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#2
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Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. ... |
#3
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Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. |
#4
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The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. |
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Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? |
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Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. -- |
#5
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Thus spake TomP <roadcyc (AT) socal (DOT) rr.com> : The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. Problem is the tires. Chunky tires make more noise. AND present delamination problems (although not as much as a few years ago). Most AWD and 4WD cars and light SUVs are now sold with a less OTR aggressive tread design. Tires dissapate heat by getting as much tread as possible exposed to the air, and getting as much tread as possible on the pavement. Slicks are great for that (although there are other advantages, like contact surface for transfer of torque), but big chunks of rubber don't do as good of a job. And radials don't like that. But yes, the CR-V can be a noisy ride. My Fit, surprisingly, is much queiter. Not as much as the Civic you'd get for the same price, but more so than the CR-V you'd get for more money. Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? DO NOT drive thorugh high water, AWD or 4WD. I don't know if you hear the LCRA commercials, but "turnaround, don't drown" is real. About 1/2 inch of moving water is death. In Houston, I've never seen "just" 2 inches standing. Look at how much of 10 and SW Freeway go under water farily easily. TXDOT keeps building drains and they keep flooding. Other than that, what are you really looking for? Is a CR-V really the answer? I've actually heard people say they buy a CR-V or RAV4 or even Highlander because they're afraid of a crash with a dump truck. Well, folks, if you get hit by a dump truck in a 'Burb, you are very likely going to be carried off in the van marked "Coroner" or "ME". Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. |
#6
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Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. |
#7
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Dillon Pyron wrote: Thus spake TomP <roadcyc (AT) socal (DOT) rr.com> : The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. Problem is the tires. Chunky tires make more noise. AND present delamination problems (although not as much as a few years ago). Most AWD and 4WD cars and light SUVs are now sold with a less OTR aggressive tread design. Tires dissapate heat by getting as much tread as possible exposed to the air, and getting as much tread as possible on the pavement. Slicks are great for that (although there are other advantages, like contact surface for transfer of torque), but big chunks of rubber don't do as good of a job. And radials don't like that. But yes, the CR-V can be a noisy ride. My Fit, surprisingly, is much queiter. Not as much as the Civic you'd get for the same price, but more so than the CR-V you'd get for more money. Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? DO NOT drive thorugh high water, AWD or 4WD. I don't know if you hear the LCRA commercials, but "turnaround, don't drown" is real. About 1/2 inch of moving water is death. In Houston, I've never seen "just" 2 inches standing. Look at how much of 10 and SW Freeway go under water farily easily. TXDOT keeps building drains and they keep flooding. Other than that, what are you really looking for? Is a CR-V really the answer? I've actually heard people say they buy a CR-V or RAV4 or even Highlander because they're afraid of a crash with a dump truck. Well, folks, if you get hit by a dump truck in a 'Burb, you are very likely going to be carried off in the van marked "Coroner" or "ME". Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. The CR-V is s short wheelbase, stiffly sprung car that is quite darty and busy on the highway, especially over expansion joints. |
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Great on back roads though, and around town, as a hauler. |
#8
