Believe it or not, discussing hybrid drivetrains on a date is not the sure-fire small-talk charmfest you might think it is. It’s actually the conversational equivalent of the-arm-over-the-shoulder move while watching a movie: awkward, cumbersome and immediately regretted 20 seconds later.
But that’s where I found myself, putting the Honda Insight through its paces in the real world, which has no numerical metric. Let’s face it, young people make for finicky car buyers, and it’s not just because the majority of us don’t have any real money yet. If you have to buy a car on a limited income, and you’re, say, a young single male, having a car that speaks to the opposite sex is a bonus. You really don’t want to have to pick up a date in a Toyota Echo (for my money, the least sexually appealing car ever built).
When examining a good, budget-conscious date car, it’s definitely worth taking a look at hybrids like the 2010 Honda Insight.
What struck me most about driving the Insight was that after jockeying all over Chicago for a weekend, I’d barely managed to move the gas gauge. The Insight can accelerate on electric power alone up to 30 mph (50 mph if going downhill).
In a city like Chicago, where traffic rarely allows you to top 35 mph, this is a good deal. With gas well under $3, the savings won’t put a dent in a night out, either.