's Chat Over Lunch
Have a Free Lunch with Metlifecare
Feel All-Bran New
Feel All-Bran New
New Ways to Get Fibre Into Your Day
Win a return journey across Cook Strait
Win a return journey across Cook Strait
See more of New Zealand with Bluebridge
See the Difference
See the Difference
Eyesight Advice from Visique Optometrists
2degrees Offer
2degrees Offer
Making the CDMA switchover easy
Optometry & Eyewear Survey
Optometry & Eyewear Survey
We'd like to find out a little more about your optometry & eyewear preferences
CDMA Phone Network close down 31 July
CDMA Phone Network close down 31 July
Move now & get $79 credit with every Prepaid mobile
Keep up to date with us
Keep up to date with us
Follow our updates, new comps and articles via Facebook and Twitter
List your Classified
List your Classified
House Sitters, Employment, For Sale, Property & Personals
Live Chat
Live Chat
With fellow GrownUps in our multi-room chat
Compare & Purchase Insurance products
Disclaimer: Grown Ups is not an Insurance Broker. We provide product information from recognised Insurance companies. We are not making recommendations and we accept no responsibility for decisions made as a result of using the information provided.'
R50 Sexual Health
R50 Sexual Health
Check out the new section available to everyone.
Recipes
Recipes
Find some delicious recipes by clicking here.
Guide to Retirement Living
Guide to Retirement Living
Get your own copy for free, here.
Columnists

Vote in our Polls

Are you carpeting or re-carpeting a property in the next 6 months?

Category sponsor

Honda Jazz - A Little Car With Enduring Appeal

By Donn Anderson - Reproduced with permission of ACP Media and Auto Trader

Rocketing fuel prices have, unsurprisingly, put new emphasis on alternative fuels and improved economy. There’s talk of mass production plug-ins that aren’t to be confused with existing hybrid vehicles which combine petrol and electric motors. Many car makers are now running luke-warm on the fuel cell, a way of reacting hydrogen and oxygen together in a controlled manner to produce electricity.

Honda and Mercedes-Benz remain faithful to the fuel cell, but the industry is really seeking a breakthrough in battery technology. More immediately, Honda is developing new generation diesels, and the same brand plans to sell around 300,000 hybrids a year by 2011.

Meanwhile, getting bigger and better all the time has long been the philosophy of most motor manufacturers when it comes to replacing models. There isn’t much doubt cars continue to improve, but the idea of designing larger vehicles to replace their predecessors is no longer appropriate.

Honda’s enviable motorcycle history began in the sixties, but it was 1972 before the make’s four-wheel expertise came to the fore. This was in the shape of the original Civic, an ingenious small three-door hatchback that wooed international markets with its originality.

It was especially popular in New Zealand, enticing buyers who, until then, had been sold on a diet of mainly British cars. Honda could not assemble enough of these front wheel drive babies to satisfy local dealers and they had strong resale values.

In many ways the first generation Civic was the new Mini for the seventies. Yet subsequent Civics grew larger and larger, until the car outgrew the company’s lower medium size Accord. A small car the Civic was no longer. Of course increasing the size of a vehicle inevitably means bringing in another model beneath it to fill the gap. And the supermini class has become increasingly important, with twice the number of contenders than 10 years ago.

Hence the local arrival eight years ago of the Jazz, or Fit as it is known in Japan and China. That the spacious, if slightly awkward looking, Jazz has been a success is in no doubt.

Two million of them have been sold in 115 countries, and the on-going sales success is reflected in New Zealand, where the Honda was long the top-selling small car before being overwhelmed by the Suzuki Swift.

Gauging best sellers in a new car industry as small as ours can be misleading because factors like the rental car market can diffuse the real pattern or trends.

In June, for example, Toyota sold a large number of RAV4s to rental companies, elevating the model to near the top of the model list, unfamiliar territory for the compact SUV.

