Reviews published today:
http://www.autofocus.ca/reviews/first-drives/2017-acura-nsx-legend-reborn
"This thing pulls more Gs accelerating than a Porsche 911 Turbo. It’s relentless, breathtaking stuff. The NSX uses the electric motors to cover any lag before the huge turbos wallop you forward. If you just get in and put your foot down, you’d never guess there was all that high-tech wizardry under the hood. All motors work together seamlessly."
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“At first the NSX feels like it’s on rails like its all-wheel drive rivals from Germany, the Porsche Turbo and Audi R8 V10. Initially, there’s no drama. All you feel is the uncanny way the front motors work to kill understeer and zap oversteer, just as you feel it’s about to begin. But with more confidence — and on a track — the NSX reveals its true playful nature. Roll smartly onto the throttle and the car slides sideways easily, naturally.”
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“The NSX is the first hybrid sports car (under a million dollars) that’s both seriously fast and fun to drive. For that reason alone, it’s a groundbreaking machine, a minor landmark in sports car history.”
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http://www.wired.com/2016/03/review-2017-acura-nsx/
“My first go at Sonoma Raceway reveals a buttery smooth ability that complements the raw power numbers. The combination of internal combustion and electric motivation delivers a smooth whoosh of energy leading up to peak torque, between 6,500 and 7,500 rpm. There’s no lull or soft spot within that crescendo, no surge or spike, just a constant pull of power. Launch control is similarly drama-free. All four wheels fling the car forward like an aircraft carrier catapult.”
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“Away from the track, the NSX is commanding and confident on public roads, devouring s-curves and straights as though someone filled the trunk with get-out-of-jail-free cards.”
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“The 2017 NSX is a monument to engineering, refinement, and ultimately, a certain kind of invisibility. While Aston Martin and Bentley build cars with enough panache to be considered supercars for the gentleman set, the Acura NSX is the thinking man’s exotic. Or, perhaps, an everyman’s supercar, exploring the themes of refinement and restraint rather than boom, bombast, and extroversion.”
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Another new review:
http://gearpatrol.com/2016/03/22/review-2017-acura-nsx/
"The other reason that Acura has been taking heat over the NSX is that it’s not the same car they introduced 26 years ago. Fans of the first-generation NSX loved its relative affordability: it launched at $60,000, or $108,000 in today’s money. They loved its
Japanese-car quality and reliability and its supercar performance, with mid-engine balance, a low, wide stance, world-first all-aluminum construction, and a naturally aspirated, 270 horsepower V6 with variable valve-timing. Early gripes about the new 2016 model are that it lacks that sort of “people’s supercar” vibe and instead aspires to Lamborghini/Ferrari greatness as though that were a bad thing. Yes, there is presently no intermediate stepping stone allowing Honda fans to get their sports-car fix, and the NSX’s $156,000 starting point makes it a supremely challenging discretionary purchase. But, frankly, so is $108,000. Sell some stock, or buy a
Porsche— but you’ll be disappointed if you do. This car sits far above any Porsche short of the 918 hypercar."
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“What I can tell you is that the dedication to getting it right, which led to those delays, and the disinclination to do the same car all over again have spawned a sports car that punches well above its weight, and which pretty much nails the company’s new ‘Precision Crafted Performance’ mantra. The NSX is by every measure a fully competent
track machine with a smart, modern hybrid twist — something only a few other car makers have only introduced in stratospherically priced hypercars — and gobs of design and manufacturing innovation.”
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“Does that make the NSX a tad boring? Perhaps. But there’s no legit race driver on earth who would trade drama for lap times. The NSX is equal parts muscle and finesse, and in the end, while not as outrageous or dramatic as the nearest
Lamborghini,
McLaren, or
Ferrari, it makes quick work of its closest competitors, including the Audi R8. It also possesses far more innovation for its time than its predecessor ever had. It’s the car Acura built to set a new standard, not meet an old one.”