Currently reading: New 2015 Honda Civic Type R to be exported to Japan from Britain

Honda’s 306bhp hot hatch sprints from 0-62mph in a claimed 5.7sec and will be exported to Japan; on sale in the UK now, priced from £29,995

The new Honda Civic Type R will be exported to Japan from the UK, arriving in showrooms there from autumn this year.

Takahiro Hachigo announced the news, which follows a new £200 million investment in the Swindon plant, in his first speech as Honda Motor Company CEO.

The first Type R rolled off the production line in the UK last week. The plant, with a 3000-strong workforce, is the global production hub for the new Civic five-door hatchback.

Philip Ross, senior vice president for Honda Motor Europe, said: “Customers are really excited about this car and we’re developing a significant order bank here in Europe.

“Exporting the car to Japan will only serve to increase demand further, which is great news.”

We put the 306bhp Honda Civic Type R through its paces on the road and track

The Honda Civic Type R is sold out in the UK until February. In total, UK dealers have placed orders for more than 800 cars, prompting Honda UK boss Philip Crossman to declare that "the car has already exceeded all our expectations".

The Type R is the fastest and most powerful front-wheel-drive hot hatch in existence. It made its debut at the Geneva motor show and is priced from £29,995. At its heart is an all-new 306bhp turbocharged 2.0-litre engine that enables it to cover the 0-62mph sprint in 5.7sec and hit a 167mph top speed.

"We knew it was a car with a following, but the interest it has generated inside and outside of the company has been phenomenal," said Crossman. "It has dominated our thinking for the past few months, and it's already playing a key role in building interest in our brand and telling the world that Honda is back where it belongs."

The Type R features a special ‘Dual Axis Strut’ front suspension system and a mechanical limited-slip differential. An extensive aerodynamic package completes the Civic Type R’s extreme track-bred positioning.

The most dominant feature in the Civic Type R is its new VTEC engine. The direct-injection turbocharged unit’s 306bhp arrives at 6500rpm and peak torque of 295lb ft is at 2500rpm. The engine hits the redline at 7000rpm.

The 2.0-litre engine drives the front wheels through a six-speed manual gearbox. There is no automatic option. The 0-62mph time and top speed are both class-leading.

Honda says the Civic Type R has been fitted with “a number of innovative new suspension systems” that are designed to “maximise power transfer to the road”.

Chief among them is that Dual Axis Strut front suspension system, which is similar to Ford’s RevoKnuckle system. It’s a version of a MacPherson strut front suspension set-up that features an additional steering knuckle, so the wheel steers around a point closer to its centre line, in turn reducing torque steer by up to 50% compared with a standard Civic, according to Honda.

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Honda's new Civic Type R is powered by a 306bhp 2.0-litre turbocharged four cylinder engine

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The rear suspension is an H-shaped torsion beam design, but it has been modified over the standard Civic’s to include a new ‘crushed pipe’, which, Honda says, improves roll rigidity by 180% and enhances high-speed corner stability. Adaptive dampers also feature at each corner and the electric steering has been retuned for greater response and feel.

To access the full potential of the chassis and powertrain, Honda has equipped the Civic Type R with a ‘+R’ driving mode. This increases engine response, provides more aggressive torque mapping, reduces the assistance on the steering and firms up the dampers by 30%.

Stopping power is provided by bespoke high-performance Brembo brakes, which feature four-piston calipers and drilled discs that measure 350mm in diameter at the front. The brakes sit behind 19in wheels shod with 235/35 tyres made of a bespoke compound.

Chassis tuning for the Civic Type R has taken place at the Nürburgring and Suzuka circuits, as well as at Honda’s own Takasu test track in Japan. Honda has already set a new lap record for front-wheel-drive production cars at the Nürburgring, eclipsing the Renault Mégane RS 275 Trophy-R’s 7min 54sec lap time by four seconds.

Extensive aerodynamic work has taken place in the wind tunnel at Honda’s dedicated motorsport facility in Sakura, Japan, where it develops its Formula 1 engines.

The result is exterior styling that has been heavily influenced by aerodynamic demands. Most striking is the large fixed rear wing, which has been redesigned from that of the Civic Type R concept car seen at the Geneva and Paris motor shows of 2014. Its height, shape, angle and end plates have all been modified to provide enough downforce without compromising drag at higher speeds.

Also notable at the rear is the large diffuser, which works with the flat underside to ‘suck’ the car to the road. There are four exhaust tips, two on each side of the car, and a more aggressive-looking rear bumper design.

Other new design features compared with the standard Civic on which the Type R is based include a new front bumper that has been shaped to reduce turbulence around the front wheels, a wide front splitter, flared wheel arches, which at the front allow air in as extra cooling for the engine, and larger front grilles, also for increased cooling. Further outlet vents for the engine feature on top of the front wings.

There are five exterior colour choices offered on the Civic Type R, including the Championship White colour seen here and shared with other Type R models.

The sporty interior features sports seats trimmed in a suede-effect fabric, a gearknob machined from an aluminium alloy, black headlining and black trim with red double stitching.

Though entry-level models will be priced at £29,995, higher-specification GT versions - which get a suite of safety technology as well as automatic lights and wipers, dual-zone climate control, front and rear parking sensors and Honda's Connect infotainment system - are priced at £32,295.

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Mark Tisshaw

mark-tisshaw-autocar
Title: Editor

Mark is a journalist with more than a decade of top-level experience in the automotive industry. He first joined Autocar in 2009, having previously worked in local newspapers. He has held several roles at Autocar, including news editor, deputy editor, digital editor and his current position of editor, one he has held since 2017.

From this position he oversees all of Autocar’s content across the print magazine, autocar.co.uk website, social media, video, and podcast channels, as well as our recent launch, Autocar Business. Mark regularly interviews the very top global executives in the automotive industry, telling their stories and holding them to account, meeting them at shows and events around the world.

Mark is a Car of the Year juror, a prestigious annual award that Autocar is one of the main sponsors of. He has made media appearances on the likes of the BBC, and contributed to titles including What Car?Move Electric and Pistonheads, and has written a column for The Sun.

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Citytiger 6 July 2015

Err no it isnt

Auotcar wrote:

The Type R is the fastest and most powerful front-wheel-drive hot hatch in existence

How about rephrasing that to "in current production"..

LP in Brighton 30 June 2015

"despite the first cars having only arrived in the UK"

Hang on a minute, the thing is actually built here anyway. Unless Swindon exports the body in white to Japan to get the car fully built? Really there should be no delay: the Swindon plant is currently running at half capacity because of limited demand for other Civic / CR-V models. Shouldn't the factory be running flat out building these Type-R models for the limited time that the 9th generation Civic has left?
scotty5 30 June 2015

Where did it all go wrong?

LP in Brighton wrote:

...the Swindon plant is currently running at half capacity because of limited demand for other Civic / CR-V models.

And to quote from an earlier Autocar article:

Autocar wrote:

The UK automotive industry turned over a record £69.5 billion in 2014, figures released by the Society of Motoring Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) have revealed.

Says everything you need to know about the Civic. I used to buy Honda's, bought one Civic when it was boring, non-vtec and bought by old people. Then again it was never out the top 10 best sellers in UK. Where did it all go wrong?

nivison 30 June 2015

phenomenal...

Who spelt that wrong (and doesn't have spell check..)? Tisshaw or Crossman ?
I would have thought a real Type-R fanboy would know that word...