2003 Honda CR-V Sport Utility Vehicle Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 2003 Honda CR-V review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 2003 Honda CR-V reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
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2003 Honda CR-V Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2003 Honda CR-V car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2003 Honda CR-V ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2003 Honda CR-V reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Honda CR-V Interior Review

The Honda CR-V has a friendly interior that's easy to live with, convenient in the daily hustle. Getting in and out is quick and easy and doesnt require climbing or stooping. For 2003, rear coat hooks have been added and the center console-mounted storage area has been enlarged to accommodate CDs and cassettes.

Gauges are easy to read, with white numerals on a black background, avoiding the twilight wash-out afflicting the black-on-white arrays that are the current fad. Cruise control is standard, as is an adjustable steering column.

The front seats are comfortable. In nearly every measure of interior room, the CR-V bests its competition. Only the Toyota RAV4 beats the CR-V's front seat headroom, and by less than half an inch. The Ford Escape and RAV4 provide more front-seat leg room, by 0.3 and 0.9 inches, respectively, over the CR-V's still-generous 41.3 inches.

Likewise, the rear bench is comfortable with lots of room. The rear bench seat has three-point belts and head restraints at all three positions, something not all SUVs offer.

In terms of cargo hauling, the CR-V is the undisputed champion, with 72.0 cubic feet of cargo space. By comparison, the second-place Escape offers 64.8 cubic feet, while the Freelander provides just 46.6 cubic feet.

There's a cool, collapsible tray table betwixt the front seats, with a couple of cup holders and a recess for a cell phone or whatever. A picnic table in back does double duty as the cover for the spare tire bin. Everything else is where it should be, and there are no less than 21 storage bins adroitly spread about the cabin.

We really liked it the AM/FM/cassette stereo with 6-disk in-dash CD changer. Honda does not provide a compass, however.

The parking brake is disguised, subtly integrated into the vertical panel forward of the center console. It looks like a grab handle, until you decipher the icon in the grip. As odd as the placement might seem at first, over time it begins to make ergonomic sense.



Honda CR-V Road Test

The Honda CR-V rides well, whether the roads are smooth or rough. That makes for very pleasant motoring around town over busy, beat-up streets.

There's enough power on tap to thrust you off the on-ramp and into traffic. The CR-V's engine delivers 160 horsepower and 162 pounds-feet of torque, more than other four-cylinder SUVs. Torque is that force that propels you away from intersections and up hills and the CR-V's torque peaks at just 3600 rpm. That means when you put your foot to the floor the acceleration force comes on quickly, which makes for safer merging into traffic and allows greater margins of safety when making a pass.

Honda is a leader in engine technology and the CR-V benefits from a 2.4-liter, 16-valve, DOHC four-cylinder with "intelligent" i-VTEC. Through the miracles of valve timing, Honda is able to generate lots of power while keeping fuel economy at an impressive EPA-estimated 22/26 mpg city/highway. All CR-Vs meet the new LEV-II low-emissions standards.

The CR-V's handling is reassuring. It feels sure-footed on twisting roads. The handling is neutral and the tires offer lots of grip in corners. The CR-V drives more like a car than a truck. That's because it is more car than truck. It's based on a front-wheel-drive Honda Civic with a unit-body and four-wheel independent suspension. It's a car and that's a good thing.

The CR-V is more maneuverable in tight parking lots than a Toyota RAV4 or Ford Escape. That's a benefit of its tight turning radius (33.8 feet for the CR-V verses 35.4 feet for both the RAV4 and Escape).

In terms of crashworthiness, the CR-V rates highly. The CR-V earned 5-star ratings from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for both front and side impact, the highest rating possible.



Honda CR-V Lineup

The CR-V is offered in two trim levels, with a choice of two or four-wheel drive. Options are extremely limited; as Honda firmly believes that the fewer the options, the less a car costs to build. It's available with front-wheel drive or all-wheel drive.

The base LX is well equipped for $18,900. It comes standard with air conditioning with micron filtration, AM/FM/cassette/CD stereo, cruise control, an adjustable steering column, power mirrors, power windows, power four-wheel-disc brakes, front and rear power outlets, and a removable folding picnic table. Also standard is an automatic transmission, which is an $800 option on other models.

A five-speed manual transmission is available on the four-wheel-drive LX ($19,300). With the automatic, the 4WD LX costs $20,100.

Side-impact air bags add $250. Aluminum wheels are available as a dealer-installed accessory.

EX comes with four-wheel drive only, and adds a premium stereo, anti-lock brakes, privacy glass, remote keyless entry, aluminum wheels, and a power moonroof. It lists for $21,600 with the five-speed manual, $22,400 with the automatic.



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