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Showing posts with label Honda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Honda. Show all posts

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Posted by: Anthony Lim

Most workers striking to demand higher wages returned to their jobs at a Honda plant in southern China after walking off the production line last week, Honda officials said yesterday.

Koji Matsuyama, an official at Honda Lock's headquarters in Miyazaki, Japan, said the strike ended on Sat, and almost all workers returned to work on Mon. The company was still not operating at full capacity, he said.

The strike at Honda Lock (Guangdong) Co comes amid an upsurge in industrial actions by migrant workers frustrated over relatively low pay, harsh working conditions and surging living costs.

Matsuyama refused to comment on news that the factory was hiring new workers to replace those who refused to return to work.

However, an official who identified herself as a human resources manager at the plant in Zhongshan, just outside the southern city of Guangzhou, said that the company was hiring new workers to replace those who had not come back.



The workers who gave up the strike agreed to accept a wage raise of 200 yuan (about US$30) to 1,139 yuan (US$170), said the manager, who refused to give her name. The workers had been seeking raises of 1,700 yuan-2040 yuan (US$250-US$300), and rejected an earlier offer of 100 yuan (US$15), the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Honda officials in Tokyo referred inquiries to Honda Lock. About 85% of plant's 1,400 workers had joined the action, forcing a halt to operations.

The strike last week came as Honda resumed production at two other car assembly plants after resolving a three-day strike at parts supplier Foshan Fengfu Autoparts Co.

Honda said the Foshan factory employees agreed to a pay raise of 366 yuan (US$53) per month for each full-time worker. That increases the pay for a new employee to 1,910 yuan (US$280) per month.

Workers largely had accepted slower wage growth during the recent economic slowdown, but as the economy has rebounded and prices rise, they are working longer hours with no appreciable improvement in income, prompting some to take action.

Fearing challenges to their hold on power, China's communist leaders ban unauthorised labour organisations and public dissent. Those who violate those bans face harassment and prosecution.

But authorities have long tolerated limited, local protests by workers unhappy over wages or other issues, perhaps recognising the need for an outlet for such frustrations. - AP

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Story and photos by ANTHONY LIM

You really can’t please everyone, that’s for sure. Build a car with 10 unique features novel to a price segment, and someone will invariably ask for 11 or 15. Offer a stylish, purposeful vehicle that you think will fit its design brief and market segmentation to a T, and someone will come along and pick at the lack of commission in it.

Sometimes though, there’s some validity to the latter. While no one is expecting the plushness and feel of a Roller if you’re paying for a Viva, you can certainly attempt to win hearts and minds by offering better than the price asked for.

It really is all about perception, and not just from the number of bling items and cool features you can put before someone. Presentation, like with everything else, is key, and the consumer must really believe that the vehicle being offered before him is really worth the asking price. Or, at the very least, feel like it.

The Honda Freed is bit like that, really. It’s stylish enough from a design perspective, and it drives as well as you would expect a Honda to do. There’s more than decent space for four and cargo, and at a pinch, it becomes a small personnel carrier, seating seven.

So, what’s there to jump on then? Well, there is the price, which is where it all starts getting a bit murky. At RM112,980, on the road with insurance, the Freed sits at a rather premium price point, and tagging it as a premium compact MPV sort of cements that thought process.

The trouble with going the premium route is that you also up expectations, and in the case of the Freed, buyers are going to expect quite a fair bit more from a vehicle that shares the same platform as a Fit/Jazz and the engine as the City.

Not that there isn’t, really. The Freed does have a good number of pluses, which were brought to the fore during the Freed media drive to Penang earlier in the week. The interior has a marvellous sense of space given the size of the vehicle, aided suitably by the walk-through cabin layout and second row captain’s chairs. Meanwhile, the automatic sliding doors are a boon, tidy and uneventful in use.

Seat comfort is high, even across long distance, and of note is the suspension setup, which offers exemplary compliance and stability at speeds for a vehicle in this class. There is still some pitching, given the vehicle’s MPV legs, but the suppleness of its ride is very commendable. At low levels, the ride has firmness to it, but it’s never jarring.

Other positives include low wind noise at high speeds, another laudable plus. As for performance, the Freed manages to get to highway speeds rapidly and doesn’t start getting breathless until you reach the 140kmh mark, from where it will get to 160kmh or so eventually, with enough road. Though the exhaust exhibits a raspy tonal quality when the vehicle is pushed hard, the overall noise level coming off the block is quite civil, actually.

The five-speed auto box is smooth in operation, but has to work hard when the car is pushed - out on the highways, and on inclines, the gearbox tends to hunt a little. Still, there’s little to complain about in this regard. The biggest point of contention in the Freed isn’t with how it performs or looks, but rather with the lack of premium in its interior. For the asking price, the cabin feels a little low rent in terms of trim and plushness.

