Has anyone tried the CNG Civic?

Discussion in 'Civic' started by Jack Hamilton, Apr 27, 2005.

  1. Has anyone tried the compressed natural gas Civic? I'm not sure when
    they'll be sold to the public (sometime this spring), but they're
    already in fleet use.

    Honda claims that they have the same performance as other Civics, but I
    find that hard to believe, given that both the horsepower and the torque
    are lower than in the gasoline-powered sedan. Can the CVT make that
    much difference?

    Too bad Honda doesn't make a biodiesel Accord - that would give the best
    of all worlds - long range, power, clean, and somewhat easy to refuel.
     
    Jack Hamilton, Apr 27, 2005
    #1
  2. Jack Hamilton

    K`Tetch Guest

    CVTs are great.

    I had one in a volvo 340 from the early 80s. the cvt kept the engine
    always at peak torque, so engine was most efficient, and ran great,
    power always on tap.
     
    K`Tetch, Apr 28, 2005
    #2
  3. Jack Hamilton

    jim beam Guest

    i second that. always in /exactly/ the best gear for the engine. not
    tried the honda cvt, but the principle is very good.
     
    jim beam, Apr 28, 2005
    #3
  4. Jack Hamilton

    Guy Guest

    It is sold in Southern CA under GX model and their ads are running crazy on
    every commercials here.

    I think GX is over price. It costs $1000 more than the Hybrid model and only
    lasts 200 miles per fill up. I am not sure that you can get tax credit from
    an CNG car. But you can certainly drive it alone at car pool lane.
     
    Guy, Apr 28, 2005
    #4
  5. Hi Jack

    I have owned and run my own Honda Civic GX for 3 years - privately
    purchased from Honda in San Francisco. Its the best commute car I have
    ever owned from cost perspective and its definently not the best car for
    seeing off beat california at the weekends. Saying that I have driven
    it to San Diego from San jose for a summer vacation and San Jose to
    South Lake Tahoe for a weeks ski-ing in earley March this year.

