zzdcar' Expert Review
by the zzdcar Experts
  
What’s new
  Priced competitively with mini-utes, the new CR-V offers more passenger room and cargo capacity than its peers. The CR-V is available with antilock brakes.
  
Cost to DriveCost to drive estimates for the 1997 Honda CR-V 4dr SUV AWD and comparison vehicles are based on 15,000 miles per year (with a mix of 55% city and 45% highway driving) and energy estimates of N/A undefined in North Dakota.
Monthly estimates based on costs in North Dakota
  Not Available  for CR-V Base
  CR-V Base
  4dr SUV AWD (Most Popular) - N/A MSRP
  vs
  $183/mo
  Avg. Midsize SUV
  
Vehicle overview
  For years, Honda has been selling a sport-utility vehicle that many consider a fraud.  Forget that the Honda Passport is based on the very rugged and capable Isuzu Rodeo, to Honda aficionados it is not a real Honda.  (Think of how the Porsche 914 fares in the eyes of diehard Porsche fanatics.)  Thus, to many people, the CR-V is the first Honda sport-utility vehicle.
  Built on the Civic platform, the CR-V successfully integrates familiar Honda components into an all-new design.  Honda's famous four-wheel double-wishbone suspension makes an appearance on the CR-V, the first ever application of four-wheel double-wishbone technology on a sport-ute, as does the very familiar four-speed automatic transmission.  The 2.0-liter DOHC inline four-cylinder engine makes 126-horsepower and 133 ft-lbs. of torque.  The CR-V's real time four-wheel drive system is a derivative of the unit that Honda initially offered on their Civic wagon.  The result of using all of these car components is that the CR-V looks and feels rather like, um, a car.
  The CR-V's interior is instantly recognizable to anyone who has spent any time in Honda's passenger cars.  Functionality takes precedence over style in the CR-V's cabin, and the result is easy-to-read gauges, well-placed controls, and high-quality, if somewhat boring, interior materials.  Fit and finish is equal to the highly-acclaimed Accord.  The CR-V offers comfortable chairs for its occupants, each of which has excellent visibility and the ability to recline when the trip grows long.  The CR-V's cargo capacity is an outstanding 67.2 cubic feet when the rear seats are folded.
  Available in only one trim-level, the CR-V is surprisingly well-equipped.  Air conditioning with a micron filtration system is standard, as are power windows, power door locks, rear window wiper and defogger, AM/FM stereo, and a folding picnic table that doubles as a cargo area cover.  Options include antilock brakes and alloy wheels.
  The CR-V is not meant to replace hard-core recreational vehicles like the Jeep Wrangler or Toyota 4Runner.  Instead, it is meant for the person who wants the functionality of a sport utility without having to pay an exorbitant sticker price and huge gas bills.  The CR-V will get people to work and back in all but the worst weather, and to their favorite picnic area, assuming it's not on the Rubicon Trail.  Best of all, it's a sport-utility vehicle that Honda-lovers can finally call their own.
  
1997 CR-V Highlights
  
| Engine Type | Gas | 
|---|
| Cargo Capacity All Seats In Place | 29.6 cu.ft. | 
|---|
| Drivetrain | all wheel drive | 
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