I took a trip this weekend from Los Angeles to Las Vegas in what must have been the hottest weather I've seen in the USA. The temperature peaked at 116°F when I was crossing the Mojave Desert both times, and never went below 95 degrees during any other part of the 640-mile round trip. I was driving with 100lbs+ of luggage and 550lbs of people (including myself).
The A/C struggled to provide barely-adequate cooling and took such a load out of the engine that city driving became an exercise in not pissing off my passengers. The power delivery became extremely rough at all revs, especially when starting off from a stop. At stoplights, every time the A/C compressor turned on, the engine idle dropped to 500-650RPM. I ended up keeping my foot on the gas at stoplights, around 2000RPM, in fear of the car shutting off.
Furthermore, with the approximately 650lbs load, the F22A4 was simply not up to the task of city stop/go driving. Every run up to 40mph required keeping the revs up; any upshift that put the revs below 2300 left the car bogging with little acceleration. I have never felt this car so grossly underpowered since I took it on a family vacation to high-altitude Oregon a year ago.
On the highway, everything was blissful despite the heat. The A/C doesn't drag too much out of the engine, and I could cruise at 80mph all day long without a hint of fatigue. The A/C only had difficulty crossing the Mojave Desert, where the cooling became next to nil; I noticed this because my rowdy passengers suddenly fell asleep (from the heat) during that 22-mile stretch.
Long story short, I have honestly never felt the age of my Accord this intensely until this trip. Sure, the balljoints squeak and the structure feels a little flexy over bumps, but this was entirely different. Upon returning to 85°F Los Angeles, the A/C immediately went back to ice-cold operation, power delivery returned to relative smoothness, and sluggishness off the line became more than manageable. The heat must have seriously pulled a number on the car.
I feel like I'm ranting, so I'll post a concluding question for discussion. For those of you who have owned your Accords for a long time, how have the added years affected your cars adversely? I was very happy to get through the desert after seeing so many newer and modern cars overheated on the side of the road, but the old girl just doesn't feel the same as she did 30,000 miles ago.
The A/C struggled to provide barely-adequate cooling and took such a load out of the engine that city driving became an exercise in not pissing off my passengers. The power delivery became extremely rough at all revs, especially when starting off from a stop. At stoplights, every time the A/C compressor turned on, the engine idle dropped to 500-650RPM. I ended up keeping my foot on the gas at stoplights, around 2000RPM, in fear of the car shutting off.
Furthermore, with the approximately 650lbs load, the F22A4 was simply not up to the task of city stop/go driving. Every run up to 40mph required keeping the revs up; any upshift that put the revs below 2300 left the car bogging with little acceleration. I have never felt this car so grossly underpowered since I took it on a family vacation to high-altitude Oregon a year ago.
On the highway, everything was blissful despite the heat. The A/C doesn't drag too much out of the engine, and I could cruise at 80mph all day long without a hint of fatigue. The A/C only had difficulty crossing the Mojave Desert, where the cooling became next to nil; I noticed this because my rowdy passengers suddenly fell asleep (from the heat) during that 22-mile stretch.
Long story short, I have honestly never felt the age of my Accord this intensely until this trip. Sure, the balljoints squeak and the structure feels a little flexy over bumps, but this was entirely different. Upon returning to 85°F Los Angeles, the A/C immediately went back to ice-cold operation, power delivery returned to relative smoothness, and sluggishness off the line became more than manageable. The heat must have seriously pulled a number on the car.
I feel like I'm ranting, so I'll post a concluding question for discussion. For those of you who have owned your Accords for a long time, how have the added years affected your cars adversely? I was very happy to get through the desert after seeing so many newer and modern cars overheated on the side of the road, but the old girl just doesn't feel the same as she did 30,000 miles ago.
Comment