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Originally Posted by tbaleno
Its not over until everyone has their car 
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I got mine today. Whooopeee!
Alabaster Silver with Nav. I like it!
Traveled 60 miles from El Cerrito to Davis to buy the car. Last Thursday I decided that I didn't like the idea of waiting an extra two weeks in January, since the lease on our RAV4-EV ends in less than three weeks. So I started emailing requests for quotes to all the Honda dealers in the area. About 15 requests went out, and then the phone rang and the dealer in Davis had exactly the car I wanted. I gave him my credit card number for a deposit (although it turns out he didn't charge it).
When we looked the car over today it was funny how much more I knew than the salesman - thanks to this forum.

For example, he was explaining to my wife that we had XM radio with the first three months subscription free. Of course he was wrong. I had to explain to HIM that it was only XM ready. After that we didn't waste too much time going over features.
I drove the HCH back home and my wife followed in the Accord. We drove pretty slow because she wanted to stay within sight and because the weather was nasty. Rain, wind, heavy traffic with incredible amounts of spray. I put the CC on 60mph whenever possible. The trip MPG started at about 20 from the 14 miles that were there before. It gradually crept up as I drove and got to 45mpg when I got home. Not too shabby IMO. Lost 1 mpg in the last 2 mile climb up the hill to our house.
The thing that struck me most was how the various indicators of FE were constantly changing. On flat sections of road, at constant speed, there was some regen early in the trip because the SOC was low. As the trip progressed there was less regen. The surprising thing was how much it changed from zero to some assist to some regen with very slight, even imperceptible, changes in terrain or speed. If the road climbed a bit, the ICE would at first remain at the same RPM and instantneous FE, and some assist would appear. If it took more than three bars of assist to maintain speed, the engine would kick into higher revs and the assist would quickly drop. Then, as the terrain leveled, the engine would first keep the same RPMs and I would see some regen kick in. But not more than 3 bars of regen. At that point RPMs would drop back and regen would disappear. Watching the instantaneous FE gauge was even crazier - it sometimes jumps up and down quite radically without any perceptible change in driving conditions. And keep in mind that all this is going on with cruise control which has a very steady "foot on the pedal".
My overall impression is that the IMA is used as the quick way to respond to changes in power demand on the engine, both up and down. The IMA handles those changes as much as possible, and the ICE reacts to changes much more gradually, usually if the change in demand persists for more than a few seconds.
Next chapter - a few hours after we got home I took out the sale documents to look them over, wanting to figure out what I would need for my carpool sticker application. Then came the shock - they had backdated all the documents to show a sale on December 29th 2005. Boy, was I POed!

My whole reason for waiting till now was being shattered. With a 2005 sale I can't get the tax credit. I called the dealership at 8PM and surprisingly they were all still there. After some initial song and dance they agreed to print out new documents with the correct date and FedEx them to me tomorrow. Apparently it was an innocent mistake. The lesson - even in all the excitement of buying a new car, take the time to look carefully at what you're signing.
A corrolary - I've been getting many more calls from dealers eager to sell me HCHs. I get the feeling that demand for these vehicles is collapsing, or rather was never as great as we have been led to believe. Some dealers will still tell you there's a three month wait, but if you call around you can find one TODAY. I know Honda of Hayward will have at least one available for delivery at the end of next week after I call him tomorrow.

It seems to me that the pent up demand due to the initial delivery delays of the HCH had the dealers seeing $$$$. Now that they are being delivered, each sale takes a potential buyer (like me) off the waiting lists of two or three other dealers.