New and Used Car Talk Reviews Hot Cars Comparison Automotive Community

The Largest Car Forum in the Philippines

Results 1 to 13 of 13

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. Join Date
    Dec 2018
    Posts
    39
    #1
    Picking between crv 3rd gen and accent hatchback 2014 up. My budget is around 350-400k and activities are usually long drive. Ano kaya mas okay between the two when it comes to comfort, fuel efficiency, maintenance, and drive?

  2. Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Posts
    1,117
    #2
    comfort-subjective. May iba kasi yung comfort para sakanila is easy ingress/egress, some yung "liit' ng kotse. May iba naman comfort para sakanila yung ride quality, seats and etc. But i'll have to give this sa CRV
    fuel efficiency- accent by a long mile
    maintenance-parang same lang.
    drive-subjective din pero long drive sa accent ako.

  3. Join Date
    May 2019
    Posts
    312
    #3
    If it’s for a long (traffic) drive, I’ll go for the more fuel efficient one.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  4. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,627
    #4
    i have a wigo, and i have innova. they have similar peso costs, when it comes to fuel.
    the innova (much bigger than wigo) is a more comfortable drive. i also feel safer in it, in the expressway.
    but i can squeeze the wigo into spaces built for tricycles.
    "what is my usual drive like?"

  5. Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Posts
    321
    #5
    Quote Originally Posted by trann123 View Post
    Picking between crv 3rd gen and accent hatchback 2014 up. My budget is around 350-400k and activities are usually long drive. Ano kaya mas okay between the two when it comes to comfort, fuel efficiency, maintenance, and drive?
    I owned a CRV gen3, and owns 10 Accent Diesels

    Comfort: Accent... Caveat, HB rear seats are not as comfortable to seat on vs Sedans (back rest angle is steep)
    Fuel efficiency : Accent, best out there
    Maintenance : Accent parts are cheaper
    Drive: Petrol engines are always better, despite the power Accent turbocharged engines gives you

  6. Join Date
    Dec 2019
    Posts
    2
    #6
    I've posted about this issue before on here about the battery/electrical warning light turning on and managed to get it fixed, but now it resurfaced after I secured the connection for the alternator (less than 50,000 km since it got replaced) which I found loose and almost unplugged for some reason, yet the car still ran properly both before and after I redid the connection. I've re-checked the run of the wires from the alternator to the battery and they are secure. I'm thinking of using electrical contact cleaner (like WD 40 Specialist Electrical Contact Cleaner) to see if it's just corrosion or debris since the contacts may have gotten wet in the monsoon rain a few days ago. I'll also be testing if the battery still charges properly. Would this be advisable or should I do something else?

  7. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,627
    #7
    Quote Originally Posted by MasonLogan View Post
    I've posted about this issue before on here about the battery/electrical warning light turning on and managed to get it fixed, but now it resurfaced after I secured the connection for the alternator (less than 50,000 km since it got replaced) which I found loose and almost unplugged for some reason, yet the car still ran properly both before and after I redid the connection. I've re-checked the run of the wires from the alternator to the battery and they are secure. I'm thinking of using electrical contact cleaner (like WD 40 Specialist Electrical Contact Cleaner) to see if it's just corrosion or debris since the contacts may have gotten wet in the monsoon rain a few days ago. I'll also be testing if the battery still charges properly. Would this be advisable or should I do something else?
    alternator contacts? that rotating thing inside?
    i thought they're self-cleaning...

    but go ahead and tell us what happens.
    i could be wrong...

    good luck, po.
    we await follow-up.
    Last edited by dr. d; December 30th, 2019 at 11:10 PM.

  8. Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Posts
    321
    #8
    Quote Originally Posted by MasonLogan View Post
    I've posted about this issue before on here about the battery/electrical warning light turning on and managed to get it fixed, but now it resurfaced after I secured the connection for the alternator (less than 50,000 km since it got replaced) which I found loose and almost unplugged for some reason, yet the car still ran properly both before and after I redid the connection. I've re-checked the run of the wires from the alternator to the battery and they are secure. I'm thinking of using electrical contact cleaner (like WD 40 Specialist Electrical Contact Cleaner) to see if it's just corrosion or debris since the contacts may have gotten wet in the monsoon rain a few days ago. I'll also be testing if the battery still charges properly. Would this be advisable or should I do something else?
    I always have a can of electronic cleaner (all brands, same effect). I've used it in just about anything that uses electricity. Most recently, my park and brake lights won't go off... Sprayed liberally to the under-dash fuse box... Wallah... Problem solved.