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| On 11/10/09 6:21 AM, in article BNudnTtGC46AxmTXnZ2dnUVZ_hFi4p2d (AT...easy (DOT) net, "News" <News (AT) Groups (DOT) Name wrote: Dillon Pyron wrote: Thus spake TomP <roadcyc (AT) socal (DOT) rr.com> : The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. Problem is the tires. Chunky tires make more noise. AND present delamination problems (although not as much as a few years ago). Most AWD and 4WD cars and light SUVs are now sold with a less OTR aggressive tread design. Tires dissapate heat by getting as much tread as possible exposed to the air, and getting as much tread as possible on the pavement. Slicks are great for that (although there are other advantages, like contact surface for transfer of torque), but big chunks of rubber don't do as good of a job. And radials don't like that. But yes, the CR-V can be a noisy ride. My Fit, surprisingly, is much queiter. Not as much as the Civic you'd get for the same price, but more so than the CR-V you'd get for more money. Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? DO NOT drive thorugh high water, AWD or 4WD. I don't know if you hear the LCRA commercials, but "turnaround, don't drown" is real. About 1/2 inch of moving water is death. In Houston, I've never seen "just" 2 inches standing. Look at how much of 10 and SW Freeway go under water farily easily. TXDOT keeps building drains and they keep flooding. Other than that, what are you really looking for? Is a CR-V really the answer? I've actually heard people say they buy a CR-V or RAV4 or even Highlander because they're afraid of a crash with a dump truck. Well, folks, if you get hit by a dump truck in a 'Burb, you are very likely going to be carried off in the van marked "Coroner" or "ME". Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. The CR-V is s short wheelbase, stiffly sprung car that is quite darty and busy on the highway, especially over expansion joints. Speaking as a CR-V owner, I don't agree with those assertions, at least not when comparing the CR-V to other SUVs. The CR-V rides much more car-like than my Pathfinder and I don't know what you mean by "darty". We've driven it cross country several times at sustained highway speeds, 70 to 80 MPH. It drives straight effortlessly. Nothing "darty" about it. My only two complaints are the road noise (its tire noise transmitted through the suspension, not wind) and the too small gas tank, both of which seem to be Honda traits, not just with the CR-V. Great on back roads though, and around town, as a hauler. That I agree with. Most versatile enclosed vehicle (open pickup still wins this category) I've owned. |
#9
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E. Meyer wrote: On 11/10/09 6:21 AM, in article BNudnTtGC46AxmTXnZ2dnUVZ_hFi4p2d (AT...easy (DOT) net, "News" <News (AT) Groups (DOT) Name wrote: Dillon Pyron wrote: Thus spake TomP <roadcyc (AT) socal (DOT) rr.com> : The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. Problem is the tires. Chunky tires make more noise. AND present delamination problems (although not as much as a few years ago). Most AWD and 4WD cars and light SUVs are now sold with a less OTR aggressive tread design. Tires dissapate heat by getting as much tread as possible exposed to the air, and getting as much tread as possible on the pavement. Slicks are great for that (although there are other advantages, like contact surface for transfer of torque), but big chunks of rubber don't do as good of a job. And radials don't like that. But yes, the CR-V can be a noisy ride. My Fit, surprisingly, is much queiter. Not as much as the Civic you'd get for the same price, but more so than the CR-V you'd get for more money. Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? DO NOT drive thorugh high water, AWD or 4WD. I don't know if you hear the LCRA commercials, but "turnaround, don't drown" is real. About 1/2 inch of moving water is death. In Houston, I've never seen "just" 2 inches standing. Look at how much of 10 and SW Freeway go under water farily easily. TXDOT keeps building drains and they keep flooding. Other than that, what are you really looking for? Is a CR-V really the answer? I've actually heard people say they buy a CR-V or RAV4 or even Highlander because they're afraid of a crash with a dump truck. Well, folks, if you get hit by a dump truck in a 'Burb, you are very likely going to be carried off in the van marked "Coroner" or "ME". Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. The CR-V is s short wheelbase, stiffly sprung car that is quite darty and busy on the highway, especially over expansion joints. Speaking as a CR-V owner, I don't agree with those assertions, at least not when comparing the CR-V to other SUVs. The CR-V rides much more car-like than my Pathfinder and I don't know what you mean by "darty". We've driven it cross country several times at sustained highway speeds, 70 to 80 MPH. It drives straight effortlessly. Nothing "darty" about it. My only two complaints are the road noise (its tire noise transmitted through the suspension, not wind) and the too small gas tank, both of which seem to be Honda traits, not just with the CR-V. Great on back roads though, and around town, as a hauler. That I agree with. Most versatile enclosed vehicle (open pickup still wins this category) I've owned. I'm also speaking as a CR-V owner of a 2005 SE ... after five years. The highway ride was improved (less darty, less noise) after ditching the Duelers that came on the car, but is still far less directionally stable at highway speeds than my 100" wheelbase comparison ride. The CR-V's issue is the steering -- overly sensitive at highway speeds. Our Accord had variable assist steering, which the CR-V appears to lack. |
