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2005 Honda S2000 Quick Spin
Nuts and Bolts

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» 2nd Opinion – Blackett

 
TO THE POINT What’s New? In 2004, Honda added a bigger engine, upgraded transmission, suspension tweaks, recalibrated electric steering, and improved brake pedal response to the S2000.
Selling Points: Seriously fun to drive; excellent build and materials quality; top is quick to drop and raise.
Deal Breakers: No automatic transmission; rough ride; noisy at all times; little interior storage space.
Our Advice: Always exhilarating but never refreshing, the Honda S2000 is not a car for the faint of heart. Select one only if you love high-revving four-cylinder engines, manual transmissions, stiff suspensions, and a feature load from the everything-you-need-and-nothing-you-don’t school of thought.

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Click to enlarge. 2005 Honda S2000 2.2L inline four Nuts and Bolts A jewel of a motor sits underhood, an engineering marvel making more than 100 horsepower per liter of displacement. Its 240 horsepower and 162 lb.-ft. of torque is charged with motivating just 2,835 pounds.

Under the Honda S2000’s long, low, lovely hood resides a jewel of a motor, an engineering marvel making more than 100 horsepower per liter of displacement. Running on premium unleaded fuel, this 2.2-liter, dual overhead cam, 16-valve engine is equipped with Honda’s Variable Valve-Timing with Lift Electronic Control (VTEC) to maximize power and efficiency at both high and low engine speeds by varying the flow of fuel and air into the cylinders. Its 240 horsepower at 7,800 rpm and 162 lb.-ft. of torque at 6,500 rpm is charged with motivating just 2,835 pounds, giving the S2000 an impressive power-to-weight ratio of 5.4 to 1.

Click to enlarge. 2005 Honda S2000 wheel There is no automatic transmission for the S2000, at any price. Rather, a close-ratio, short-throw, six-speed manual transmission with a torque-sensing rear differential delivers power to the Honda S2000’s back wheels. Electric drive-by-wire rack-and-pinion steering guides the front tires, wrapped around lightweight alloy wheels measuring 17 inches in diameter at each corner. The front rims are seven inches wide while the rears are 8.5 inches thick, wearing Bridgestone Potenza RE 050 tires sized 215/45 up front and 245/40 in back.

Four-wheel-disc, antilock brakes include ventilated front rotors measuring 11.8 inches and solid rear 11.1-inch rotors. The Honda S2000 rides on a double wishbone suspension with front and rear stabilizer bars and coil springs all around. And with a near perfect 49/51 front-to-rear weight distribution, the S2000 is clearly designed for performance and handling.


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