2016 Acura NSX Dissected: Powertrain, Chassis, and More
Repeatedly rewired in flight, the future NSX sure isn't what it used to be.
Feature
From the April 2015 issue
Acura clearly wants to get this thing right. The original aluminum-intensive 1991 NSX
was a stunner, a sunrise of engineering inspiration that chased away
the darkness in the realm of sports cars and laid bare the multitude of
sins being committed there. For the first time, a large automaker that
took quality seriously had applied itself to a segment rampant with all
manner of pop-riveted, glued-up, hammered-down, and wiggy-wired
silliness. In the presence of the $60,000 NSX, the self-important
air-puffed mediocrities of the eroti-car industry scurried for cover.
It didn’t last. Everybody else got better, with newer and faster cars, while the NSX mainly just got more expensive, chained as it was to the rapidly inflating yen. The final targa-topped NSX went off the line in 2005, and hardly anybody noticed. Since then, Acura has launched, scrubbed, relaunched, rescrubbed, and re-relaunched projects intended to replace it. In the first two tries, the car got as far as a fully styled and drivable prototype, which in NASA parlance is 30 feet above the moon, before Acura aborted.
A
wall-to-wall brake-lamp strip is a styling nod to the original NSX.
The trunk will accept one set of golf clubs, because maybe you're into
that sort of thing.
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But even as NSX version 3.0 made its first glory laps, Acura had already decided to scrap major elements of the design. According to NSX project leader Ted Klaus—notably not a Japanese citizen, for this project is U.S.-based—it was in mid-2012 that “the performance targets were changed.” Meaning upped considerably, to confront an era in which Nissan GT-Rs have more than 500 horsepower and a Dodge Charger can make more than 700. According to Klaus, the transverse, single-cam 3.5 was maxed out trying to make just so-so power, which didn’t give the NSX any room to grow. So it was back to the CAD stations for changes.
The upside of the engine swap is more power; the downsides are huge increases in cost and complexity, plus a decentralizing of the powertrain mass.
The car’s styling has also morphed, the changes including another radiator opening up front and much larger corner and side ducts, plus a couple of hood vents, all to service 10 separate cooling circuits with airflow. Undoubtedly, curb weight is up as well, probably to around 3700 pounds, though the final figure is still guarded.
The low-slung V-6 is just barely visible under the rear glass and weird mesh thingy.
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The new space-frame structure, joined by self-piercing rivets, flow-drill screws, welding, and lots of adhesive, is described as aluminum-intensive. That means there’s also high-strength steel in the superthin A-pillars (another point of pride for the NSX team) and a carbon-fiber floor panel. Acura uses a supposedly novel—also undisclosed—aluminum-casting technology for part of the rear subframe, providing ample stiffness with low weight. The hood and doors are aluminum while the fenders are SMC (sheet molding compound, a common form of fiberglass). Buyers have the option of an aluminum or carbon-fiber roof.
The
cockpit feels airy and shoved forward like the old car's. Slivers of
metal trim grace the high tunnel, which houses the power electronics,
supplying a suitably modern, android look. And now for what really
matters: The cup holders ride in the glove box until snapped into place
in the console.
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In principle, the NSX operates like a Porsche 918 Spyder, able to drive electrically or on engine torque alone, though the first mode is mainly a gimmick. One big electric motor located at the front of the transaxle can power the car up to 50 mph for a few miles in a quiet mode. The lithium-ion battery pack behind the seats is too small to supply more. On the front axle, the “Twin Motor Unit” drives each wheel separately through planetary gearsets that allow the motors to provide torque-vectoring capability in concert with the brakes at the rear. Four driver-selectable modes—quiet, sport, sport-plus, and track—progressively ratchet up the car’s aggression level.
Lots of money and effort was flushed in the pursuit of what Klaus calls “a human-centered supercar,” but the end result, designed and built in Marysville, Ohio, will be a technical thunderclap destined to reach customers before the end of the year. This latest iteration, let’s call it version 3.5, shows who won the marketing struggle over where to drop the marker: the guys originally proposing the Amex Centurion NSX. The ’16 NSX will
Will Acura be able to put enough of these assuredly fabulous NSXs on the road to in any way help the brand’s sleepy image? That may be the next big challenge.
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Specifications | |
Vehicle Type | mid-engine, twin-front- and mid-motor, 4-wheel-drive, 2-passenger, 2-door coupe |
Base Price | $150,000* |
Engine Type | twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve 3.5-liter V-6 |
Motor Type |
F: two permanent-magnet synchronous AC R: permanent-magnet synchronous AC |
Total System Power | 560 hp* |
Transmissions |
F: 1-speed direct drive R: 9-speed dual-clutch automatic with manual shifting mode |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 103.5 inches |
Length | 176.0 inches |
Width | 76.4 inches |
Height | 47.8 inches |
Curb Weight | 3700 lb* |
Performance* | |
0–60 mph | 2.7 sec |
0–100 mph | 6.4 sec |
Standing 1/4-Mile | 10.8 sec |
Top Speed | 190 mph |
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