The shortcomings - I wouldn’t call them outright flaws - begin with the texture of the plastic panelling, which isn’t only hard to the sight, but to touch as well, especially so with the door cards. Granted, the panel looks resistant to scuffing and dirt, but surely there has to be a better solution somewhere. There were also some fitment issues evident in the demonstrators.

The main contact points, in this case the plastic steering wheel and gearshift knob lever, amplify things that bit more. The anomalies - and omissions - don’t end there. There’s no armrest on the rear sliding door panels (in order to achieve a required travel clearance), but instead these are offered on the inside of each second row seat.

Not a problem if you have overhead grip handles, but surprisingly there are none to compensate for the handle omission on the door cards. There is a grip handle located on the B-pillar, but this is meant more as a means in assisting ingress and egress, and requires too much arm extension as a grip handle in normal use.

It’s not lost upon Honda, which agreed with the consensus of most of the motoring journalists present that the level of trim doesn’t reflect the price point, and the same amount of feedback has apparently been received in Japan. The company says that the choice of texture for the plastic makes it easy to clean (and, keep clean, presumably), but given the feedback gathered from markets, is considering how to upgrade the interior.

The third row seats fold up and sideways, instead of down flat, in a simple three-step process, a layout choice Honda says was made so the flat floor through the cabin could be had. While there is some space lost in cargo carrying ability, a Freed on display showed that a fair amount can be carried, which is surprisingly good.

The Freed doesn’t have second row blower vents, which may or not be a point of contention depending on how you value the condition of your air. In the vehicle I was in, this didn’t crop up as a problem, even for the person sitting in the third row, but there were other test drive teams reporting the lack of this to offer less than perfect climate control at the back. Honda says that implementing the blower vent couldn’t be done with the layout chosen, but with feedback, is considering an add-on recirculation improver to move air faster around the cabin. Your guess is as good as mine as to what it’ll look like, and where it will be sited.

There’s a plus to the AC system, and that is that it’s quiet. The blower, even at maximum level, offers good output volume but without being shouty; indeed, this must be one of the easiest on the ear climate control systems I’ve come across, and that’s a definite plus.

In all fairness, it’s not about the Freed being less than what it set out to be. It really isn’t, and in truth is a neat, compact MPV with a set of good attributes. From a performance perspective, it’s winsome, and ditto the overall functionality. Given the pricing, however, the ‘premium’ tag may be stretching it a bit too thin, especially with those plastics on call. Sometimes, the small things really do matter.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Posted by: Anthony Lim

Honda is ending the production cycle of its Civic Type R sedan, with the last vehicles rolling off the Suzuka plant at the end of Aug. With that, Honda Malaysia will also end sales of the car locally then - Malaysia is the only country outside of Japan to have the four-door Civic Type R.



Since its introduction, close to 12,000 units have been sold in both Japan and Malaysia, and to date, since its introduction here in Aug 2007, 234 units of the type have been sold locally.

At the moment, customers in Malaysia can still place orders for the Civic Type R, which is priced at RM199,800, at any authorised Honda dealer, so if you want one before it's gone, best be quick about it.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Posted by: Anthony Lim

The green fad in Japan is expanding from cars to bikes with Honda's zero-emission super-quiet electric EV-neo scooter.

The EV-neo, shown yesterday at Honda's research facility in the Tokyo suburb of Wako, zipped around emitting just a calm whirring sound, with none of a motorcycle's gritty growl.

Honda plans to start leasing the scooters - the equivalent of a 50cc gasoline-powered bike - in Dec and says its target market is companies that make deliveries, such as newspapers and pizza parlors. The EV-neo has a cruising range of 30km on one charge.

It takes four hours to recharge fully from a regular home outlet, and recharges about 80% in 20 minutes from a special machine. The EV-neo goes up to 30kmh, and runs on lithium-ion batteries from Japanese electronics maker Toshiba Corp.

The EV-neo gives Honda a chance to push an electric vehicle, an area where it has been less aggressive than rivals such as Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors, said Honda general manager Toshiyuki Inuma. "The motorcycle is a more nimble business, and it allows us to try out more things," he said.



Overseas plans and sales to individual consumers for EV-neo are still undecided.

Honda plans to lease the scooters instead of selling them and hopes to set a price will that will cost less than a regular bike over three years including gas prices - a range that would be about 600,000 yen (US$6,000) to 800,000 (US$8,000) each.

Motorcycle manufacturer Yamaha Motor is also planning an electric motorcycle for this summer, although pricing and other details have not been announced.

