Acura Will Introduce Clean Diesel i-DTEC Engine in 2009
#1
Super Moderator
Thread Starter
Acura Will Introduce Clean Diesel i-DTEC Engine in 2009
Acura Will Introduce Clean Diesel i-DTEC Engine in 2009
Posted on 01/14/2008
Acura will introduce the new i-DTEC clean diesel engine to the North American market in 2009. The i-DTEC engine reduces noxious exhaust emissions while boosting power and fuel efficiency. A combination of optimized combustion chamber design and reduced injection time results in a clean, quiet engine that delivers excellent performance for an enjoyable driving experience. In addition, the i-DTEC engine meets the ultra-stringent U.S. EPA Tier II Bin 5 emission standards without the on-board storage of urea.
The i-DTEC clean diesel engine is on display exclusively in the Acura booth at the North American International Auto Show and will be utilized in an Acura vehicle to be named at a later date.
Source: Acura
Posted on 01/14/2008
Acura will introduce the new i-DTEC clean diesel engine to the North American market in 2009. The i-DTEC engine reduces noxious exhaust emissions while boosting power and fuel efficiency. A combination of optimized combustion chamber design and reduced injection time results in a clean, quiet engine that delivers excellent performance for an enjoyable driving experience. In addition, the i-DTEC engine meets the ultra-stringent U.S. EPA Tier II Bin 5 emission standards without the on-board storage of urea.
The i-DTEC clean diesel engine is on display exclusively in the Acura booth at the North American International Auto Show and will be utilized in an Acura vehicle to be named at a later date.
Source: Acura
#5
Profitable
Honda CEO Says Clean Diesel Cars will be Profitable
Reuters | Monday, 14 January 2008
The head of Honda said that the Japanese automaker's yet-to-be released clean diesel cars will be profitable immediately, unlike expensive gasoline-electric hybrid cars that still yield little or no profit after a decade on the market.
"Our diesel cars are going to have an appropriate level of profit from the start," chief executive Takeo Fukui told a small group of reporters in an interview at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
He said Honda's clean diesel cars, to be launched in the United States next year, will not require a urea tank as most European systems do.
The use of aluminum in the cylinder block instead of steel would also allow it to manufacture the engines using its existing gasoline engine facilities, keeping initial investments down, Fukui added.
Honda's new diesel drive train generates and stores ammonia within a two-layer catalytic converter to turn nitrogen oxide into harmless nitrogen.
The new system will clear the same emissions regulations as gasoline in the United States, Fukui said.
Japan's second-biggest automaker is set to announce later this afternoon the launch of its first ultra-clean diesel car in the United States in 2009, as planned.
Honda's premium Acura brand will be the first to get the four-cylinder diesel engine, Fukui said. Models fueled by V6 diesel engines will follow after 2010, he added.
Diesel cars now make up more than half of Europe's new cars but have a poor image among consumers in the United States, as well as Japan, as being both loud and dirty.
But Fukui said he expected Honda's sale of four-cylinder diesel cars to reach about 150,000 vehicles globally by around 2010 with the planned roll-out in the United States and Japan.
Honda now sells more than 100,000 diesel cars a year, all in Europe.
Honda is also due to begin selling low-cost hybrid cars in 2009. Half of the planned 200,000 units of the hybrid-only family car are bound for North America.
A new hybrid sports car is set to follow, while the mass-volume Civic series will also get the cheap and improved hybrid system with the next remodeling.
Fukui said he expected the new hybrid system would be as profitable as conventional gasoline cars, depending on the cars' selling price.
The chief executive has indicated that he wants to limit the price premium for consumers buying hybrid cars to around 200,000 yen ($NZ2367) to achieve the company's target of powering 10 per cent of its global vehicle sales with hybrid cars by around 2010.
Honda produces its hybrid cars in Japan. While Fukui said he wants to build at least 80 per cent of its cars sold in the United States in North America, he said he was not now thinking of local production of hybrids in the region.
"We may be thinking about local production (in North America) around 2011 or 2012 when our global hybrid sales reach 400,000 to 500,000 cars a year, but we don't think it's all that important," Fukui said without elaborating.
Reuters | Monday, 14 January 2008
The head of Honda said that the Japanese automaker's yet-to-be released clean diesel cars will be profitable immediately, unlike expensive gasoline-electric hybrid cars that still yield little or no profit after a decade on the market.
"Our diesel cars are going to have an appropriate level of profit from the start," chief executive Takeo Fukui told a small group of reporters in an interview at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
He said Honda's clean diesel cars, to be launched in the United States next year, will not require a urea tank as most European systems do.
The use of aluminum in the cylinder block instead of steel would also allow it to manufacture the engines using its existing gasoline engine facilities, keeping initial investments down, Fukui added.
Honda's new diesel drive train generates and stores ammonia within a two-layer catalytic converter to turn nitrogen oxide into harmless nitrogen.
The new system will clear the same emissions regulations as gasoline in the United States, Fukui said.
Japan's second-biggest automaker is set to announce later this afternoon the launch of its first ultra-clean diesel car in the United States in 2009, as planned.
Honda's premium Acura brand will be the first to get the four-cylinder diesel engine, Fukui said. Models fueled by V6 diesel engines will follow after 2010, he added.
Diesel cars now make up more than half of Europe's new cars but have a poor image among consumers in the United States, as well as Japan, as being both loud and dirty.
But Fukui said he expected Honda's sale of four-cylinder diesel cars to reach about 150,000 vehicles globally by around 2010 with the planned roll-out in the United States and Japan.
Honda now sells more than 100,000 diesel cars a year, all in Europe.
Honda is also due to begin selling low-cost hybrid cars in 2009. Half of the planned 200,000 units of the hybrid-only family car are bound for North America.
A new hybrid sports car is set to follow, while the mass-volume Civic series will also get the cheap and improved hybrid system with the next remodeling.
Fukui said he expected the new hybrid system would be as profitable as conventional gasoline cars, depending on the cars' selling price.
The chief executive has indicated that he wants to limit the price premium for consumers buying hybrid cars to around 200,000 yen ($NZ2367) to achieve the company's target of powering 10 per cent of its global vehicle sales with hybrid cars by around 2010.
Honda produces its hybrid cars in Japan. While Fukui said he wants to build at least 80 per cent of its cars sold in the United States in North America, he said he was not now thinking of local production of hybrids in the region.
"We may be thinking about local production (in North America) around 2011 or 2012 when our global hybrid sales reach 400,000 to 500,000 cars a year, but we don't think it's all that important," Fukui said without elaborating.
Trending Topics
#9
It is fairly obvious that the new 4 cylinder diesel is going in the TSX first. Acura confirmed that before the engine arrives to the Acura brand in the U.S., it would first debut in Europe. Most likely the Euro-Accord which is our U.S. TSX.
So this means that the TSX will have three engine options now: standard petrol 4 cylinder (turbo RDX motor?), petrol V6 motor, and a turbo-diesel 4 cylinder.
So this means that the TSX will have three engine options now: standard petrol 4 cylinder (turbo RDX motor?), petrol V6 motor, and a turbo-diesel 4 cylinder.
#14
Lets also point out that Honda has single diesel engine, while Toyota has 3-4 different series of diesel engines, including 1.4l, 2.0l, 2.2l, 2.5l, 3.0l, 4.5l in different variations.
#15
Interesting. Curious to see if there is a market for diesel Hondas in the United States. It would seem to me that Honda has already set themselves in with the hybrid crowd. They just didn't execute it properly with the Accord. But then I could be way off. Just have to wait and see I guess.