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Unsorted discussions

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Hello all, I have limited editing experience but was trying to flag a dead link and/or unsubstantiated claim. If you look under "sixth generation" someone listed the CR-V designer as "Mitsuhiro Abe". I clicked on the link source and it was dead. Furthermore, when searching that name I found someone named "Mitsuhiro Abe" and a particularly disturbing article came up regarding a crime on June 10th, 2022 in Hokkaido. The date of the incident conveniently coincided with the same date as the "designer" being added to the wiki page. It's possible someone is pulling a prank. I can't ascertain with certainty one way or the other, but, the designer link is definitely dead and the name being used is questionable. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Takeachillphill (talkcontribs) 04:25, 10 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]

I added info on the 2.2 N22B i-DTEC engine used between 2012 and 2015 for the European CR-V. This engine was paired with the 5sp automatic gearbox made by Honda (the 9 speed is made by ZF I think). Basically the same drive train as used in the previous generation CR-Vs (but somehow much smoother). The sentence about 2015 engines used for Europe became a bit long though. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Zpeed (talkcontribs) 20:19, 6 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I removed the mention of the Passport as predecessor, because the successor to the Passport is the Honda Pilot (i.e., largish/midsize SUV, rather than small-SUVs such as the CR-V or Toyota RAV4). Moreover, the Passport and CR-V were sold simultaneously until the Pilot was released, as the Passport and CR-V served different market segments entirely.

Similarly, I took out the mention of the Honda Element as successor—it seems a little silly to talk of a successor, when the CR-V itself is still marketed. Also, same as above, the CR-V and Element are targeted to different market segments, although I would agree these two segments have more overlap than between the Passport and the CR-V. --Ryanaxp 00:19, Dec 15, 2004 (UTC)

how about moving the picture of the 2005 CRV to the gen 2 section instead of being in the gen 1 section? worldtravller

I corrected the generation 1.5 engine specs. VTEC did not appear in the CRV until the introduction of the K24 engine for 2002. Information was gained from: http://hybrid2.honda-perf.org/tech/b20/b20tech.html

A very interesting article on how Honda created the cylinder sleeves for the B20: http://dwolsten.tripod.com/articles/jan96a.html

I removed references to the transmission from the Generation 1 section - as this was only relevant to the US model CR-V. CR-Vs in other countries had a manual transmission available from day 1, and the automatic was not standard. It should also be noted that CR-Vs in some parts of the world (such as most of Europe) do not have the K24 2.4L engine, but a 2.0L i-VTEC engine. Someone should add this information to the Generation 2 section Davez621 11:25, 16 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Made some further changes to generation 2, version 2. Wheel dimensions in millimetres are unnecessary - all countries use inches to describe wheel sizes. I have therefore removed the metric equivalents. Only the US model receives standard driver, passenger, side and curtain airbags. ********COMMENT: NOT TRUE - UK MARKET ALSO GETS DRIV/PASS/SIDE/CURTAIN BAGS, AS DOES MUCH OF EUROPE******* Here in Australia, only 2 airbags are standard, with side airbags optional. Curtain airbags aren't available at all. I have again re-worded the article. I have also re-worded the introductory paragraph: I do not agree that the CR-V is a "crossover", because all SUVs are "crossovers" in the sense that they are a breed between car and truck (see my discussion in the crossover SUV article). Davez621 09:18, 2 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The introduction says, "Honda produces CR-Vs in the United Kingdom and Japan for the American market." To me, this is somewhat confusing, suggesting that CR-Vs are only available in North America (this is not the case, as the article says further.) As far as I know, CR-Vs for all world markets are made in the UK and Japan.

The picture is a second generation image, not first. Can it be changed? My change was "undid". 24.87.104.219 (talk) —Preceding undated comment was added at 08:24, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The second generation facelift model is available with a 6-speed manual transmission (not 5-speed as stated) - at least in UK. Might be true for all second generation cars?

By definition in North America, any SUV with a car based platform is a "crossover". I would call it a "small crossover" because the CR-V slots between "compact" and "mid-size" while the Pilot is a "large crossover" because it slots between "mid-size" and "full-size".

Attention NORTH AMERICAN contributors!

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WITH REFERENCE TO THIS ARTICLE, AND PARTICULARLY TO CONTRIBUTORS BASED IN NORTH AMERICA....

Please don't assume that just because something applies in America, that it applies worldwide. For example, Gen2 CR-V engine's don't JUST come in 2.4l size - there is also a 2.0l that is available to much of the world. Also, Honda in US might call it a "Comfortable Runabout Vehicle", but in Europe and Japan it's called "Compact Recreational Vehicle".

Remember this vehicle is built in Japan and United Kingdom, and America is just one market for it!

