Despite being the oldest model in North America's subcompact sweepstakes, the current Honda Fit
remains a paragon in its segment, offering unparalleled packaging, good
road manners and robust reliability. In fact, even with far more modern
competitors like the Chevrolet Sonic, Ford Fiesta, Hyundai Accent and Nissan Versa Note on the scene, it may well still be the best of the bunch.
All of which explains why we're so nervous about the next-generation
model, shown in these apparently leaked stock shots scanned from an
in-country magazine (no, that rear end really isn't that wonky, it's the
page curl distorting the image).
Will the next Fit retain the current car's incredible seating
flexibility? Will it still offer a sweet-shifting manual transmission
and a four-cylinder seemingly happy to bounce off its rev limiter all
the livelong day? We won't know until we try it, but if these shots are
representative of what we can expect in North America, it certainly will
look very different. While the same two-box shape with roughly the same
greenhouse remains, the front end looks much more aggressive than
before, with squinty-eyed headlamps blending into a Civic-like grille,
all sitting over a lower fascia with unusually oversized air intakes.
The profile view is dominated by the front quarterlight and a new
sharply rising character line that originates in the front fenders and
terminates in the headlamps.
It's important to note that these images are said to be that of the new
Japanese-market Jazz, but there has historically been very little
difference between the appearances of the NA Fit and the JDM model. We
might see more differentiation in powertrain, however –
IndianAutosBlog,
which first posted the images, says that the Jazz will receive 1.2- and
1.4-liter four-cylinder, and reports that a three-cylinder model is
also possible. On the diesel front, Honda's new Earth Dreams
1.6-liter i-DTEC four is expected to make an appearance, but we
certainly wouldn't expect that powertrain in our market, even if it's
clean enough to run without aftertreatment.
Courtesy of Autoblog
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