Did they have someone else make it?The biggest problem was that the Prologue wasn't a Honda, and people noticed
Honda should've done the engineering and have GM rebadge a Honda, instead of the other way around.
Did they have someone else make it?The biggest problem was that the Prologue wasn't a Honda, and people noticed
Honda should've done the engineering and have GM rebadge a Honda, instead of the other way around.
Why? Model, year?I dumped my new Honda a few days ago.. no tears were shed....
Yeah I don't understand their reasoning. GDI with less power and intake valve deposits.With LESS power on a GDI vs port injection. Then they deserve to fail financially.![]()
Post in thread 'Lets talk about new vehicles' https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/threads/lets-talk-about-new-vehicles.338563/post-7595966Why? Model, year?
Yes, they wrote down these EV investments. But what was their cash position for the fiscal year?https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/14/....iVA.20Iq.9z1vucPVxA2q&smid=nytcore-ios-share
Honda Motor on Thursday reported its first annual loss since becoming a publicly traded company in Japan seven decades ago, as the costly retreat from its ambitious electric-vehicle targets plunged earnings into the red.
The automaker reported a net loss of $2.7 billion for the fiscal year that ended March 31. Earnings were weighed down by more than $9 billion in restructuring charges and write-downs following a retrenchment of its E.V. strategy. It is the first loss that the 77-year-old company has reported since listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in 1957.
In 2025, electric vehicle sales in the United States fell, snapping a record-breaking growth streak half a decade long for electric cars. The slowdown has also weighed on American majors. Earlier this year, Ford said its electric-vehicle division lost $4.8 billion in 2025 and would likely continue to lose money for at least two more years.
This again?we simply don't have the infrastructure for universal EV usage.
You can go anywhere on the US Interstate system with an EV, anywhere! It's only in some places in the Intermountain West where charging is really lacking off the Interstates.And not only that, America is a vast land of open space with an interstate highway system - and how fortunate we are to have this instead of being confined to densely populated, city centric countries elsewhere.
As an aside, I rode my bicycle across the continental US in 1992 and 1996. 1,000 miles per week for three consecutive weeks. In 1996 there were 26 Swiss riders who took part. The Swiss were highly capable cyclists but they said America was the only country in the world you could ride across the continent and rack up mileage like that. The same applies automotive travels.
Scott
If you plan on riding across the country at a 1,000 mile per week pace - with an average of 30,000 feet of climbing per week - you better be an experienced, well conditioned cyclist. The MINIMUM amount of training required for this endeavor is 350 to 500 miles per week, and that needs to be on a sustained basis for 3 or 4 months prior to attempting. Be sure you get lots of climbing in too. On day 7 and 8 in 1996 we rode 323 miles with 9,940 of climbing. Just two days prior to that we had an 8,800 foot day of climbing. We're talking 8 to 10 hour days on the saddle, day after day, rain or shine, for 3 straight weeks. And this wasn't flat interstate frontage road cruising. In 1992 I roomed with Gary Tatrai, the 1998 RAAM winner. This was serious sheet.I would like to ride my bike across the US, if I had the time. I would definitely take more time than 3 weeks though, not that I couldn't do it in 3 weeks if I was fully supported, but I would want to do more sightseeing than that.
Don't look now but the EU has mapped out many EuroVelo routes that cross the continent.
@Brons2 That sunk cost was on the balance sheet as an asset. The money was spent but not expensed. When an asset is written down or written off entirely there is a charge against earnings. If the asset has lost value that is considered an expense. Normally an asset is depreciated over a period of years which is also an expense. In cases such as this where the asset value has decreased dramatically the expense is taken in one shot. It is important to note that this has no impact on cash flow since no real money went anywhere at this point in time.Hum. So how do we make sense of this financial hocus pocus, which basically occurred from Honda writing down the value of money already sunk.
I've done 1000Km Randonneuring events twice, in 65 and 70 hours. That's 625 miles in less than 3 days. I have north of 25,000km lifetime overall in Randonneuring events, in addition to all the various charity rides and centuries/double centuries I've done in the past. I'm pretty sure that I have a decent idea of what it takes. I know I'm not in as good of a shape now as I would need to be due to the demands of family life, but I'm pretty confident I could get there given maybe 6 months to a year of training.If you plan on riding across the country at a 1,000 mile per week pace - with an average of 30,000 feet of climbing per week - you better be an experienced, well conditioned cyclist. The MINIMUM amount of training required for this endeavor is 350 to 500 miles per week, and that needs to be on a sustained basis for 3 or 4 months prior to attempting. Be sure you get lots of climbing in too. On day 7 and 8 in 1996 we rode 323 miles with 9,940 of climbing. Just two days prior to that we had an 8,800 foot day of climbing. We're talking 8 to 10 hour days on the saddle, day after day, rain or shine, for 3 straight weeks. And this wasn't flat interstate frontage road cruising. In 1992 I roomed with Gary Tatrai, the 1998 RAAM winner. This was serious sheet.
Scott
Mazda is slept on. If I wasn't fully in on the EV thing I'd buy one of their crossovers. Their metallic red is gorgeous and they have the nicest interiors compared to cars of more than twice the price. They seem to have a real focus on quality that seems to have been mostly ignored by the new car buying public.Honda's problem is not 100% due to EV. They started having head gasket issues where they very rarely had in the past. They also started putting turbo small motor in everything and CVT in a lot of cars having no business using CVT, and recycle a lot of model names from the past in new cars that is nothing like their previous models.
As a former Honda fanboy, I think if I were to buy another car that is the closest to the former Honda, it would be a Mazda today.