Rant over ;-)

— Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.146.19.215 (talk) 16:45, 12 April 2006‎ (UTC)[reply]

Disclaimer Rant

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Since we had one rant here already, what is with all the little disclaimers that have been popping up on Wikipedia that state the obvious. Like the one on the current version of the CR-V entry towards the bottom that says "This article or section contains information about a scheduled or anticipated future automobile..." I have a disclaimer: "If you're hobby is hopping around an online encyclopedia posting tags that state the obvious, you need a new hobby." I liked wikipedia better before the nerds took over. Oh Well.

Rant over ;P

And you think we like people who type "your" as "you're"? And just how hard can it be to type four tildas? I liked Wikipedia more when rednecks stuck to singing. Le Grand Bleu (talk) 13:43, 5 July 2015 (UTC)[reply]

CR-V To Midsize??

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I told you, Hyundai & Mazda will wind up with 3 crossover SUV's. The Toyota RAV4 has morphed to more of a mid-size crossover SUV, and the next CR-V is shorter than RAV4. Here's how it goes:

Honda Element Vs. Hyundai Tucson Vs. Mazda CX-5
Honda CR-V Vs. Hyundai Santa Fe Vs. Mazda CX-7
Honda Pilot Vs. Hyundai Veracruz Vs. Mazda CX-9 -- Bull-Doser 03:20, 4 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The Element is a niche car that's similar in size and price to the CR-V. The CR-V isn't increasing drastically in size in its redesign the way the RAV and Santa Fe did, and there's no such car as the CX-5. IFCAR 12:48, 4 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Attention UK contributors and any reader of the specs.amayama.com site in Russia !!!

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Granted the rantings that Honda decided to open "one" of their many manufacturing plants there and that you have a market for (sub)"compact" vehicles like the Mini can be proven, the "fact" remains that Honda originated the term CR-V to be Comfortable Runabout Vehicle from conception.

(With probably the exception of the few who offer only their island for authority and their bias against North America instead of providing independently verifiable sources) Anyone capable will easily find Comfortable Runabout Vehicle clearly spelled out on very credible sites "open" to "peer review" including two official (C) Honda Motor Co., Ltd. sources - the Honda Japan CR-V Fact Book http://www.honda.co.jp/factbook/auto/CR-V/200610/01.html document and the World Honda http://world.honda.com/news/2001/4010918.html document.

Also, until a verifiable source is given, caring peer reviewers should at least consider warning readers on a contributor mixing a single market reality with own opinion claiming wider scope and adding their personal grand feelings as expressed in that contributor's "many markets such as the United Kingdom, only all-wheel drive is offered due to lack of demand for lower specification vehicles and higher consumer expectations" example. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 207.112.74.201 (talk) 13:49, 16 December 2006 (UTC).[reply]

Similar Hyundai Vehicles For The CR-V

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Just think! The Santa Fe is V6-only for North America, and still competes up against the RAV4 and CR-V. The Santa Fe is priced up against the RAV4 and CR-V worldwide.

Tucson - Element
Santa Fe - CR-V
Veracruz - Pilot
Portico

The Tucson is similar in size to the Element, and the current CR-V's length is similar to the original Santa Fe. The CR-V's length is also positioned between the Tucson & Santa Fe, and the Santa Fe is much closer to the CR-V than the Tucson. When the Nissan Rogue arrives for next year, this CUV will be tackling mainly with the Honda CR-V, Hyundai Santa Fe and Toyota RAV4. The Santa Fe & CR-V are mid-level CUVs. The Tucson & Sportage twins have got a longer wheelbase than the CR-V, and they're both powerful than the CR-V, because the CR-V lacks a V6 engine. In North America, the Sportage is still Kia's only crossover SUV.

BTW, I switched the similar vehicle to the Kia Sportage, since the Sportage will be Kia's mid-level CUV for '09 with the arrival of the smaller Soul. -- Bull-Doser 03:50, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

CRV towing

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I own a 1999CRV and want to tow it behind a RV. Is there any problems?

Pchancellor 22:38, 27 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Subjective Opinion

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The following lines are completely subjective; some people may have preferred the previous interior:

"The interior was also improved, as some consumers felt that the support provided by the seats was inadequate for longer trips. The cloth on the seats was also redesigned with a much more attractive pattern."

I recommend changing them to just report the facts. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 156.99.75.2 (talk) 16:16, 13 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

CR-V Special Edition?

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Does anyone know the difference between a 2007 Honda CR-V and a CR-V Special Edition? Cflm001 (Talk) 12:05, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Missing UK chassis code?