Inuma said some companies will want to send a green message by using the EV-neo. The sales potential in China is huge, but bringing the EV-neo price down to attractive levels for such markets would be hard, he added.

Honda may face stiff competition from Chinese manufacturers who already are churning out 22mil battery-powered bikes and scooters a year priced at 1,700 to 3,000 yuan (US$250 to US$450). Most are for domestic use but exports to other developing markets have soared.

Still, Inuma boasted the scooter is not only quiet and green, but it also doesn't smell greasy, and may prove a hit in industrialised nations. - AP

Sunday, April 11, 2010

honda freed




http://cloud.paultan.org/honda-freed-malaysia.jpg

I knew this MPV was coming to Malaysia the moment Honda announced that it would be building it in Honda Prospect Motor Indonesia. And Honda has just announced that the Freed is 100% coming to Malaysia, set for a launch in Q2 this year to be exact. It will come in as a CBU import from Indonesia.

“Since its official launch in Japan in 2008, Freed has been well received in the Asia region including Indonesia and Thailand. It later garnered great anticipation in Malaysia in 2009. Therefore, we are excited to inform all that Honda Malaysia will be bringing in the Freed onto Malaysian shores in the second quarter of this year,” said Mr. Toru Takahashi, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Honda Malaysia.

The Honda Freed is the latest and probably the longest wheelbase addition to the Global Small Platform which underpins cars such as the Honda Jazz. There are various seating configurations – a 5-seater 2-3 config as well as triple row configs such as 2-3-3, 2-2-3 with individual 2nd row seats, and 2-2-2 with individual seats for everyone. We’ll have to wait until the launch to find out what kind of seat configuration we’ll get.

The Freed is a B-segment MPV positioned below the Honda Stream but it has some unique features that most of its B-segment competitors do not have, such as automatic sliding doors on BOTH sides. The Freed also has a walkthrough cabin, which means the floor is flat from the front to the rear and you can walk from the front row to the rear row (hunched down of course) without having to exit the vehicle. Honda claims that the flat floor and high roof allows you to carry a 27 inch bicycle without taking off wheels or handle bars. Look after the jump for some Japanese market pix of the Freed.

Related Posts:
New Honda Freed MPV with up to 8 seats
Honda Freed Indonesia production for South East Asia
Honda Freed styling study at Tokyo Auto Expo 2010

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VIDEO: Honda Freed MPV

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Honda had recalled 646,000 vehicles in January. — AFP pic

CHICAGO, March 18 — Honda has announced the recall of an estimated 412,000 vehicles in the United States because of problems with “soft” brakes, in the latest blow to the embattled Japanese auto industry.

Honda said the problem can result from air accumulating in a “vehicle stability assist modulator,” which causes the pedal to get closer to the floor than normal before the vehicle stops.

The move came a month after Japan’s second-biggest carmaker recalled more than 437,000 vehicles worldwide to fix airbags that it said can explode and spray out potentially deadly metal shards.

In January, some 646,000 Honda Fit and Jazz vehicles were recalled worldwide because the power window switch could short out and cause a fire if too much water got into the door handle.

The Japanese automaker’s latest recall affects 2007-2008 model years of the Odyssey minivan and boxy Element sport utility vehicle.

Honda said some accidents involving soft brakes were reported to safety regulators in the vehicles covered under the recall but that it was unlikely the soft pedal problem was a significant factor.

“There are three injuries reported to NHTSA for vehicles in this range but it’s tough to link those injuries to this cause,” Honda spokesman Chris Martin told AFP.

That’s because the brakes continue to function long after they begin to soften and the softening process takes a long time to develop.

“It’s a very slow progression because it’s a tiny, tiny amount of air that gets in — it’s smaller than a drop of water,” Martin said.

“Customers get a lot of warning.”

If the problem goes untreated, however, the brakes could eventually stop working, he added.

Honda’s woes come as rival Toyota is struggling to rebuild its once stellar reputation for quality and safety after a series of mass recalls due to faulty accelerator and brake systems.

Toyota has insisted it has found a solution to defects that triggered the recall of more than eight million vehicles worldwide, including six million in the United States, and have been blamed for about 50 US deaths.

But critics have accused Toyota of intentionally hiding deadly defects from consumers and ignoring potential electronic problems.

The top Japanese automaker has been called to Washington to answer a congressional investigation. It faces scrutiny by securities regulators and a US federal grand jury investigating whether there is sufficient evidence for criminal charges related to problems with Toyota’s brakes and accelerators.

It has also been slapped with scores of civil lawsuits, including one last week from a California prosecutor alleging that Toyota ignored reports of problems with its vehicles and deliberately misled the public.

