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The seventh-generation Honda Civic is an automobile produced by Honda from 2000 until 2005. It debuted in September 2000 as a 2001 model. Its exterior dimensions stayed similar to the outgoing predecessor, with interior space significantly increased, bumping it up to the compact car size designation.
Suspension and engine options were available along with their first Natural Gas Powered Civic, the GX. In the United States, model year 1996 to 2000 the Civic was sold under the CX, DX, EX, EXR, HX, LX, and for Canada, SE, and Si trims; all base models were made with 1.6-liter 4-cylinder engines. The EX-CX are all SOHC (Honda D engine).
Current Honda general-purpose engines are air-cooled 4-stroke gasoline engines but 2-stroke, Diesel, water-cooled engines were also manufactured in the past. The current engine range provide from 1 to 22 hp (0.7 to 16.5 kW). More than 5 million general-purpose engines were manufactured by Honda in 2009.
1996–2000 Honda Civic HX; 1996 Honda Civic EX (sedan Peruvian version) 1996-1997 Honda Civic VTi (Philippines, with engine code as PH16A) 1998-2000 Honda Civic VTi (Philippines, with engine code as P6FD1 for Manual Transmission and P6FD6 for Automatic S4PA Transmission) Rod Length: 137 mm; Rod/Stroke: 1.52; Compression: 9.4:1
For eight years up to 2011, the Civic GX was rated first by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy in the "Greenest Vehicle of the Year" list (excluding the years 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2006 when the Honda Insight hybrid topped the list) [7] For 2012 the GX was surpassed by the Mitsubishi i-MiEV.
i-CTDi, an abbreviation for Common Rail Turbo Diesel Injection, is the common rail technology used in Honda's automobiles produced and sold in the Europe market between 2002-2008. It is the general name of direct injection turbodiesel diesel engines. Its production was completely discontinued in 2008 and was replaced by i-DTEC.