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Honda is doing a straight 180 on the next S2000, judging by the concept car revealed at the BIMS today. The Honda S2000, a dynamic marvel with that screaming 2.0-litre engine and excellent short-throw 6-speed gearbox, has been due for a new model for some time now, as rivals keep bettering their offerings. The concept uses Honda�s hybrid technology, although our feeling is this would not be the engine of choice when the street car debuts.
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Featuring integrated rear lights, a flowing bodyline and a shape clearly related to the Civic hatch, the S2000 concept seems to have been shortened and its stance widened. There seems to be a lot of flow in the lines, giving the car cleaner, more seamless looks. Interior again, is a Civic relative of some note, peppered with blue background lighting, digital speed readout and utility buttons. And the concept is no longer a roadster; we see space for two baby hobbits at the back. No sign of where the roof goes though, and none of whether said roof is made of canvass or tin either.
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Honda says that the OSM roadster on display at the 2008 British Motor Show is merely a design study, but given that �design study� is frequently a euphemism for �future design language,� we wonder if we�re seeing the next iteration of Honda car styling. Frankly, we hope so, because this is worlds better than what we�ve seen from the automaker of late, from the Accord right on up to the bland and bloated Pilot. The OSM, short for Open Study Model, is a shapely two-seat convertible that we�d be happy to drive today. Well, maybe with headlamps that weren�t lightsaber-sized. Other than that, we love the jaunty look, especially in back, where the taillamps sweep gently from one side of the car to the other. Since it�s a styling exercise, there�s no specific powertrain combination associated with it, but Honda assures us that the car is an indication that lightweight, low-emissions motoring needn�t be boring.
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No kidding, guys. Inside, the cockpit basically evolves the two-tier instrument panel you�ll find in the current Civic into a far more attractive driving environment that we hope to see in road cars sooner than later. While Honda says there�s no plan to create a production sport/econo roadster like this anytime soon, somebody�s obviously thinking about it. Future S2000 replacement, maybe? �Design studies� such as this don�t happen by accident.
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