Tested: 2014 Honda Civic 1.8L Sedan Gets Another Polishing (2024)

Tested: 2014 Honda Civic 1.8L Sedan Gets Another Polishing (1)

Our review of the redesigned 2022 Honda Civic sedan is coming on 6/16, until then we decided to look back at the Civic’s greatest hits and how Honda’s iconic compact car has evolved over the years.

You’ll recall that shortly after the 2012 Honda Civic landed on our collective consciousness like a half-pound bucket of Play-Doh dumped onto a tabletop—soft, amorphous, just lying there, and with even less play value—the company hastened a refreshed 2013 model. We characterized the compact sedan’s exterior and interior styling upgrades and tautened steering and suspension as baby steps that made the Civic “28 percent closer to the car Honda should have built in the first place.”

It turns out Honda didn’t think the job was finished, either, so we have a 2014 Civic sedan with further alterations. Changes are most extensive for the performance-oriented Si model that didn’t benefit so much last year. Still, the sedan range (base LX, HF, EX, EX-L, and EX-L with Navi—Honda regards the Si as a separate model) gains three useful if not particularly dramatic enhancements: A freer-flowing exhaust squeezes three more horsepower and one more pound-foot of torque from the 1.8-liter i-VTEC four-cylinder (now with 143 horses and 129 pound-feet); a CVT replaces the aged five-speed automatic to eke out a bit more fuel efficiency; and a new, more capable 7.0-inch touchscreen audio and navigation system takes center stage on the dashboard. The latter allows you to talk to and, for all we know, fall in love with Siri, provided the Bluetooth device you’re linked with is an Apple iPhone 5 or newer.

View Photos

Amendments don’t stop there. Sedans get upgraded seats with more adjustments, as well as less cheesy interior door trim. An expanded-view mirror on the driver’s side is joined by a passenger’s-side camera that puts a view of your blind spot on the new big screen when the right turn signal is activated. Finally, Honda adds a proximity-detecting key fob and pushbutton start, and wheels on the top models grow from 16 inches to 17. It’s hardly a return to old-school annual redesigns, but neither is Honda sitting pat just because the Civic tops the sales charts in its segment.

HIGHS: Good grip, capable binders, quiet cabin (for the class), roomy back seat.
LOWS: Clumsy touch screen, numb steering, CVT lacks manual-shift capability, distracting blind-spot camera.

We tested an EX-L sedan, its $23,530 price unsullied by optional add-ons (the only one that might tempt us is remote start, at $399), which gave us all the factory goodies on offer. The new CVT is standard on all sedans except the base LX, where it’s an option over the five-speed manual (the Si is the only other Civic sedan you can shift for yourself). Offering the CVT in the $19,980 LX puts it one up on the new-for-2014 Toyota Corolla, which got a new paddle-shifted CVT this year with seven discrete “gears.” But Toyota makes the entry-level Corolla customer endure a four-speed automatic evocative of the 1980s. At Honda, the old five-speed slushbox survives only on the limited-availability natural-gas model.

View Photos

Getting the Civic in Gear

Compared with the five-speed automatic, Honda says the CVT weighs less, has less internal friction, and offers a 22-percent-wider ratio spread, all contributing to hike the EPA city rating from last year’s 28 to a nice, advertising-friendly 30 mpg. The highway rating stays at 39 mpg, so the combined rating (the large-font number on the sticker) rises by one, to 33. In C/D’s version of real-world driving, we recorded 28 mpg through nasty winter weather and associated congestion. We’d expect the CVT to do better in conditions less evocative of the White Walkers in Game of Thrones.

Tested: 2014 Honda Civic 1.8L Sedan Gets Another Polishing (4)

Specifications

SPECIFICATIONS

2014 Honda Civic 1.8L CVT sedan

VEHICLE TYPE
front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan

PRICE AS TESTED
$23,530 (base price: $19,980)

ENGINE TYPE
SOHC 16-valve inline-4, aluminum block and head, port fuel injection
Displacement
110 in3, 1798 cm3
Power
143 hp @ 6500 rpm
Torque
129 lb-ft @ 4300 rpm

TRANSMISSION
continuously variable automatic

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 105.1 in
Length: 179.4 in
Width: 69.0 in
Height: 56.5 in
Curb weight: 2871 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
Zero to 60 mph: 8.8 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 24.5 sec
Zero to 110 mph: 33.9 sec
Rolling start, 5-60 mph: 10.0 sec
Top gear, 30-50 mph: 4.6 sec
Top gear, 50-70 mph: 6.2 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 17.0 sec @ 86 mph
Top speed (drag limited): 125 mph
Braking, 70-0 mph: 165 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.85 g

FUEL ECONOMY
EPA city/highway driving: 30/39 mpg
C/D observed: 28 mpg

c/d testing explained


Tested: 2014 Honda Civic 1.8L Sedan Gets Another Polishing (5)

Kevin A. Wilson

Senior Online Editor

Kevin A. Wilson has been writing about cars since 1986 for AutoWeek, Popular Mechanics, Road & Track, Automobile, and, since 2010, at Car and Driver. He also wrote that Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia entry on "Electric Cars" that you plagiarized in middle school—you're welcome.

Tested: 2014 Honda Civic 1.8L Sedan Gets Another Polishing (2024)
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