2020 Honda Fit: 5 Things You Should Know About the New Model

Honda has overhauled its capable and surprisingly spacious Fit subcompact for the fourth time. Here are five things we learned about the fourth-generation 2020 Honda Fit when it made its official debut at the 2019 Tokyo Motor Show.

This 2020 Fit Is Not For America—Yet

Honda President and CEO Takahiro Hachigo introduced the all-new Fit at the Tokyo Motor Show as a vehicle “perfected in Japan for a global market.” The Fit’s release date in Japan is February 2020, but American Honda tells us that, at this point, U.S. plans for the Fit are still to be decided. “The [Japanese domestic market] Fit you are seeing is pretty cool, but not built directly for the U.S. market. We’re still a little bit out of making any Fit news for the U.S.,” said American Honda product PR manager James Jenkins.

Fit Has Been A Global Hit

The first Fit nameplate debuted in Japan in 2001, and it has been completely overhauled every six years, with the second generation arriving in 2007 and the third in 2013. Collectively, more than 7.5 million Fits have been sold worldwide.

There’s A New Fit Hybrid

As Hachigo-san said during his introduction, Fit is “specifically important for Japan” and if you read between the lines, it’s exactly the kind of car that established Honda’s empire. Fit has always been small, with a smartly packaged five-passenger layout, and powered by an efficient powertrain. For 2020, the JDM (Japanese Domestic Market) Honda Fit will launch with a traditional gasoline powertrain and a new two-motor hybrid system under Honda’s recently announced “Honda E” hybrid strategy.

It’s Not All About The MPG

“Fuel economy is not everything. What people sense is what counts,” said Hachigo at the introduction, before outlining some of the new Fit’s key priorities. In addition to making the seats more supportive and slimmer—thus reducing the separation between the front and rear occupants—and installing slick storage solutions, the Fit team focused on a “comfortable field of view.” This means an expansive view of the road, that the designers and engineers achieved by using extremely thin pillars to support the windshield. Tall triangles of side glass provide visibility ahead of the side mirrors, which are mounted to a much thicker pillar as part of the door aperture. While it appears to provide a great view of the road, we wonder whether it also gives the driver the sensation of being set at a remove from the proceedings.

There Are Five Fun Flavors For Japan

The JDM Honda Fit will launch with five different grades that are all entirely too cutesy Japanese to cross the Pacific to America: Basic, Home, Ness (Fit Ness, get it?), Crosstar, and Luxe. Basic is the value-priced base model as you’d expect, while Home appears to be what we’d consider the volume play, with all of the most popular options bundled together. Fit Ness is about fun and a “healthy life” but should not be confused with the sporty and adventurous Crosstar, which comes with roof rails and a water-resistant interior. The leather-trimmed Luxe edition appears to be the fully loaded Fit, and one we could imagine as a Fit EX-L, if and when Fit makes it to America. Stay tuned.

Source:Automobile

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