There have, however, been no such variances in demand for Honda’s smallest car.
The local distributor believes Jazz immediately changed the small car market, and there is no doubt the car has been a consistently strong seller virtually from launch.

This year, the enduring Jazz is running ninth best selling new car and second most popular small car with volumes outstripping Honda’s Civic and Accord.

The formula was deemed so right that when the new version arrived in Japan last year, both styling and dimensions were strikingly similar to the original.

New Zealand stays with the international version, while Jazz in its home market second time around has a 50mm longer wheelbase and a repositioned fuel tank that increases rear headroom by 10mm while retaining the same overall body height.

The tall body concept was always likely to comprise harmonious styling while preserving the remarkable interior space and flexibility that have made the car so popular.

At 3830mm, overall length still qualifies Jazz as a small car, even if the 1525mm height is anything but miniscule.

There’s a choice of 1.3-litre and 1.5-litre VTEC, with prices spanning $5000 from the entry-level manual that has a retail cost of $20,500.

Significantly, half the Jazz sales in our country are $24,600 Sport versions, with the larger motor boasting a seven-speed CVT automatic transmission as standard.

For an extra $900 you can specify the same model with the swivel seat, a manually operated arrangement to ease entry and exit for front seat passengers.

Integrated body skirts, mesh grille and decals provide the Sport with a slightly more ostentatious look than the less powerful Jazz.

Even so, all the latest versions boast front fog lamps, rear spoiler and 185/55 Bridgestone tyres running on 15-inch spoked alloys.

Also standard is a height adjustable driver’s seat, manual air conditioning, rear load tonneau cover, leather steering wheel, engine immobiliser and power retractable wing mirrors.

Formula 1-style steering wheel paddles activate the CVT automatic, with the left-hand paddle to shift down and the right paddle for up shifting.

A steering wheel button switches between sequential and auto modes, and the transmission is smooth and quick acting. On a light throttle at slow urban speeds, however, there is some hesitancy.

With 81kW of power and 143Nm of torque, the Sport is a brisk performer, producing low emissions and frugal 6.1 litres/100km overall economy. The motor is happy to run on E10 ethanol blend petrol.

Electric speed sensitive steering is a little light and lacking in feel, and the car’s suspension is all conventional, with MacPherson struts up front and a rear trailing arm and torsion beam set-up at the rear.

Anti-roll bars are fitted front and rear and the ride is firm and somewhat unforgiving, while road noise tends to be high at open road speeds.

Rear brakes are drum, and the four-sensor, three-channel ABS braking is combined with electronic brake distribution.

All Jazz models also have emergency brake assist, while the Honda G-Force function is claimed to moderate the force of any impact and help maintain a safety zone around the car’s occupants.

What really sells this car, however, is the cab-forward design, compact engine, high body and flat floor, all of which embodies the Jazz with remarkable interior space.

Door panels and handles are scalloped and recessed where possible, and the versatile seating arrangement allows the carrying of tall, awkward loads.

There are no qualms, either, about the excellent leg and head room front and rear and the amount of storage space.

The bold instrument panel, with three main instrument dials reflecting a motorcycle heritage, and bright layout of controls also win favour.

Fine-tuned in Germany by a European design team, the enduring success of this little Honda is best expressed by the car’s long-time sales appeal.   

The customer, as always, votes with the chequebook.

Published 25th Jul 2008

print

Advertisement

Advertisement

Article Information
Average Rating: 10
Explore This Topic
Discuss This

Click here to start a discussion on this or Click here to read other discussions.

Contribute
Log in to post comments

 

Join GrownUps Free
By becoming a GrownUps member and part of the Community, you gain access to:
  • Enter Competitions
  • Go into regular prize draws
  • Play daily games
  • Join Discussion Groups
  • Find like-minded individuals and create lasting friendships
  • Receive special GrownUps offers and
  • Add you own articles of interest, recipes, pictures for fellow members to read and view.
All for FREE! So why not join now?

Register Now