The 2025 MDX Type S also debuts Acura's most powerful sound system ever - a bespoke 31-speaker, 1,760-watt, Bang & Olufsen ...
Like Ford did with its Mustang in 2019, Acura is taking the nameplate of a two-door sports car and slapping it on an electric ...
The GFC Camper Makes Roughing It A Lot Less Rough Upon doing some research, these Astro Tiger GT campers are much loved by ...
FEATURE Battery-powered cars had a banner year in 2024, although investors might not realize that from the headlines pointing ...
That alone would make you think they’d do the same with the RSX nameplate as a possible Acura version of the upcoming Honda Prelude. However, it wasn’t meant to be. Acura has now designated ...
Acura has revealed that its upcoming electric vehicle (EV) will be named the "RSX." This model is based on the Acura Performance EV Concept and will be the first to use Honda's new EV platform.
Acura today announced that the premium performance brand’s next-generation EV will carry the “RSX” nameplate. Based on the Acura Performance EV Concept, the all-new Acura RSX will be the first model ...
The premium performance car will include the ASIMO operating system and Honda's in-house battery platform. It will also be the first vehicle to come off the line at its Ohio EV plant.
The Acura RSX nameplate is making a comeback on a very different vehicle than the Integra-based RSX coupe from the 2000s. This one is an all-electric crossover with a coupe-like profile.
Acura is bringing back another classic model … name. On the heels of the return of the Integra and ZDX names to the brand’s lineup, Honda-owned Acura has announced that its first homegrown electric ...
The reveal of Acura’s new RSX EV prompted Hagerty Media staff to remember the original RSX that was produced from 2001 to 2006. An Integra in all but name, that RSX lived in the long shadow of the ...
Acura is reviving the RSX nameplate, but it won’t be applied to the rear of a high-revving, four-cylinder sports coupe like the previous generation, which was sold here in the States from 2001–2006.