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Honda Accord (Japan and Europe seventh generation)
Motor vehicle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The seventh-generation Honda Accord for the European and Japanese markets is a mid-size car that was available as a four-door sedan or a five-door station wagon and was produced by Honda from October 2002 (for the 2003 model year) to 2008. It won the 2002-03 Japan Car of the Year upon its launch.[2]
For this generation, the European and Japanese Accords, previously separate models, were consolidated into a single version designed to be more competitive in the European market. It became a top seller in its class in Australia, where over 45,000 sedans were sold between 2003 and 2008.[citation needed] The car was also exported to the United States and Canada, where it was sold as the Acura TSX. Outside North America the first Honda-built diesel engine was offered. In the Japanese market, the Accord was merged into the Torneo range to compete against the Mazda Atenza and Subaru Legacy.
The consolidation of the Japanese and European models was met with some skepticism in Japan at the time, with journalists suggesting Honda was abandoning the Japanese platform in favor of prioritizing foreign markets. Honda suggested that delivering a vehicle achieving that of a "European standard" was in line with what prospective Accord owners in Japan were expecting, compared to buyers of kei cars or compact cars.[3]
Unlike the previous generation, the sedan and wagon variants were simultaneously designed and released alongside each other, with everything behind the B-pillar for the wagon being independently designed by another designer. This allowed greater flexibility with core design elements in the wagon, instead of just lengthening the roof and boot space.[3]
A variant of the larger North American Accord was sold in Japan as the Honda Inspire to compete in the entry-level luxury sedan class.[4] In markets where both versions of the Accord are sold, such as in New Zealand and Australia, the smaller Japan/Europe-type car is called Accord Euro to distinguish it from the larger North American model.
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AWD variant (CL8 & CM3)
In Japan, an AWD variant of the Accord was offered in both Sedan (CL8) and Wagon (CM3) forms. The sedan was offered with the Eco 2.0 Engine and automatic transmission only.[5] Note some were fitted with smaller brakes to fit the smaller 15 inch (195/65R15) wheel and tyres. The Wagon was offered with the 2.4 engine (in both high output and low output) and automatic transmission only.[6]
Performance Variant: Euro R (CL7)
It included a 1,998 cc (2.0 L; 121.9 cu in) high performance K20A engine rated at 220 PS (162 kW; 217 hp) at 8000 rpm and 21 kg⋅m (206 N⋅m; 152 lb⋅ft) at 6000 rpm, 6-speed manual transmission, locked slip differential, lightweight flywheel, strut-brace, bodykit, Recaro seats, Momo steering wheel, HID headlights, "Type-R" red instrument cluster, aluminium pedals and 17-inch aluminium wheels with 215/45R17 tires.[7] Unique to the K20A in the Euro R, the engine features a secondary-force counterbalance shaft not found in the other Type R K20A engine variants - a feature for reducing engine vibration at the cost of power. The balancer system rotates at speeds exceeding 16,000 rpm.[8] A Mugen Motorsports concept was unveiled at the 2009 Pro shop Refill.[9]
Note the Chassis Code (CL7) is shared with the base model Accord in Japan, using a different Eco version of the 2.0 engine rated at 155 PS (114 kW; 153 hp), offered in auto transmission only along with none of the other performance and visual enhancements.
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Engines
Japan
Europe, Australia and New Zealand
- Additional notes
- FWD only
- N22A1 engine available in Europe only
Gallery
- Honda Accord Euro sedan (Australia; pre-facelift)
- Honda Accord Tourer (Europe; pre-facelift)
- Honda Accord Euro sedan (Australia; facelift)
- Honda Accord Euro sedan (Australia; facelift)
- Honda Accord Euro R sedan (Japan; facelift)
- Honda Accord Tourer (Europe; facelift)
- Honda Accord WTCC
Marketing
The European marketing campaign was quite successful and is regarded as one of the most influential commercials of the early 2000s.[10]
References
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