Let's review some facts:
It is the year 2009, and the planet is in a general state of higgledy-piggledy. The global economy is in the toilet, the polar ice caps are melting, and most car manufacturers are running scared.
Sound depressing? Look on the bright side: Gasoline is no longer five dollars a gallon, which is good, because almost everyone is newly broke. People are driving less, which means that there's less traffic, at least in theory. And if you like the idea of using as little fuel as possible while you drive around spending money you don't have, there are now more hybrid vehicles on the market than ever before.
Good students that we are, that last fact gave us pause. Something doesn't add up: many of those hybrids are big, heavy machines, their glorious technological accomplishments muted by high curb weights and dowdy chassis behavior. If less is more in our brave new world, then where are all the light, affordable, entertaining hybrid cars? Is there no room for fun in the fuel miser?
Twenty-four years ago, Honda reached out to mileage enthusiasts with the Civic CRX HF - for high fuel efficiency - which earned EPA ratings of 49/54 mpg (40/48 mpg adjusted to today's procedures). A tiny engine, 1713-pound curb weight, and petite size were the HF's key attributes.... Read full article