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2006 Honda Civic Sedan First Drive
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| Nuts and Bolts |
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TO THE POINT
What’s New? The 2006 Honda Civic Sedan features a radical new exterior look, an innovative interior, and quantum leaps in performance, comfort, refinement, and efficiency.
Selling Points: Sleek styling, sophisticated engineering, comfortable seats front and rear, lots of standard safety equipment, reputation for reliability, excellent fuel economy
Deal Breakers: Funky dash design
Our Advice: For stylish, affordable, safe, economical, and reliable transportation, it’s hard to argue against the redesigned 2006 Honda Civic.
MEET THE COMPETITION
Chevrolet Cobalt Toyota Corolla
Related Links
2006 Honda Civic Sedan Photo Gallery
2006 Honda Civic Coupe First Drive
2006 Honda Civic Coupe Photo Gallery
2006 Honda Civic Hybrid First Drive
2006 Honda Civic Hybrid Photo Gallery
2006 Honda Civic Si Coupe First Drive
2006 Honda Civic Si Coupe Photo Gallery
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Nuts and Bolts
A 140-horsepower, 1.8-liter four-cylinder engine comes standard in every 2006 Honda Civic Sedan, expected to get as much as 40 mpg on the highway with the optional five-speed automatic transmission.
Every 2006 Honda Civic Sedan gets the same engine, a 1.8-liter, inline four-cylinder equipped with i-VTEC variable valve timing. With 140 horsepower available at 6,300 rpm and 128 lb.-ft. of torque peaking at 4,300 rpm, the 2006 Civic Sedan’s engine is more powerful than both motors offered in 2005 and runs on regular unleaded fuel. A five-speed manual transmission sends the power to the front wheels, and is estimated to provide 30 mpg in the city and 38 mpg on the highway. The optional five-speed automatic is expected to do even better when it comes to fuel efficiency, matching the manual’s city rating but getting 40 mpg on the highway. Suspended by MacPherson struts in front and double wishbones in back, the 2006 Honda Civic Sedan rides on standard P195/65 all-season tires. Civic LX and EX get P205/55R16 treads. All three models have a conventional hydraulically assisted rack-and-pinion steering system, unlike the drive-by-wire electric units in the Civic Hybrid and Civic Si sports coupe. Ventilated front disc brakes are standard, but DX and LX make do with rear drum brakes while the EX trades up for solid discs for better, more balanced braking performance.
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A D V E R T I S E M E N T
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CUSTOMER FEEDBACK |
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Why our customers love our dealers...
"Very accommodating, gave a good trade in deal and good purchase price."
- Sheri M. (South Plainfield, New Jersey)
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