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With the audience figures for Radio 1’s Breakfast Show in free
fall, bosses have decided to replace the DJ Sara Cox with someone else whose
name escapes me. The Queen probably.
It won’t make the slightest bit of difference. No one tunes into a music radio
station because of the announcer. We tune in because of the music, and the
music on Radio 1 is from a never-ending stream of increasingly angry black
men who, so far as I can tell, wouldn’t know a piano if one were to land on
their heads.
No, I do not sound like my father. He couldn’t tell the difference between Ted
Nugent and Karen Carpenter; it was all rubbish to his ears. Whereas today
there is simply no difference between 50 Cent, Wyclef Jean and Black Eyed
Peas. Except for the amount of times each of them has been shot.
I have been paying rather more attention than usual to music recently because
Sue Lawley invited me on Desert Island Discs.
The luxury good was easy. I decided I’d take a Jet Ski, though I was tempted,
when I met Sue, to ask her along instead. She’s hugely attractive.
The book was harder. You’re given the Complete Works of Shakespeare — to get
your fire going presumably — and the Bible. But you’re allowed to take one
other. That’s impossible. Not being five, I find all books dull after I’ve
read them once.
But the most impossible thing of all was the music. Like everyone else, my
list of Top 10 greatest all time songs features around 250 tracks. Fourteen
of which are the best ever.
And to make matters worse, some of the 14 best ever songs are not the sort of
things I would care to share with the nation. Telling the audience that one
of your favourite tunes is Clair, by Gilbert O’ Sullivan, is not that far
removed from walking into the pub and telling everyone you have genital
sores.
For instance, I’ve always had a soft spot for Sad Café. In the wee small hours
I can admit that to myself, along with a fondness for Camel and Yes and
Supertramp. But not in a studio, at 11am on a Tuesday morning. Not to Sue
Lawley.
It was for this reason I also decided to steer clear of anything classical.
Unlike some of the guests on the show, who prove themselves to be
interesting and mysterious by choosing pieces in B flat by someone
unpronounceable from Transylvania, the only classics I know are from
adverts. And I fear I may have looked a bit of a fool if I’d asked for that
piece from the Pirelli tyre commercial. Or worse, that one they all clap
along to at the Horse of the Year Show.
So what I ended up with was my best ever eight songs (that I’ll admit to
liking). And you know what? The most recent was Bowie’s Heroes
from 1977. This makes me a very, very old man and that means I’m feeling
well qualified this week to write about Honda's new Accord Tourer Type S.
Over the years Honda has tried and tried to give itself a youthful appeal. It
has injected its cars with Botox, collagen and testosterone. It has even
slotted 190bhp engines under the bonnet of a Civic, but this was like
fitting a spoiler to a plastic hip. All it did was increase the speed the
old lady was going when she hit the tree.
It came up with a funky small car which it called the Jazz. It even offered it
in the same shade of metallic pink as a nine-year-old’s nail varnish. And
what happened? My mother bought one.
There were sports cars in the Sixties and Honda does a wonderful sports car
now: the S2000. There have been three prolonged lunges for glory in grand
prix racing and even a foray into the world of supercars.
But it’s to no avail. I was busy admiring an electric blue NSX on the A40 last
week when, with no warning whatsoever, it veered across my bows and shot up
a slip road. And who was driving it? Well it was Mr Bean himself, Rowan
Atkinson. ()
At first I thought the new Accord Type S might be yet another attempt to woo
thrusting young executives out of their BMWs and Audis. It has the requisite
black interior and the de rigueur fake carbon fibre cubbyhole covers, so
that inside it looks like a gentleman’s electric razor. In addition it has a
huge orange speedometer that goes up to 160mph, twin exhausts, lights like
Butler & Wilson jewellery and a titanium gearlever that offers a
selection of six forward gears.
“Oh no,” I thought, as I eased out of the drive. “It’s like someone’s father
undoing one too many of his shirt buttons and trying to dance.”
