Filed under:
Coupe,
Sedan,
Etc.,
Plants/Manufacturing,
Honda
Are we allowed to say that this infographic celebrating the 2013
Honda Accord might be - so far - the most interesting thing about the car? Breaking down thirty years and eight generations of Accord production at Honda's Marysville, Ohio plant, it's a detailed chart of how the Accord went from a 75-horsepower sedan that got 28 mpg, took 12.9 seconds to reach 60 mph in 1982 and boasted a digital clock, to a 185-hp (the four-cylinder model) sedan that gets 35 mpg, takes seven seconds to get to 60 mph and boasts the kinds of features you'd also find in a
Mercedes-Benz.
The factory numbers are just as interesting, the Marysville plant taking six years to build its first million cars, then taking just two years to add another one million during the third-generation Accord, repeating the feat again twice during the fifth and sixth generations. The latest sedan and coupe carry the hopes of those
nine million others that came before it, each generation of which made
Car and Driver's 10-Best list. Let the games begin - after you check out the infographic, which you can click on to enlarge.
Infographic: 30 years of American-built Honda Accord originally appeared on
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