1995 Honda Prelude Sports Car Reviews & Ratings

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1995 Honda Prelude Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 1995 Honda Prelude car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 1995 Honda Prelude 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 1995 Honda Prelude reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Honda Prelude Interior Review

Like all sport coupes, the prelude's interior is snug and driver-oriented. Typical of Honda, the controls are exceptionally well-located - there's no hunting around for anything.

Our only reservation about the prelude's instrument package was in regards to its design. The major gauges - speedometer and tachometer - are electro-luminescent analog dials, placed squarely in front of the driver.

But other instruments - the digital coolant temperature display, for example - are spread across the dashboard. honda's reasoning: Spreading some of the instruments across the dashboard gives the passenger greater involvement in the driving experience. Although this arrangement doesn't create any problems - the ancillary gauges are readily visible - it looks peculiar and the rationale behind it is odd at best. We expect to see a more traditional layout in the next generation of the Prelude.

The seats in any of the Preludes are attractive, well-shaped and comfortable, but the deep leather buckets in our test car were exceptional. In addition to lateral support worthy of a race car, they offered sufficient adjustment to fit a wide range of body types. Considering the cost of the VTEC model, about the only thing missing in our test car was power adjustments.

There's enough legroom up front to suit anyone on the low side of 6-foot-6. If You're taller than that you could run into clearance problems with the steering wheel, although the standard tilt feature helps.

Like so many cars in this class, the so-called 2+2 coupes, the Prelude's rear-seat legroom is all but nonexistent. The essence of 2+2 is that the rear seats are designed for occasional seating, and we always wonder what the occasion could possibly be. For the sake of the rear-seat passenger, we hope the occasion will be brief.

If a truly useful backseat is an important consideration, this isn't the car for you. The same goes for all of the prelude's competitors with the exception of the new Dodge Avenger/ Chrysler Sebring.

Standard equipment in the base Prelude goes beyond the bare essentials, including civilizing extras such as an AM/FM/cassette sound system, air conditioning, power assists, cruise control and - get this - a power sunroof.

Safety features are current but not as exceptional: dual airbags and side-impact protection, plus the standard ABS in the Si and VTEC.



Honda Prelude Road Test

We've had a chance to drive Preludes on racetracks, as well as on the normal mix of public roads, and the experience has always been stimulating. With its precise steering, crisp response and superb braking, the Prelude still sets the handling standard for front-drive sport coupes, even over the new Eclipse/Talon.

There Isn't much distinction in handling between the Si and the VTEC. But there's a substantial distinction when the VTEC engine revs up to its magic number: 5200 rpm. That+s when the tiger comes out and horsepower soars, accompanied by an eager snarl from under the hood.

The VTEC engine hustles the Prelude from 0 to 60 mph in about 7 seconds, and is capable of 140 mph, assuming you can find a proper place for this kind of exercise. Pretty good for 2.2 liters.

Fuel economy is good, provided you're not exercising VTEC magic all the time; then the system gets mighty thirsty.

Ride quality is smooth in all three Preludes, though it's a little stiffer in the Si and VTEC editions. Even so, the ride in a Prelude VTEC is more supple than some of its popular competitors: the Probe GT, for example, or the Talon TSi.



Honda Prelude Lineup



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