    The alternator contact cleaning might work, no harm trying. If it doesn't, maybe it is time to change the carbon sticks.

    Update us please

  9. Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    27,624
    #9
    Quote Originally Posted by MasonLogan View Post
    I've posted about this issue before on here about the battery/electrical warning light turning on and managed to get it fixed, but now it resurfaced after I secured the connection for the alternator (less than 50,000 km since it got replaced) which I found loose and almost unplugged for some reason, yet the car still ran properly both before and after I redid the connection. I've re-checked the run of the wires from the alternator to the battery and they are secure. I'm thinking of using electrical contact cleaner (like WD 40 Specialist Electrical Contact Cleaner) to see if it's just corrosion or debris since the contacts may have gotten wet in the monsoon rain a few days ago. I'll also be testing if the battery still charges properly. Would this be advisable or should I do something else?
    Use that contact cleaner. Refit that connector several times as this will make the metal to metal contact better. Avoid pushing at an angle - she might say ouchy

  10. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,627
    #10
    wala na bang gumagamit ng liha o kikil ngayon, to improve on electrical contacts ?

  11. Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    27,624
    #11
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    wala na bang gumagamit ng liha o kikil ngayon, to improve on electrical contacts ?
    Hindi kasya sa butas ng ilang doc. this will also change the Male female sliding surface. Better to refit 3x-5x

  12. Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Posts
    5,975
    #12
    I have a 1st Gen CRV & a 2014 Accent HB. Practicality wise, CRV wins because it is higher, has more cargo & passenger room, a small table in the boot & easier to maintain with less frequent oil/SP & filter changes.... but upright passenger seats are not very comfortable for long drives, very thirsty engine, creaky body, noisy engine. Ride is also not very stable.
    The Accent sits very low, has excellent fuel efficiency, very powerful engine, good seating comfort in front, very maneuverable, solid body & very quiet engine.... but ride height is very low so the undercarriage & front bumpers have this tendency to scrape onto humps, parking tire stops, dirt mounds which, for me, is the main disadvantage of this.
    If you do frequent long drives, you’d love the very powerful & efficient diesel engine (up to 25/lit hw) & better driveability of the Accent. It has a big boot for it’s class but has it’s limitations.
    The CRV is more suited for city drives like going to the grocery or market, hauling big stuff.... I don’t like using it for long drives, too tiring for me.
    A compromise, for me, is the 2nd Gen Kia Sportage (2004 - 2010) It’s as big as the CRV & has a 2.0 CRDI engine. I still see a lot of these & I think the design is timeless.
    These are just my honest opinions on the matter, based on personal experiences.



    Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    Last edited by bloowolf; December 31st, 2019 at 02:34 PM.

  13. Join Date
    Feb 2020
    Posts
    17
    #13
    Quote Originally Posted by bloowolf View Post
    I have a 1st Gen CRV & a 2014 Accent HB. Practicality wise, CRV wins because it is higher, has more cargo & passenger room, a small table in the boot & easier to maintain with less frequent oil/SP & filter changes.... but upright passenger seats are not very comfortable for long drives, very thirsty engine, creaky body, noisy engine. Ride is also not very stable.
    The Accent sits very low, has excellent fuel efficiency, very powerful engine, good seating comfort in front, very maneuverable, solid body & very quiet engine.... but ride height is very low so the undercarriage & front bumpers have this tendency to scrape onto humps, parking tire stops, dirt mounds which, for me, is the main disadvantage of this.
    If you do frequent long drives, you’d love the very powerful & efficient diesel engine (up to 25/lit hw) & better driveability of the Accent. It has a big boot for it’s class but has it’s limitations.
    The CRV is more suited for city drives like going to the grocery or market, hauling big stuff.... I don’t like using it for long drives, too tiring for me.
    A compromise, for me, is the 2nd Gen Kia Sportage (2004 - 2010) It’s as big as the CRV & has a 2.0 CRDI engine. I still see a lot of these & I think the design is timeless.
    These are just my honest opinions on the matter, based on personal experiences.



    Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    Very helpful, thanks!

Tags for this Thread

CRV 3rd gen or 2014 accent hb?