The mission was an interior designer's dream. A whole
new shell meant a clean sheet of paper for the interior,
and designers were encouraged to utilize every known advancement
in ergonomics, comfort, convenience and materials. "I will
sell you this car based on the seat alone!" boasted Charlie
Baker, the project leader for the new Accord. But which
car? The Sedan and Coupe seats are
different, with the Coupe's bolstering providing a more
secure fit at the torso, and a lower seating position. If
our decision were based on the seat alone, we'd buy the
Coupe. Especially in leather, much nicer than the velour,
which curiously felt smoother in black-and-gray than brown-and-beige.
That was probably in our head. But it definitely looked
classier in black.
We did not get enough seat time in any of the models we
drove to evaluate comfort after long hours in the saddle,
which is the true test of a seat, but we can say that even
the Sedan seat has a certain one-with-the-car feel.
The Sedan seat, for the masses, has been widened by
1.7 inches and its backrest made taller. The cushion, springs
and new urethane padding are all intended to reduce vibration.
The vertical travel in the manual LX seat, with lever operation,
has been increased by 1.5 inches, a nice touch for women.
The steering wheel has been angled more toward the driver
and raised almost an inch. It tilts as before, and now telescopes
as well, by 1.5 inches. The space below the steering
wheel and instrument panel was enlarged, and the foot room
increased. But in the rear, the new front seats seem to
have a mixed effect; there's slightly more knee clearance,
but overall leg room has been reduced by 1.1 inches to 36.8
inches. That's 1 inch less than the
2002 Toyota Camry, but 0.4 more than the
Nissan Altima and 1.5 inches more than the
Volkswagen Passat.
Compared to these cars, the Accord Sedan trunk comes
up small, with a volume of 14 cubic feet, although the flat
floor will make it very easy to load things. The Camry has
17 cubic feet, Altima 16 and Passat 15. Now you can see
the cheetah profile, in those numbers. The Coupe looks more
like a cheetah. Its trunk holds 13 cubic feet.
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The excellent, clear analog instrumentation is also
all new, with large faces and LED illumination, another
feature previously found only in higher-priced cars. There's
dual-zone climate control on some EX models. The switchgear,
primarily three big dials located in the center of the dash,
is simple, if not particularly attractive. However the faux
carbon fiber trim on one of the models we drove looked nice,
while the brushed aluminum on other models wasn't bad either.
The simple big switchgear is a result of the successful
search for efficient use of space, with the audio, climate
and optional navigation systems integrated into a single
unit. The freed space leads to exceptional cabin storage,
including a good glovebox, big center console, bin under
the audio system that will hold 12 CDs, and door pockets
deep and wide enough for a purse.
All three sound systems are upgraded, featuring stuff
like two-band compression and five-point parametric equalization,
which sounds nice, pun intended. The Premium system includes
a six-disc in-dash CD changer, having a 180-watt amplifier
with four twin-neodymium speakers with polypropylene cone
woofers and soft dome tweeters, which sounds even better.
But here's the real-world test: We took the V6 Coupe six-speed
on a flat-out blast through the Malibu hills,
engine revving to redline, windows wide open, CD celebrating
Bob Marley, and even with the exterior noise, max volume
on the sound system wasn't necessary for the full effect.
The attention to detail shows in every corner: coinholders,
cellphone cord hooks, grab handles over every door, console
lights, power outlets, sunglass holders, sliding armrests
for different-sized arms, convenient and versatile access
to the trunk from the rear seat, a remote entry that opens
or closes all four windows, and last but definitely not
least, a total of eight cupholders, a couple of them big
enough to hold a liter-sized water bottle but, with four-spring
prongs, secure enough to grip a paper coffee cup. But if
you could distill this attention down to one example, it
would be the solid, pleasurable and unique sound of the
turn-signal click.
Oh, we almost forgot about the performance of the interior.
In three words: smooth, firm, quiet (when we wanted it to
be). Interior mission accomplished.