RobbJK
Senior Member
- First Name
- Robb
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2020
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 192
- Reaction score
- 278
- Location
- Columbus, OH
- Car(s)
- 2019 Honda Civic EX Coupe
It's also worth comparing possible competition (not just the Type R) as I tend to be in the camp that Acura will want to keep the ITS under the CTR in terms of outright performance, and thus could result in a similar or lower starting price point. From the reviews I've seen on the CTR it seems less daily driver friendly than the FK8 was being much stiffer and harsher on regular roads. The ITS will be softer, have more features, but still benefit from some of the CTR's performance upgrades.
Just one example would be the Audi A3... the regular A3 starts around $4-5k more than a base Integra. The S3 starts around $45k... using that metric, Acura could aim to shave that $5k-ish markup from the Integra to make it competitive. Either a detuned CTR 2.0T or the related TLX 2.0T coming in around 272-285hp and making the price of entry $39,990 (about $43k after taxes and destination and such) brings it well under the competition Acura claims it goes against. Keeps it under the CTR in terms of outright performance, but would still offer a relatively competitive vehicle for the segment.
The thing that *might* work in the ITS favor is keeping the curb weight lower than the german rivals to make the most out of the lower HP numbers. But given that the regular Integra, despite having a class competitive 200hp, has a tested 0-60 behind many of those german cars claiming to make around the same power (while being heavier too) tells me Acura doesn't really care that much about outright quickness and will prefer a well balanced car that again blends the best aspects of handling, adequate power, while being a leader in price, practicality for daily use, and features per dollar.
But at the same time, I could see them going all in balls to the wall CTR copy and this being a $47k car (which would put it OVER the starting prices of some of its competition... which in terms of how Acura is marketing the Integra as a whole, seems unlikely, and they'll care more about undercutting competition than competing with the CTR.
Just one example would be the Audi A3... the regular A3 starts around $4-5k more than a base Integra. The S3 starts around $45k... using that metric, Acura could aim to shave that $5k-ish markup from the Integra to make it competitive. Either a detuned CTR 2.0T or the related TLX 2.0T coming in around 272-285hp and making the price of entry $39,990 (about $43k after taxes and destination and such) brings it well under the competition Acura claims it goes against. Keeps it under the CTR in terms of outright performance, but would still offer a relatively competitive vehicle for the segment.
The thing that *might* work in the ITS favor is keeping the curb weight lower than the german rivals to make the most out of the lower HP numbers. But given that the regular Integra, despite having a class competitive 200hp, has a tested 0-60 behind many of those german cars claiming to make around the same power (while being heavier too) tells me Acura doesn't really care that much about outright quickness and will prefer a well balanced car that again blends the best aspects of handling, adequate power, while being a leader in price, practicality for daily use, and features per dollar.
But at the same time, I could see them going all in balls to the wall CTR copy and this being a $47k car (which would put it OVER the starting prices of some of its competition... which in terms of how Acura is marketing the Integra as a whole, seems unlikely, and they'll care more about undercutting competition than competing with the CTR.
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