But it isn’t. The 2.4 litre i-VTEC engine doesn’t spin quite so readily, or
sound quite as fruity, as Honda’s other sporty engines and nor does it
develop quite so much power as I was expecting. That said, it’s a very good
engine, which is coupled to a sublime gearbox. But both are overshadowed by
the ride.
Not even the new Jaguar, with its air suspension, can cope with bumps as well
as this Honda. Even when you’re going quickly, and you won’t be because you
grew out of that sort of thing 40 years ago, there are no jars or shudders.
On the road I use to test this sort of thing, I was astonished. You feel the
car rise as it crests a bump in the road and you tense, waiting for it to
crash back down again. But the crash never comes. It settles gently, like
it’s a burly paramedic and you’re on a stretcher.
Strangely, this doesn’t seem to have affected the handling unduly. The
steering’s beautifully weighted. There’s a good seat-of-the-pants feel. The
brakes are powerful and the seats hold you in place perfectly. This is all
very clever. I’ve been saying for ages that I want a car that’s fast and
sporty, but not so that it breaks my spine in two every time I run over a
badger. And that’s what you get from the Accord Type S. Performance for the
Past-It boys.
There’s more, too, in the shape of a low £20,000 price tag and unburstable
mechanicals. I found out the other day that in the past 13 years there has
never been a single failure of Honda’s VTEC system. Not one. Ever.
People talk about Volkswagens being reliable, and Mercs. But if I may liken
reliability to the M1, the German cars are only at Milton Keynes. Toyota is
outside Leicester, whereas Honda is already on the A1, going into Scotland.
I hope the tyres are reliable, too, because as is increasingly becoming the
norm these days no spare wheel is supplied. It saves weight, say the car
manufacturers. Yeah, right. And money.
You only get a puncture once every 150,000 miles, they counter. Sure, but when
it happens it’s nice to know you’ll only be held up for 20 minutes, not two
weeks while a replacement tyre is shipped from Yokohama.
And no, we’re not fooled by the sealant and pump that are supplied. This may
work if you discover a drawing pin in the tread when you come out of the
house in a morning. But they are of limited use if your tyre is in 578 small
pieces all over the M20.
The only real upside to this penny-pinching is the extra space in the boot.
Not that the Accord estate needs it. The rear end is almost Volvoesque in
its vastness.
So, a pretty good effort then, all things considered. Except for one enormous
detail. Look at the picture and tell me if you have ever, in all of your
life, seen anything quite so ugly.
If I may bring the M1 into again, we have Gérard Depardieu at Bedford and the
new British Library at Sheffield South. But this is off the top of the map,
up round the North Pole alongside Ranulph Fiennes’s frostbitten fingers.
Why, for instance, does the rear window taper when the bodywork does not? And
why does such a big car come with wheels like Smarties? I’ve seen more
balance and cohesion at a stag party and more aesthetic merit in a Prague
housing project. Did Sara Cox design it? Or was it drawn in the middle of a
yardie shootout? In my Top 10 worst-ever looking cars, a list that currently
features 145 different models, this is number one. Along with 38 others.
VITAL STATISTICS
Model: Honda Accord Tourer Type S
Engine type: Four-cylinder, 2354cc
Power: 190bhp at 6800rpm
Torque: 164 lb ft at 4500rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual
Suspension (front and rear): Double wishbone, telescopic gas-filled dampers
Weight: 1,508kg
Luggage capacity: 1,707 litres
Fuel/C02: 29.1mpg (combined)/230g/kg
Top speed: 138mph
Acceleration: 0 to 62mph: 8.4sec
Price: £20,100
Verdict: Great legs, shame about the face
My Honda Accord Estate had everything I needed, for famiy and 3 dogs, I bought it with 14,00 miles on the clock, I did 7,000 miles and the clutch completey burnt out. I was told that I rode the clutch when driving, I have been driving for 30 years and this is the first timeI have had to have a new clutch at a grand total of £1,024. Glancing thru quite a few views on different cars, I notice when peoples clutches go they are all informed they drive badly. What a get out.
jose tite, Basingstoke, England