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The statement "in many markets such as Australia and the United Kingdom, only front wheel drive is offered" appears to be incorrect. I'm currently borrowing a UK "07" plate (i.e. registered in 2006-2007) CR-V diesel, which has an RD9 chassis code (not listed at all) and 6-speed manual gearbox and is clearly 4WD/AWD (I'm not going to get into that discussion!).86.25.185.198 (talk) 18:30, 26 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

The RD9 (4WD, diesel engine) was only for Europe. The RD8 (also 4WD, K20A engine) is also missing at the 2nd generation.... The chassis code RE6 (4WD - N22A diesel engine) is also missing. I own one. I'm from Germany.CWeitzer (talk) 08:33, 19 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Another question: never heard about the RE7. Could this be wrong?CWeitzer (talk) 09:17, 19 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Some mixed data

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I'm from Germany and so I was reading the article about the 3rd generation CR-V. Because while I'm owning a pre-facelift and I'm a Honda fan from the first day of driving, I'm common with the car I drive ;) There is something mixed up in the article "Europe" under the "2010 facelift" section. It's not right, that the facelift **first** became xenon headlights. In Germany there were only three options / models available: Comfort, Elegance and Executive. The Executive came stock with Xenon, it was an option for Elegance and not available for Comfort. Everything else (GPS/DVD navigation system, sound system, panorama moonroof, chrome handles) was also stock for Executive before facelift and as an option for the other two lines... The only different for the facelift in Germany was, that the body is now painted at the lower plastic parts and engine size & type (as written in the article). Additionally there were some new materials for the interior (fabric, leather like pre-facelift and new: alcantara leather), the arm rests between the front seats are a little wider and the aluminium trim on the dash board was a little darker now, the inner door handles aren't silver painted anymore: they are overdrawn with rubber. All CR-V in Germany are 4WD. CWeitzer (talk) 09:10, 19 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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What CR-V stands for

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It appears the expansion of "CR-V" is a sometimes contentious subject. The standard for inclusion of information is verifiability -- anyone has to be able to look at the information given, trace it back to its origin, and verify it as correct. This is generally done by citing reliable sources. Personal opinion and original ideas are generally not acceptable.

With that in mind, I set out to see what I found find on the subject. A Google for Honda "Compact Recreational Vehicle" finds the term does seem to enjoy some currency in independent sources, but I don't see anything from any proper Honda Motor site. I did see at least one dealership using the term. Google does not find the term on any global or US Honda website (where global=GTLD).

What about "Comfortable Runabout Vehicle"? Google for Honda "Comfortable Runabout Vehicle" likewise finds plenty of independent usage, but nothing leaps forward as official. Limiting the search to Honda US/global, it finds a grand total of one occurrence, on the Honda Worldwide site. While an official statement is good, it seems strange that only one mention is found.

A search of the Honda UK website is even less conclusive. Google finds nothing for Comfortable Runabout. Searching for Compact Recreational finds again a single match, but that turns out to be a third-party review regurgitated by Honda. Still, I have to think that Honda reviews such things before posting them to their own website, so this is better than nothing at all.

The Honda Japan website is a little more interesting. Google does not find any Compact Recreational hits. However, Comfortable Runabout finds a handful (six) of pages, including some official Honda "Fact Book" pages going back at least to 2001. This adds slightly more weight to Runabout. However, it's far from conclusive. Google isn't everything, and there are still very few mentions. It's even possible the original Japanese doesn't have an exact translation, and both were given by Honda at various times.

None of my research and speculation is acceptable in the article itself, but I wanted to note what research I did and what I found. Maybe someone else can pick up where I left off, and find something more.

Respectfully submitted,

DragonHawk (talk|hist) 19:43, 5 August 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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"7FAR" VINs

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Many fifth generation CR-Vs built in Honda's Ohio plant have VINs beginning with "7FAR". While typical VIN decoding techniques would suggest that these vehicles are built in New Zealand due to the VIN starting with a '7', they are not built in New Zealand. My best guess as to why they are using "7" VINs is that they have run out of "5J"s — Preceding unsigned comment added by Avedantt (talkcontribs) 07:43, 10 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Ok. See WP:OR. Or find some sources if it is interesting enough to include.  Mr.choppers | ✎  13:49, 10 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Include where? The main article? I'm just trying to have a conversation about this over here on Talk for now. Cheers... Avedantt (talk) 16:57, 10 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion

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The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion:

Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 02:51, 10 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Re disambiguation with Honda ZR-V

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@Andra Febrian Hi. So the disambiguation there was an attempt to WP:DEORPHAN and make the article easier to find. ZR-V sounds similar to CR-V so that is why I thought a disambiguation here was appropriate. I suppose I'd be open to hold off on the disambiguation until the name is confirmed, or if you have any other suggestions? lovkal (talk) 16:14, 12 November 2021 (UTC)[reply]

In the meantime no one will potentially confuse CR-V with ZR-V as the latter is unknown by most people, so yes I suggest to hold off the distinguish template until the ZR-V is either confirmed or known by the public. Andra Febrian (talk) 16:27, 12 November 2021 (UTC)[reply]