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The N360/N600 torque converter was about 5.5in. long and achieved a torque multiplication of over 2.2 to 1. The first Civic was equipped with a manually changed hydraulically engaged two-speed transmission with a torque converter. This torque converter was nominally about 7in. and achieved a torque multiplication of c2.7 to 1.
*The H5 transmission was redesigned with a stronger case and four shafts versus three in the earlier H5 transmissions. The four shaft H5 transmissions are much more robust and do not exhibit the same failure rate as the three shaft H5. The new design first entered service in the 2005 Acura RL.
The Acura TL Type-S was introduced in 2001 for the 2002 model year. It featured a 3.2 L SOHC VTEC J-series V6 and added 35 hp (26 kW) over the base model for a total 260 hp (194 kW). Further upgrades included 17-inch (430 mm) wheels, firmer seats and suspension. The TL Type-S was introduced once again for the 2007-2008 model years.
The most notable addition during the 2007 revision is the return of the Type-S edition of the TL. The Acura TL Type-S received the Acura RL's 3.5-liter J35A8 V6 tuned to 286 horsepower (213 kW) and 256 lb-ft of torque with either a 5-speed automatic with F1 style paddle shifters or a 6-speed manual transmission.
TL: 1996 2014 4 Mid-size sedan, sold in Japan as the Honda Saber and Inspire from 1996-2003, and also the sedan version of the CL from 1997-2003. CL: 1997 2003 2 Personal luxury coupe, also the coupe version of the TL. EL: 1997 2005 2 Subcompact executive sedan and a rebadged version of the Civic sold only in Canada. RSX: 2002 2006 1
16.5 hp @ 9000 rpm Honda CB150R StreetFire Honda K45 CBR150R: 2014–Present 17 hp @ 10.5000 rpm Honda CBR150R Lokal Indonesia Honda K56: 2015–Present 15.5 hp @ 9000 rpm Honda New Sonic 150R; All New Supra X 150 GTR; Winner 150R Honda GL150: 2013–Present Four-stroke, SOHC 2-valve, Single-Cylinder, Air-cooled. 149.16 9.5 :1 57.30 x 57.80 ECU ...
The longitudinal 2.5L straight-five engine layout and platform remained and was sold as the Acura 2.5 TL. In 1999, these cars were replaced by the second generation TL that was based on the US-spec Accord platform, and largely designed and engineered in the US by Honda R&D Americas, Inc. in Raymond, Ohio. Manufactured in the US, these were ...
Found in the Japanese 1998-2002 Accord Wagon AWD (CL2). It produces 190 PS (140 kW; 187 hp) @ 6,800 rpm & 163 lb⋅ft (221 N⋅m) @ 5,300 rpm and comes with a "blue top". Below is a chart that consists all of the engines in the H Series.