How much HP does a 2014 Civic Si have?
205 hp2014 Honda Civic Si / Horsepower
What series engine is in the 2014 Honda Civic Si?
Heavier, But Ever Sporty; Oh, What A Shifter!
2014 Honda Civic Si Coupe | |
---|---|
BASE PRICE | $23,580 |
VEHICLE LAYOUT | Front-engine, FWD, 5-pass, 2-door coupe |
ENGINE | 2.4L/205-hp/174-lb-ft DOHC 16-valve I-4 |
TRANSMISSION | 6-speed manual |
Is a Honda Civic Si a sports car?
The uncluttered design makes it easy to operate the sports car/daily driver Honda Civic Si, while new sports seats keep you supported no matter how tight you are hugging those corners. Featuring red and black two-tone and Si badging, the new bolstered seats add to the race car feel.
What year Civic Si is fastest?
Which Honda Civic Is the Fastest?
- 2014 Civic Si Sedan: 0 – 60 in 6.5 seconds.
- 2006 Civic Si Coupe 0 – 60 in 6.4 seconds.
- 2017 Civic Si Coupe: 0 – 60 in 6.3 seconds.
- 2017 Civic Type R: 0 – 60 in 5.4 seconds.
- 2019 – 2021 Civic Type R: 0 – 60 in ~5.0 seconds.
Why did you buy a 2014 Honda Civic Si?
’14 Honda Civic Si Sedan. I needed the practicality that the sedan offered, & to be honest I like the way it looks better than the coupe. So far I’ve put about 1K miles on the car. Honda’s manual gearbox is amazingly smooth and easy to drive. Engaging without being a pain.
What are the differences between the 2014 Honda Civic sedan&coupe?
While the Civic coupe gets a subtle styling adjustment, the Civic sedan carries over visually unchanged. For both, however, the biggest development for 2014 is the new continuously variable transmission (CVT) that replaces the previous five-speed automatic transmission.
Why did the Honda Civic Si fail to succeed?
The Civic Si goes down the road with a feeling of lightness, because at 2996 pounds, it is measurably lighter than the 3100-to-3200-pound hatchbacks that now rule the sport-compact scene. Yet Honda failed to capitalize on that advantage. Mediocre chassis tuning squanders the baked-in agility that comes with low mass.
How fast does a 2013 Honda Civic go from zero to 60?
A sprint from zero to 60 mph takes 9.1 seconds (8.7 seconds with a foot of rollout as on a drag strip) versus the 9.6 seconds it took the 2013 Civic and its five-speed automatic. Improvement is improvement, but the Civic remains one of the slower compact sedans in the class.