Honda EVs Could Use Software To Replicate The Sensation Of Driving ICE Cars
If thereās one reason, above all others, the car enthusiast community hasnāt quite embraced electric cars yet, itās that their very nature means they donāt give us that same tingling sensation as a good ICE car. You press a pedal and go, and everything is very quiet and smooth and undramatic. Honda, it would seem, wants to change that.
Car and Driver recently attended a media event and drove some prototypes with tech set to feature in the brandās upcoming 0 Series electric cars, which it plans on spearheading a global EV push within the coming years.
Honda 0 Series saloon concept – front
One of these features is pretty eye-catching from an enthusiast’s perspective: a mode that aims to recreate the sensation of various Honda performance cars from the past. This goes beyond some synthesised engine noise ā although that features and is apparently fairly realistic ā as it also changes the carās digital gauge cluster to mimic that of the car the driver has selected.
The feature is also set to allow the paddles on the steering column, which would otherwise be used to adjust regenerative braking, to āshiftā through the carās virtual āgearsā. This is something already used to impressive effect on the Hyundai Ioniq 5 N, but what we havenāt seen before is Hondaās implementation of vibration through the seats, which aims to recreate the imperfections of a combustion engine.
Honda 0 Series saloon concept – interior
C&D tried the system in a Honda E, and the menu showed options for an S2000, current-gen Civic Type R, CRX, original NSX-R and the hybrid NSX Type S. There was even what looks like a relatively modern F1 car and, hilariously, the companyās HondaJet private jet ā that one apparently changes the gauge cluster to an aircraftās yoke.
During their test, the CRX and F1 car were displayed as locked, and a Honda engineer said that the F1 car, at least, would be extra paid content, suggesting that some of these modes will be paywalled.
Honda 0 Series saloon concept – rear
The various attempts to recreate ICE sensations in EVs so far have been a mixed bag, but software is only getting better, and thereās no reason it canāt be used to great effect to make you feel like youāre charging around in an original NSX-R, even if youāre in an electric hatchback. Reckon theyāll be able to recreate the feeling of VTEC kicking in, yo?