2009 Honda Odyssey

2009 Honda Odyssey

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Photos by -Autonet.ca
Andrew Pollreis
Published: 05 11 2009

A family’s Odyssey

As I’ve said before ... if you can make my wife want to dump her van for another vehicle, you’ve done something good.

Of course it wasn’t much of a stretch this time around that she would like the latest tester ... the Honda Odyssey.

I will say, however, that it took some convincing. Since she gets attached to things so easily and change is something that can enter her life and abruptly manifest itself in various stages of worry and panic.

And that’s just when the kids start something like swim class.

While the Odyssey can’t relive the stress of the kids’ swimming lessons, it does it’s best to make it pleasant to get them there.

The Odyssey makes the most out of its large size, with lots of cubbies, storage compartments, fold up and fold away items.

Larger storage areas can be found in the floor in front of the second-row seats; the compartment can hold the removable middle portion of the 40/20/40 split middle row seats.

For really large items the third-row seats fold flat into the cargo floor and the middle row seats lift out. That’s great for temporary cargo hauling, and even better if you need some extra seats in you living room.

When the 60/40 split third-row seats aren’t folded away, the empty space doubles as a super handy grocery holder, complete with bag handle hooks.

The kids got a kick out of the power windows on the sliding doors and when things got too sunny they just rolled up the retractable sunshades.

Sitting up front, the driver and passenger have plenty of room and if either gets really thirsty you can make use of the folding tray with four drink holders and a retractable cup holder in the centre stack.

The dash setup is petty straight forward, with the only oddity being the gear selector being pushed a bit too far away from the steering wheel. In turn, its position forces the main audio controls and tri-zone climate controls to be just a little too far for the driver to adjust quickly.

Half of it is solved with the use of steering-wheel mounted audio controls.

Power sliding doors make getting in and out of the Odyssey a breeze and the kids found it easy to pull the handle to engage the power opening feature.

The feeling for most van owners is that the vehicles can be a tad sluggish off the line, but that isn’t the case with the Odyssey.

Getting the Odyssey moving is a 244 horsepower 3.5-litre V6 linked to a five-speed automatic transmission. The combination gets the most out of the heavier footed driver and because of the Honda engine tone, it sounds as if it’s willing to do a little racing for you. But you won’t, because you’re a responsible adult. And you wouldn’t want to embarrass the kids driving their parent’s cars.

The Honda Odyssey does what it’s made to do: get the family and its gear from one place to another in comfort.

Best of all for my wife, it gives her another option down the road if she wants another van.

As a family hauler, it’s one of the best.

Even dad can appreciate that.

Summary:

Year/Make/Model
2009 Honda Odyssey
Price as tested
$37,490
Trim level
EX
Price range
$31,490-$49,390
Freight
$1,590
Options
None
EnerGuide fuel economy ratings
13.3 L/100km city; 8.5 L/100km hwy
Observed fuel economy
13.6 L/100 km combined
Warranty (basic)
3 years/60,000 km
Warranty (powertrain)
5 years/100,000 km
Competitors
Dodge Grand Caravan; Kia Sedona; Toyota Sienna

Strong Points

Weak Points

  • - Dad liked good power
  • - mom liked plenty of room
  • - kids liked second-row power windows
  • - Dad disliked location of parking brake
  • - mom disliked that it felt too big at times
  • - kids disliked not having a DVD system

Editors Rating:

Fuel consumption
Decent fuel economy
Value for price
Can be pricey
Styling
It's a van
Comfort
Smooth ride, lots of room
Performance
Plenty of Honda power
overall
A good family hauler

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