#10
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| On 11/10/09 10:48 AM, in article Cs2dndYocaDDBGTXnZ2dnUVZ_tdi4p2d (AT...easy (DOT) net, "News" <News (AT) Group (DOT) Name wrote: E. Meyer wrote: On 11/10/09 6:21 AM, in article BNudnTtGC46AxmTXnZ2dnUVZ_hFi4p2d (AT...easy (DOT) net, "News" <News (AT) Groups (DOT) Name wrote: Dillon Pyron wrote: Thus spake TomP <roadcyc (AT) socal (DOT) rr.com> : The 2010 CR-v is as reliable as an anvil. That is the breed is well developed and refined. If you drive mostly in town; the CR-v is a great choice... However, the ambient sound level when on the highway (driving 65~80 MPH) can get a bit loud, depending on the road condition... after all, it's not a luxury ride. Make sure to drive the CR-v on the highway, and if possible on different road surfaces. Problem is the tires. Chunky tires make more noise. AND present delamination problems (although not as much as a few years ago). Most AWD and 4WD cars and light SUVs are now sold with a less OTR aggressive tread design. Tires dissapate heat by getting as much tread as possible exposed to the air, and getting as much tread as possible on the pavement. Slicks are great for that (although there are other advantages, like contact surface for transfer of torque), but big chunks of rubber don't do as good of a job. And radials don't like that. But yes, the CR-V can be a noisy ride. My Fit, surprisingly, is much queiter. Not as much as the Civic you'd get for the same price, but more so than the CR-V you'd get for more money. Observer wrote: Considering buying a new 2010 CR-V but so far what I read on the net is about reviews or comments for the features. What I want to know is the comments about the mechanics of them. Is there any mechanical / electrical weaknesses or things I should be wary of if I buy one... ie: timing belt or chain, electrical wiring, transmission, etc.. . Also anyone think a AWD in south Texas (Houston area) worth considering? I'm thinking about high water or just a lot of rain not snow or ice of course. Are the AWD reliable and do they require more maintenance? And do they handle a lot better than FWD? DO NOT drive thorugh high water, AWD or 4WD. I don't know if you hear the LCRA commercials, but "turnaround, don't drown" is real. About 1/2 inch of moving water is death. In Houston, I've never seen "just" 2 inches standing. Look at how much of 10 and SW Freeway go under water farily easily. TXDOT keeps building drains and they keep flooding. Other than that, what are you really looking for? Is a CR-V really the answer? I've actually heard people say they buy a CR-V or RAV4 or even Highlander because they're afraid of a crash with a dump truck. Well, folks, if you get hit by a dump truck in a 'Burb, you are very likely going to be carried off in the van marked "Coroner" or "ME". Sorry for all the questions but I'm still in learning and research mode. The CR-V is s short wheelbase, stiffly sprung car that is quite darty and busy on the highway, especially over expansion joints. Speaking as a CR-V owner, I don't agree with those assertions, at least not when comparing the CR-V to other SUVs. The CR-V rides much more car-like than my Pathfinder and I don't know what you mean by "darty". We've driven it cross country several times at sustained highway speeds, 70 to 80 MPH. It drives straight effortlessly. Nothing "darty" about it. My only two complaints are the road noise (its tire noise transmitted through the suspension, not wind) and the too small gas tank, both of which seem to be Honda traits, not just with the CR-V. Great on back roads though, and around town, as a hauler. That I agree with. Most versatile enclosed vehicle (open pickup still wins this category) I've owned. I'm also speaking as a CR-V owner of a 2005 SE ... after five years. The highway ride was improved (less darty, less noise) after ditching the Duelers that came on the car, but is still far less directionally stable at highway speeds than my 100" wheelbase comparison ride. The CR-V's issue is the steering -- overly sensitive at highway speeds. Our Accord had variable assist steering, which the CR-V appears to lack. My CR-V is an '06. The steering is not any more sensitive at highway speeds than any other car I've owned. In fact, its less sensitive than many of them, including the '00 TL (which is an Accord with delusions of grandeur). There was a TSB that applied to the '05 & earlier 2nd gen CR-Vs to take the front suspension apart and reposition the spring in the upper seat. You might want to look into that. |
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