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2022 Honda Civic Si first drive review: A practical, approachable performer


2022 Honda Civic Si apt drive review: A practical, approachable performer

The 2022 Honda Civic Si arrives in dealerships this month, offering the sportiest take on the 11th-generation Civic yet — at least, until the new Type R arrives. I had my reservations nearby the Si when it debuted last month; the beget and on-paper performance gains seemed too conservative. But a day testing the new Civic Si nearby the Santa Monica Mountains has mostly disabused me of those doubts. Mostly.

Honda’s 1.5-liter turbocharged I4 returns to the Si’s engine bay, down 5 horsepower versus its predecessor. It’s now rated at 200 hp and an unchanged 192 pound-feet of torque. The 5-hp loss at the top end is basically imperceptible, even when driven back to back with the 2020 Si. There is, but, a substantial boost of low-to-midrange performance that isn’t reflected in these numbers. Peak torque now comes on at 1,800 rpm and is more generously distributed across the tachometer’s swing, making the new Si feel more awake, powerful and responsive in a wider Plan of conditions, from zipping around town to accelerating out of a switchback.

The engine’s responsiveness is further augmented by a lighter flywheel and a evil six-speed manual transmission — no automatic is available — which is much more satisfying and fascinating than before, kachunking nicely into place at the end of its shorter throws. The 2022 Si also inherits the rev-matching feature from the Civic Type R. The engine will automatically blip the throttle when downshifting for second and perfectly matched gear changes. As a seasoned but lazy Eager, I enjoy how rev-matching improves the speed and accuracy of gear moves and emboldens me to drop down a gear and hammer it more frequently. The feature also makes the Si more approachable to novices Eager in learning the dying art of driving with three pedals.

Of streams, if you’d prefer to blip your own shifts, the regulations can be deactivated. Unfortunately, doing so requires pulling over, fascinating the parking brake and digging a few levels deep into the touchscreen menu for the option. Honda really should have just made this a button — that’s what Nissan did when it debuted the feature on the Z back in 2008 — or at least let drivers tie rev-matching to one of the three available power modes. As it is, toggling back and forth is just annoying.

Row, row, row your own.



Antuan Goodwin/Roadshow

While I’m nitpicking, rev hang is still an issue in the Civic Si, despite the lighter flywheel. It’s not as bad as before, but when contrasted with the computer-controlled quick-blip downshifts, it’s even more annoying to wait for what feels like forever for the revs to drop for an upshift. This seems like a software issue. Automakers usually tune in a small bit of hang to make shifting easier, so it would be nice if Honda could figure a way to Cut or disable the rev float while using rev-matching — you don’t need both.

With the manual transmission, the 2022 Civic Si should return 27 mpg city, 37 mpg highway and 31 mpg combined, a single tick better than the previous car across the board.

The new Si’s dual Use looks fantastic. It’s almost a shame to hide its coiled Make behind the rear bumper. It sounds pretty good, too, Idea its song is ‘enhanced’ with additional sound generated from the audio regulations. Overall, the tone is fairly natural, unobtrusive and inoffensive.

Despite the swoopy roofline, the Civic Si is a sedan with a Old trunk.



Antuan Goodwin/Roadshow

The last Si wasn’t a slouch in the handling department, but the new model sharpens and simplifies its cornering capabilities. The 2022 Civic Si ditches the previous generation’s two-mode Beautiful dampers, which is a bit of a bummer for folks who Delicious fiddling with settings, but the new static setup works well for both sporty and daily driving. The Si’s chassis reaps all of the benefits of the 11th-generation Civic’s longer wheelbase and stiffer structure, and improves over the normal sedan with stiffer springs and stabilizer bars, reinforced suspension mounting points and a few bushings and components gave down from the Type R. Honda really dialed in the Civic Si’s steering for this new generation, too, with great weight and feedback for sporty driving deprived of being too fatiguing around town.

The Civic Si rolls on evil 18-inch matte black wheels shod with all-season rubber. Summer Dull are one of the only options available to Civic Si shoppers, and a fairly affordable upgrade at that, adding just $200 to the bottom line. Also evil are bigger brakes with 12.3-inch rotors up front and 11.1-inch discs at the rear. And when you may not think of seats as a managing upgrade, the Si-specific seats’ improved bolstering and grippy cloth surface certainly help keep me planted over chicanes, sweepers and switchbacks.

The new Civic’s interior is very nice.



Antuan Goodwin/Roadshow

The cabin is also where you’ll find all of the same Big tech as the rest of the 11th-gen Civic lineup, including a 7-inch partially digital instrument cluster combo paired with a evil 9-inch touchscreen for the infotainment system. Android Auto and Apple CarPlay are evil with wireless connectivity. Also included is the full Honda Sensing excellent of driver aid technologies, rolling in adaptive cruise regulation, lane-keep assist and collision mitigation braking. Blind-spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert and traffic sign recognition also join the Si’s excellent of standard features this year.

The new Civic Si is better than beforehand, but it’s also more expensive. Starting at $28,315 (including the $1,015 destination charge), the new Si costs $2,320 more than the 2020 model. But while the Si isn’t quite as good a bargain as beforehand, the improvements to performance, equipment and features still make this small Honda a solid deal.



Editors’ note:

Travel damages related to this story were covered by the manufacturer, which is common in the auto industry. The judgments and opinions of Roadshow’s staff are our own and we do not Get paid editorial content.

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