Top Car

(BrasilTuga) #1
January 2016 |TOPCAR.CO.ZA 71

If the NSX sounds like a complicated car – and its

spec sheet, prolonged gestation and sh eer weight would


suggest it is – that feeling lasts only as long as opening


the door and sliding over the slim sill into the low-slung


but comfortable cockpit. Take a moment to appreciate


the panoramic forward visibility – low dashboard, slim


A-pillars – start the engine (if it stays silent you’re in


EV-biased Quiet mode), grasp the oddly sh aped wheel


(pronounced bulges where you grasp it) and go.


For a car weighing more than 1700kg (a gluttonous

300kg more than a McLaren 570S), the NSX makes a


good fist of feeling fast. ‘Zero delay’ might be a slight


exaggeration but with the hybrid drivet rain delivering


additi onal torqueand all-wheel-drive traction, the


Honda launches with a refined violence that can make


you feel mildlyunwell. There’s no need for any throttle


modulation – just put your footdown and the low-slung


coupe hooks up without aflicker of the traction control


and gathers speed with a heavy insistence. It’s a job to


keep the thing in gears, so closely stacked are the ratios.


After the initial getaway that ferocity does bleed away


as the car’s weight and the e-motors’ ab ility to help


diminishes, butthis remains an effortlessly fast car.


A shame then the gearbox itself isn’t nicer to use, and

that the cacophony of acceleration is both a little ugly


in note and dislocated from what the engine’s actually


doing. The cheap-feeling sh ift paddles pull home with


a disappointing ‘clack’ and offer little of the McLaren


unit’s feel-good tactility. And while the exhaust note


is nothing more than a muted if potent purr in normal


driving, twirl the drive mode selector around to Sport or


Sport+ and the racket from the artificial acoustics is less


than spine tingling.


Take a moment to get the measure of the steering. The

system is neither hefty and nuanced like a Porsche 911


GT3’s, nor exhilarating in its speed and responsiveness


like a Ferrari 488 GTB. Deliberately so, argues project


leader Ted Klaus – ‘We wanted driver confidence and


a sense of complete control.’ True enough as you build


speed and slide into Sport+ (the third offour modes,


which ramp up from Quiet to Track) you grow to admire


the accuracy and reassuring paucity of slack in the NSX’s


steering. Response to your demands is immediate and


accurate, and it’s during these tentative enquiries that
the first flickers of chassis magic make themselves
known. At speed the car changes direction with an
almost surreal ease, as if the physics that normally
interfere with doing so have beensubtly but tangibly
re-written in your favour.
Soon you long to get stuc k into a meaty complex

of corners, happy that you have the car beneath you to
monster them. Here the NSX’s mixed-media powertrain
promises unique advantages, beingable to trimthe forc e
at each front wheel for an ideal cornering attitude without
drive-sapping applications of the brakes. At the wheel
you’re vaguely aware of the car’s intelligent powertrain
at work butmainly there’s just a sense of neat, composed
togetherness, the Honda driving where you expect a slide.
Ultimately the NSX is inseparable from its hybrid
drivet rain. Without it the Honda would be a lighter,
less powerful, less complex car, and one closer in spirit
to its namesake. But Honda, perhaps more than any
other manufacturer, is a believerin progress through
technology. Do the advantages of the NSX’s hybrid
powertrain negate the weight penalty? Given the car’s
real-world remit, Klaus is adamant that they do, and the
way it powers out oftighter corners, shrugging off early
stabs of throttle and translating them into big corner-exi t
speeds, would certainly seem to back himup, as would
the car’s eerie sense of agility without the instability. But
still the NSX can’t ou t-think 1 725kg.
An extended road drive –as opposed to this all-too-
brief first encounter – will answer a lot of questions,
and perhaps banish the lingering fear that this car just
doesn’t feel as special as it should. Job done, Ho nda
argues, if ‘special’ means obtrusive NVH, tiresome
steering and a chassis prone to spats of oversteer. This is
an everydaysupercar, remember, butsurely the game’s
moved on – what’s not everydayaboutan R8, 570S (okay,
the doors perhaps) and the 911 Turbo? Technically
fascinating, impressively resolved and unfeasibly easy to
drive fast, if the NSX has a failing it’s that its ro ad-biased
remit has left it feeling a little aloof. The original’s subtle
brilliance emerged with time and miles. Perhaps it’ll be
the same story with its complex, enigmatic and fiercely
ambitious successor.tc

There are three
elec tric motors
in here. Three!

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