One feature we really like on the Odyssey is the well in the cargo area that stores the third seat. When all seating is in use, that well adds seven inches of convenient storage space to the cargo area. That's two more suitcases.
The white-on-black instrumentation is legible and controls are convenient and simple.
Honda has replaced last year's 2.2-liter engine with a new 2.3-liter 16-valve VTEC (variable valve timing and lift electronic control) engine. It's the same engine used in the Honda Accord LX and EX models.
This new engine has eliminated one of our major complaints with the Odyssey-not enough get up and go. Not only has the horsepower been increased from 140 to 150, but torque has improved from 145 pound-feet at 4500 rpm to 152 pound-feet at 4700 rpm.
Odyssey is the only minivan available in 1998 powered by a four-cylinder engine. Toyota replaced its four-cylinder Previa with the new V6-powered Sienna.
Fortunately, Honda's 2.3-liter VTEC happens to be one of the best four-cylinder engines in the world. The 3.0-liter V6, in Mazda's MPV, for example, has an edge of only 5 horsepower over Honda's four-cylinder engine.
Not only is Honda's VTEC engine powerful, it's also fuel efficient, with EPA ratings of 21 mpg in the city and 26 mpg on the highway.
The Odyssey sits closer to the ground than a traditional minivan and, in many ways, it feels more like a car. Lifting a child into a car seat repeatedly tires quickly. Especially if your lifting the child up an extra six inches.
We really liked its car-like doors. The advantages and disadvantages of swing-out car doors versus sliding doors on minivans is an issue that's debated over and over in the auto industry. Advocates of swing-out doors say they are easier to use and less likely to slam onto small fingers. After all, we spend our daily lives opening and closing swinging doors; very little time is spent sliding doors. Advocates of sliding doors say they take up less room in crowded parking lots, making loading and unloading children and cargo easier. We think it's a matter of preference.
Also new for 1998, is the addition of Honda's proven anti-theft system featured in the Accord and Prelude. With this state-of-the-art system, an "Immobilizer" transmits a digitally coded radio signal to the control unit when the driver inserts the encoded ignition key. The car will start if the code is recognized. The fuel injection and ignition systems are disabled if the car has been improperly started. Next Page