    I'm not sure I would agree with Hondas statement either about the same
    performance as other Civics but I've never owned a non-CNG Civic so I
    can't confirm 100%. The Civic GX is definently not going to take you
    from 0-60 in less than 10seconds and reaching 100mph could be a
    challenge. The CVT definently delivers a more constant flow of power to
    the wheels when accelerating from stand still unlike a normal automatic
    that would noticeably step through the gearing(or the last automtic I
    sued certainly did). Saying that its definently not a master piece the
    CVT definently has challenges in certain environments like not holding
    on hills in san francisco, engine races when driving down steep hills
    and a few other bizzare effects that I've learned to live with as I
    appreciate this is not a $50k precision engineered performance vehicle.
    I have found over the last three years whilst doing my 51K of commute
    miles around the bay area the car does best between 65-70mph from a fuel
    consumption perspective. So if you drive the car in the carpool lane
    doing 80+mph which I did during my first few weeks of purchasing the
    car, you quickly realise the miles per tank are very very low and your
    spending more time fueling up that you expected. During this first few
    weeks I would maybe get about 100-ish miles to the tank. I now drive
    around a maxium of 65-70mph and I get a regular 140-150mph for a 3/4
    tank - I never let the tank go below 1/4 because if the next re-fueling
    station you visit to has problems then you need to get the car to the
    next station but that station maybe 30 miles away. I've only had that
    happen 2-3 times in the last 3 years but it can happen and the natural
    gas fueling stations are not on every street corner like standard
    gasoline fueling stations. So it takes some getting used to as running
    a natural gas car requires a different mind set. The conveniece factor
    is out the window and you need to have a re-fueling plan as a priority.
    Why? If you run out of gas in this car your screwed - there is no
    walking to the nearest station to fill a canister with natural gas and
    don't think about calling AAA to help you with re-fueling. The car is
    going to require a tow to the nearest re-fueling station. If that
    re-fueling station is 25-30 miles away then your AAA towing service may
    only cover the first 5 miles so your going to end up with a hefty towing
    charge. Fortunately, I have never experience this as I alway re-fuel
    with 1/4 tank remaining which seems to have served me well but it
    certainly was close a few times. I never purchased the home fueling
    unit which definently would have made things easier but I live in rented
    accomodation so that wasn't an option for me. I think the re-fueling
    would be made much easier if you had the home unit so you could slow
    fill every night thus you shouldn't really need to think about fueling
    unless your heading off on a road trip. I have done a number of road
    trips in my honda civic GX (south lake tahoe, LA and San diego) it just
    take a bit more planning to identify the route and re-fueling schedule
    prior to heading off on your journey. For example, if you want to drive
    from san jose to LA the 5 is not an option as their are no re-fueling
    stations so its highway 99 or 101. Why? because these are the only
    highways that follow main californian gas pipelines with re-fueling
    facilites dotted along them in towns like Salinas, San Luis Obisbo,
    Santa Barbara etc..... Anyway, the reason for me mentioning my road
    trip is I have managed to easily get over 200 miles per tank when doing
    these long journeys and keeping a steady speed of 70mph or lower.
    Many of the non-PG&E fueling stations offer the large fill service
    3600psi not just the small fill of 3000psi which is still the norm at
    most PG&E stations. These 3600psi fills definently help out with
    getting the extra mileage out of the car on those long road trip plus it
    really helps with the weekly commute as it can mean getting an extra
    days commute. I have also noticed some of the fueling stations
    calibration of fill seems to vary with the 3000psi PG&E giving anything
    from less than 3000psi up to 3500psi and I have also seen other
    companies re-fueling 3600psi pumps going as far as 4000psi. I always
    use the 4000psi fueling station before heading off on a long roadtrip as
    it really helps with flexability when it comes to reach the next station
    to fuel and building in a buffer incase of problems. I guess the big
    question your asking now is how much does it cost to fuel up? I did 900
    miles in march and my total gas bill for the month was $45 and february
    I did about 1100 miles and my bill was $50. I really need to look at my
    gas bills for the last 12 months to get a much better idea on the cost
    to run etc but I recon its definently cheaper than a normal civic but
    I'm not sure if it does better than a hybrid civic. I have also heard
    the gas from the home fill unit is cheaper than the PG&E fueling station
    gas which would drop the fuel costs further. From my bills it looks
    like I pay $1.40 per therm (procurement+transportation) and my home bill
    for the same month states $1.11 per therm. My PG&E car Natural gas
    bill for february was based upon purchasing 36 therms at a rate of
    $1.40=$50. If I had used the home fill those 36 therms would have been
    charged at a rate of $1.11 per therm thus 36 therms would have cost $40.
    Wow - this is the first time I've done this calculation and at a
    further saving of $10 per month the $1000 home fill unit would pay for
    its self in 10-12 months. Ok, so at $40 for 1100 miles - I really
    don't think the hybrid Civic can compete with that as I think the Hybrid
    civic has a 12Gallon tank which would cost $30 to fill based upon $2.50
    per gallon price. So a few quick searches on google informed me a civic
    hybrid can do about 500miles per tank of gasoline so the civic hybrid
    would need to fills to get about the same mileage as I did in my natural
    gas car in february and it would cost the hybrid owner about $60 but it
    cost me $50 but I could get it down to $40 with a home fill unit.
    **Note : These figures are very rough estimates. So I think it comes
    down to, is the inconvenience of the natural gas Civic GX worth $20 per
    month to me? I guess thats $240 per year and $1200 after five years.
    Personally, I'm not sure its worth $20 per month saving as I'd prefer
    not have to buy another car or rent a car for the weekend just so I can
    take a trip to Yosemite or shasta.

    So before this turns into a book on owning and running a natural gas car
    I can recommend owning & running the honda Civic GX as a commute car as
    it has done a brilliant job of that task for me during the last three
    years. But running a Honda Civic GX as your only car may not be the
    best option as it will definently limit you when it comes to weekend
    trips away. So I think if this had been a dual-fuel car it would have
    been the perfect car providing cheap clean fuel for my commute miles and
    expensive dirty fuel for my weekend trips away.

    hope this info helps and definently think long & hard before taking the
    leap into the Natural gas car world as its definently an adventure.


    Mike Anderson
     
    Michael Anderson, May 1, 2005
    #5
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