“As other car companies watch from the sidelines, they are likely to shorten the decision cycle between learning of a problem and taking action,” said Jeremy Anwyl, chief executive officer of the automotive website Edmunds.com.

“Industry norms for ‘due diligence’ research and testing may take too long in the court of public opinion, given today’s heightened consumer sensitivity to car safety issues and defects.”

Honda will be sending letters out to owners next month asking them to schedule an appointment to have the modulator sealed to prevent air intrusion.

“Although not all vehicles being recalled are affected by this issue, we are recalling all possible units to assure all customers that their vehicles will perform correctly,” Honda said in a statement. — AFP/Relaxnews

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Honda CR-V Diesel
Expected in 2011
Estimated price: Rs 22.5 - 25 lakh
With the current diesel engines being quick, silent and efficient; they are giving the petrol engines a run for their money. After manufacturing only petrol engines for decades, Honda has produced its first diesel engine to boost its sales. Honda Siel will use this engine in its CR-V to boost its sales and compete in the current Indian market.

Engine:

Honda has developed a common-rail diesel engine, its all four cylinder displacing a total of 2200 cubic centrimetres. The engine’s 134 horses pull the SUV and produce a maximum of 347Nm of torque.

Features:

The Honda CR-V diesel looks no different from its petrol sibling. The only difference between the two is the powerplant running them.

Competitors:

The Honda CR-V Diesel’s main rivals are the Chevrolet Captiva, Hyundai Tucson, Nissan X-Trail.

Specs (Speculated)
Displacement: 2200cc
Power: 134bhp
Torque: 347Nm

Honda Accord Diesel
Expected in 2011
Estimated price: Rs 20-25 lakh
The present day diesel engines are quick, silent and efficient; they are giving the petrol engines a run for their money. After manufacturing only petrol engines for decades, Honda has produced its first diesel engine to boost its sales. Honda Siel will use this engine in its Accord to boost its sales and compete in the current Indian market.

Engine:

Honda has developed a common-rail diesel engine, its all four cylinder displacing a total of 2200 cubic centrimetres. The engine’s 134 horses pull the Accord and produce a maximum of 347Nm of torque.

Features:

The Honda Accord diesel looks no different from its petrol sibling. The only difference between the two is the powerplant running them. The car interiors, and the rest of the features remain unchanged.

Competitors:

Honda Accord’s main rivals include the Skoda Superb Diesel, the Mercedes C-Class, BMW 3-series and the VW Passat. Considering the current sales of Accord petrol, the diesel engine could trigger its sales further.


Specs (Speculated)
Displacement: 2200cc
Power: 134bhp
Torque: 347Nm
Overall Length : 4950mm
Overall Width : 1845 mm
Overall Height: 1475 mm
Seating Capacity: 5
No of Doors: 4 door
Gears/Speeds: 5 Gears
Minimum Turning Radius: 5.6 metres
Tyres: 215 / 60 R16 Tubeless

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Civic MUGEN

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American Honda Motor Co., Inc., today revealed a prototype Civic MUGEN Si Sedan prepared by legendary Honda tuner MUGEN equipped with a high performance suspension, forged aluminum wheels, aerodynamic body styling and a sport exhaust system at the 2006 Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show.

Planned for production in a limited quantity of 500 units a year, the Civic MUGEN Si will be available at U.S. Honda dealers starting in spring 2007 with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of less than $30,000 and a full factory warranty.

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Sunday, January 31, 2010


honda.jpgJOHANNESBURG, Jan 29 – Honda Motors has recalled all 2002-2008 year model Jazz units in South Africa after a fire broke out in one last year, killing a toddler.

Honda said on its website www.honda.co.za it would "inspect and modify driver door power-window switches that may, in some cases, short-circuit as a result of water intrusion".

Vanilla Nurse was killed on her second birthday in Cape Town in September last year when the car she was sleeping in caught fire.

Honda’s Jazz was its best-selling model in December, selling 352 units during the month.

Earlier this week, Toyota Motor Corp's announced it would extend to Europe and China a recall of millions of vehicles due to faulty accelerator pedals and floor mats. – Reuters


honda.jpgMUMBAI, Jan 31 – The Indian unit of Honda Motor Co said late on Saturday it would recall 8,532 of its 2nd generation City models manufactured in 2007 because of a faulty window switch.

The 3rd Generation City currently sold in India is not affected and does not require any part replacement, Honda Siel Cars said in a statement.

Earlier, Honda Motor Co said it has recalled 646,000 of its Fit/Jazz and City automobiles globally, including 140,000 vehicles in the United States and covers the models sold in North America, South America, Europe, South Africa and Asia, but not Japan. – Reuters

 

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