Honda Orthia

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Honda Orthia (EL1/EL2/EL3)
Kerb weight
  • 1,220–1,300 kg (2,690–2,866 lb) (Orthia)
  • 1,080–1,190 kg (2,381–2,624 lb) (Partner)
Chronology
Predecessor
Successor

The Honda Orthia (Japanese: ホンダ・オルティア, Honda Orutia) is a

Artemis Orthia in Greek mythology.[1][2]

The Orthia is available with either

inline-four or 1,972 cc B20B
DOHC inline-four engines.

The following models were available at launch (with a choice of P (Primo) or V (Verno) equipment grades):

In January 1998, an additional model, the 2.0GX-S Aero, was introduced.

A facelift in June 1999 saw only the 2.0 L engine option available and the models were B, M, S (available in automatic transmission option only), M4 and L4 (available in automatic transmission option only); the last two being the four-wheel drive versions. The production of Orthia stopped in January 2002 while its sibling, the Partner, continued until March 2006. The Orthia was replaced by the Airwave station wagon and Stream minivan.[3]

Honda Partner (EY6/EY7/EY8/EY9; 1996–2006)

A

Low Emission Vehicle. Anti-lock braking system was installed in January 1998 and the vehicle was brought into year 2000 emissions compliance along with a driver-side airbag
as standard equipment.

  • 1996 Honda Partner
    1996 Honda Partner
  • Partner rear view
    Partner rear view

References

  1. ^ "1996 Honda Orthia Wagon – Japanese Classics". Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  2. ^ "Honda Global | January 22, 1998 Upgrades to Orthia and Partner Series". global.honda. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  3. ^ "Honda Global | October 26, 2000 Honda Introduces Sporty & Stylish New %22Stream%22 Minivan". global.honda. Retrieved 2023-03-30.