Feb 20, 2020
1 min, 50 secs
Enlarge ImageJust 600 of these Limited Edition Type Rs will come to the US.
Steven Ewing/Roadshow
There's a reason why I brought up the Honda Civic Type R's Nürburgring lap time when the 2021 Limited Edition debuted on Wednesday. This new Type R's focus is on better handling and lighter weight, so Honda will definitely be taking it back to the 'Ring to record an official lap time. But the company isn't just doing this to go for the gold.
"We will return to the Nürburgring and we will do a timed lap, but not with the purpose to break the record," Ko Yamamoto, Honda's technical consultant, told me at the Limited Edition's unveiling. Instead, the company will do this to "verify and confirm the improvement level of all those technical measures in a lap time," he said.
Many companies boast about their cars' Nürburgring times, and some of the time, it can feel more like a performance pissing match than anything. But, Yamamoto explained, "The Nürburgring lap time has always been part of the [Type R's] complete development program. This is something we will repeat for our internal verification."
The 2021 Limited Edition boasts a number of improvements, starting with small mechanical tweaks that debuted on the standard 2020 Civic Type R. The Limited Edition takes those one step further with recalibrated steering, sticker Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires and up to 70 pounds of weight savings in the European-spec car.
In 2017, the Civic Type R set a new record for front-wheel-drive cars on the Nürburgring Nordschleife, posting a 7-minute, 43.8-second lap time. Last year, however, the Renault Megane RS Trophy-R beat that time by four seconds. But with these performance improvements, Honda thinks it can easily shave some time off its 7:43.8 run.
"If that time happens to be the quickest," Yamamoto said, smiling, "then of course, we won't be silent."
2021 Civic Type R Limited Edition is Honda's new halo car
22 Photos
More From Roadshow
2020 Honda Civic Si review: A top pick for budget performance
2019 Honda Accord Sport 2.0T review: The driving enthusiast's family sedan
2020 Toyota Supra review: A solid sports car that’s rife with controversy
Comments
Hatchbacks
Sports Cars
Notification on
Notification off
Honda