2007 Accord Features?

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Herpster1966, Jun 26, 2006.

  1. Herpster1966

    Herpster1966 Guest

    Hi all,

    I have a 2005 Accord EX Sedan and I like it very much. This is my third
    Honda and I plan on staying with Honda for my life. I was noticing that
    Accord put out a few minor changes for 2006 from the 2005 model that I
    have. The 2006 changes seem to include 6 additional HP, slight body and
    wheel changes, LED tail lights, DRL's, and heated mirrors.

    I'd like to see what is going to take place in 2007. Some of the things
    I'd like to see are active head restraints, optional or standard
    stability control on the lower models just as the V6 has it. Possibly
    OnStar being offered. Does anyone have any ideas about what the 2007
    model might have based on spy information or Honda news etc?

    Thanks,
    Al
     
    Herpster1966, Jun 26, 2006
    #1
  2. 2007 will be the last year for the current design. The most you'll see
    is a Value Package, which pretty much gives LX features at a DX price.
    They traditionally do that in the last model year.

    The things you describe would not happen in 2007. 2008 at the earliest,
    with the new model, maybe. Maybe. But Honda has some weird ideas about
    the line between Honda and Acura models. In their minds, some things
    are Acura only, period--and end up that way for a long, long time.
     
    Elmo P. Shagnasty, Jun 26, 2006
    #2
  3. Herpster1966

    Herpster1966 Guest

    Yes I noticed that about Honda not wanting certain things to cross
    over, such as the HID lights which would be great. Toyota Prius offers
    them, but Honda Civic Hybrid doesn't, go figure??!

    I think Honda is almost there as far as having total safety, but things
    like Stability Control and Active Head Restraints and OnStar would be
    the icing on the cake.

    Al
     
    Herpster1966, Jun 26, 2006
    #3
  4. Herpster1966

    jim beam Guest

    what does onstar offer that a cell phone can't?
     
    jim beam, Jun 26, 2006
    #4
  5. Herpster1966

    Dick Guest

    What kind of cell phone do you have that can unlock your doors from
    hundreds of miles away? Or report that your airbags have deployed in
    an accident? Or perform vehicle diagnostics?
     
    Dick, Jun 26, 2006
    #5
  6. Herpster1966

    Herpster1966 Guest


    OnStar would definitly be a welcome feature and since cars like Chevy
    have it, Honda would be doing a good service to offer it.
     
    Herpster1966, Jun 26, 2006
    #6
  7. Herpster1966

    Seth Guest

    Automatically calls emergency services if the air bags deploy and they can't
    speak to you.
     
    Seth, Jun 26, 2006
    #7
  8. But Chevy's NEED OnStar since they break down a lot more than Hondas. :)
     
    High Tech Misfit, Jun 26, 2006
    #8
  9. Herpster1966

    Herpster1966 Guest


    Any car would benefit from having OnStar. I went and added a roady xt,
    xm radio unit to my accord for a total instalation and product cost of
    120.00. Thats a far cry from Hondas installed XM for 725.00. Thats
    another welcome addition that should be offered for a reasonable price.
    Other good additions would be the active head restraints, and stability
    control, maybe traction control offered on the 4 cyl models.

    Al
     
    Herpster1966, Jun 27, 2006
    #9
  10. Herpster1966

    jmattis Guest

    the HID lights which would be great. Toyota Prius offers

    HID is not entirely reliable. If it were, then Honda Care's extended
    warranty would cover it (in Acuras). It doesn't.

    As much as an Acura owner would scream about a $900 HID light
    replacement, can you imagine how a CIvic/Accord owner would act?
     
    jmattis, Jun 27, 2006
    #10
  11. Herpster1966

    jim beam Guest

    holy carp, you should work for a detroit auto marketing consultancy. or
    maybe you already do.

    onstar is expensive, intrusive and unnecessary. and have you ever heard
    those onstar radio ads? sheesh, they're just criminal. a company using
    such material would not be above paying trolls to pollute usenet.
     
    jim beam, Jun 28, 2006
    #11
  12. Herpster1966

    TeGGeR® Guest



    I know it's all well-intended and all, but I find it rather alarming that a
    car could "phone home" whenever it wants, tattling on you. I'd make a
    mention of Eric Arthur Blair's writings here, but I won't.

