Honda Fit Sport Automatic San Francisco CA

There's the institutional prejudice we harbor when we plant our backsides into any automatic-equipped subcompact. Which is precisely what makes the Honda Fit Sport automatic a pleasant surprise.

Local Companies

Mazda
(415) 241-8100
280 S Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA
Ellis Brooks Chevrolet-Cadillac-Pontiac-Buick-GMC-Saab
(415) 776-2400
Van Ness Avenue & Bu
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Honda
(415) 441-2000
10 S Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Toyota
(415) 750-8300
Geary Bl & 2D Ave
San Francisco, CA
Royal Motor Sales
(415) 241-8100
280 S Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA
Qvale
(415) 776-7785
901 Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA
S & C Ford
(415) 861-6000
2001 Market St
San Francisco, CA
Mercedes Benz of San Francisco
(415) 673-2000
950 Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA
Mercedes-Benz of San Francisco
(415) 673-1700
1480 Folsom St
San Francisco, CA
Royal Motor Sales
(415) 241-8100
1525 Howard St
San Francisco, CA

Provided By:

BY TONY SWAN

This is not widely understood, but we have no conceptual problem with small, basic-transportation cars. Particularly now. For anyone interested in preserving the negotiable contents of one's pockets, small cars make big sense, and the more fuel prices soar, the more sense they make. Beyond that, the penalties we once associated with small cars — noise, spartan accommodations, primitive amenities, motor-scooter power — are essentially gone.

Where we have had reservations regarding small cars is when we encounter one whose limited power resources are further drained by an automatic transmission. Generally speaking, self-shifting plus modest power yields a car whose role in life seems to be getting in the way. And in a country where most drivers don't want to be bothered with — or are perhaps incapable of — manipulating a clutch and shift lever, the majority of the vehicles on our public roads are equipped with automatic transmissions.

So there's this institutional prejudice we harbor when we plant our backsides into any automatic-equipped subcompact. Which is precisely what makes the Honda Fit Sport automatic a pleasant surprise. As subcompact automatics go, it actually goes. Okay, 0 to 60 mph in 10.4 seconds isn't likely to produce brownouts in your peripheral vision. The manual Fit Sport in our May comparo, "$15,000 Cheap Skates," did the same sprint in 8.7 seconds. But it's not bad for cars at this end of the spectrum, it's far more entertaining to operate than competing automatics, and it's well suited to urban driving.

Read more about this make and model

For more Reviews click here