AutoWeek carries the following: "Honda's limited light-truck lineup means that it has too few models on its light-truck assembly lines, Kondo (Koichi Kondo, CEO of Honda North America Inc.) said at the Detroit auto show last week. The No. 2 line at the company's Alliston, Ontario, plant builds the Honda Pilot and Ridgeline and Acura MDX. Honda's plant in Lincoln, Ala., builds the Pilot and Honda Odyssey. Those assembly lines are flexible enough to handle more derivatives, Kondo said." Perhaps if the Ridgeline were selling better, Honda wouldn't have to design yet another derivative. And why aren't Odyssey buyers offered an AWD option? I suppose this means that unless the next Prelude is a derivative of an existing car platform, the Civic/CRV/Element or Accord/TL/RDX, it won't get built, at least not at a USA plant. RDX production on the Accord/TL line makes it even more likely that these cars might have an AWD option soon. Unless Honda decides to force AWD buyers into the RDX.