    You can, however, be 100% certain that GM would be 5,000 miles away from
    this stuff if they weren't being pushed towards it by government, tort, and
    the environut activists. When will Honda start doing this?

    I am so glad I have an ancient 1991 vehicle. Too bad the Ontario government
    is actively trying to push the old ones off the road. Bastards.
     
    TeGGeR®, Jun 28, 2006
    #12
  13. Herpster1966

    jim beam Guest

    i don't see an environut angle to this, but there sure are a lot of law
    enforcement conveniences. ecu data retention is bad enough, but coupled
    with gps? big brother indeed.

    but that said, the /really/ crazy thing is getting you to pay /twice/
    for all this stuff. onstar is basically a cell phone with a couple of
    adornments. since i already have a cell phone, why do i need to pay for
    a second one? because i lost my key? because i break down? because i
    can't remember where i parked my car??? that's what aaa is for [and for
    a /lot/ less money]. assuming non-senility that is.

    and regarding law enforcement, it's already possible to track location
    to within a couple of hundred meters on a non-gps cell phone, and worse,
    it's already possible to give you a speeding ticket using your cell
    phone too. it was tried in one of the scandanavian countries for a
    while. norway or sweden? i forget which. unsurprisingly, it proved to
    be very unpopular so it's been quietly disregarded, but imagine the
    possibilities for enforcement zealots over here... i know there was a
    scandanavian bank robber intercepted because he was seen using a cell
    phone while robbing a bank. his call was id'd and he was tracked &
    intercepted on the freeway. yes, he got a speeding ticket, iirc.

    and just to take all this lunacy a step further, you could also issue
    speeding tickets based on the time elapsed between gas station refills.
    you know the distance between them and you know the time between
    transactions... the french used to do something like this on toll roads
    between toll booths. you had to take a ticket, and hand your ticket in
    on the way out. if you arrived at the second toll station "too soon",
    you'd be fined on the spot. :(

    license plate readers on the freeway? that's being done in the uk. the
    whole thing's all rather scary.
     
    jim beam, Jun 28, 2006
    #13
  14. Herpster1966

    SoCalMike Guest

    GM owns onstar. they want everyone to sign up for their silly "service".
    they get paid when people do.
     
    SoCalMike, Jun 28, 2006
    #14
  15. Herpster1966

    SoCalMike Guest

    how hard would it be for an automaker to do some kinda bluetooth thing
    with the SRS computer, so it sends a signal for your personal cellphone
    to dial 911?
     
    SoCalMike, Jun 28, 2006
    #15
  16. Herpster1966

    jim beam Guest

    absolute piece of cake. as a consumer you'd pay through the nose of
    course, but built-in, in quantity, it would be less than $10 a piece.
     
    jim beam, Jun 28, 2006
    #16
  17. Herpster1966

    jim beam Guest

    which kinda makes me think of potential for lobbying dollars at work.
    but that would never happen...
     
    jim beam, Jun 28, 2006
    #17
  18. TeGGeR® wrote:

    This is considered malware/spyware when it's on our computers. How can
    we know all that's being sent and what about after a couple of software
    updates?
     
    Sparky Spartacus, Jun 28, 2006
    #18
  19. jim beam wrote:

    NJ used to do this on the Turnpike in the 50's-60's until someone
    challenged it and the court told them to cease & desist. If you don't
    have a 5th Amendment (against self incrimination), you're probably out
    of luck.

    Fot tech types, the NJTP used Univac computers at the time which used
    the 90 column punched card with round holes. They disappeared decades
    ago. Now EZPass is the way to go and it creates a record of every toll
    you pay.
     
    Sparky Spartacus, Jun 28, 2006
    #19
  20. Too bad OnStar can't call the cops when your airbags are being stolen.
     
    Sparky Spartacus, Jun 28, 2006
    #20
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