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The 1995 Odyssey was introduced in 1994 as Honda's first minivan. [5] [6] It was based on the Accord platform, with a 4-cylinder engine, all-disc anti-lock braking, all wishbone suspension, and a four-speed automatic transmission with a steering-column-mounted shifter and a hill-hold feature marketed as Grade Logic. [6]
2006–2011 Honda Civic FD/FA/FN; 2011–2015 Honda Civic FB; 2007–2011 Honda CR-V RE; 2012–2016 Honda CR-V RB; 2008–2016 Honda Freed; 2002–2004 Honda Odyssey (BYBA) 2003–2012 Honda Odyssey JDM (P2646/P2647) 2005–2006 Honda Odyssey (BGRA) 2007–2010 Honda Odyssey (PGRA)* 2011–2013 Honda Odyssey (PV1A)* - except Touring and Elite ...
The first-generation Odyssey was a raised wagon from Honda that was launched in Japan and North America in 1994. [4] Based on the fifth-generation Accord sedan, it was offered with an optional 4WD (with RA2 and RA4 chassis), and from 1997 with a 3.0-litre V6 J30A engine with the RA5 chassis code (front-wheel drive only).
Adaptive cruise control does not provide full autonomy: the system only provides some help to the driver, but does not drive the car by itself. [3] For example, the driver is able to set the cruise control to 55mph, if the car while traveling that speed catches up to another vehicle going only 45mph, the ACC will cause the car to automatically brake and maintain a safe distance behind the ...
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The first major cause of unintended acceleration was found in March 2007, when an engineering analysis showed that unsecured all-weather mats had led to pedal entrapment and drivers accelerating up to 90 mph (140 km/h) with decreased braking power.
Honda Odyssey can refer to three motor vehicles manufactured by Honda: Honda Odyssey (ATV) Honda Odyssey (Minivan, international) Honda Odyssey (Minivan, North America)
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