Acura ILX light on power, driver enthusiasm

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The 2013 Acura ILX is assembled at Honda's Greensburg, Ind., plant. (Honda/MCT)
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More power _ and fun _ is available in the form of the optional, 2.4-liter engine ripped right out of the Honda Civic Si. It gives you 201 horsepower and 170 pound-feet of torque and is paired with a six-speed manual transmission.

Although I wasn't able to sample this power plant in the ILX, I've driven it in the Civic Si, and it's a rev-happy joy-machine. One has to wonder why Acura didn't make it standard equipment on the ILX and skip the smaller engine altogether. After all, an ILX with the Premium package is $30,095, regardless of which of these two engines you choose.

Acura chalks it up to the smaller engine's (minor) advantage in gas mileage. Although that could be the case, it seems like Acura also didn't want the demi-luxury ILX to encroach on the territory of the larger TSX, which has that bigger engine as standard.

Finally, Acura offers the ILX with a hybrid powertrain, again from the Honda Civic. This $3,000 upgrade has 111 horsepower and 127 pound-feet of torque from a 1.5-liter engine and an electric motor. It's paired with a continually variable transmission and is estimated to get 39 mpg in the city and 38 on the highway.

Turning to the metal that's wrapped around these engines, Acura has done a great job of making the ILX safely handsome. Save for similar profiles that feature short trunk lids, you'd be hard pressed to see any resemblance of the lesser Honda in this Acura.

Thankfully, Acura also did away with the imprudent and garish metal grills of some of its other vehicles. Instead, the ILX is fitted with a much smaller chrome strip up front, which ties in well with a sleek and sporty visage that should appeal to a wide variety of buyers.

Inside, Acura has also nicely delineated the ILX from the Civic. The cabin is solidly bolted together and finished with a soft-touch dashboard. The seats are comfortable throughout, though in the rear they seemed to be more supportive than those up front.

The model I tested was the $32,295 ILX Tech, which adds options such as leather seats that are heated in the front, a navigation system with real-time traffic and weather updates, a 10-speaker sound system and a backup camera.

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