Accord Hybrid vs. Camry Hybrid
We've already opined that when Honda cooked the Accord Hybrid's ingredients, the oven's performance knob was twisted too high and the fuel-economy dial set too low. With a paltry 16-horsepower electric motor (less than the Civic's), the Accord Hybrid is all about acceleration, its motor-assist here playing the part of an electric nitrous bottle. Sure its mileage is incrementally better than it might otherwise be via engine shut-down at stop and deactivation of the firewall bank's three cylinders while cruising, but don't be fooled by the badge on the trunk. It should read Hyper instead of Hybrid. Why not just bore out the cylinders a millimeter and save the complexity, cost, and weight? Or just engineer it around a more fuel-efficient four-cylinder engine with a bigger electric motor?
That said, the Accord Hybrid is silly fun in a straight line, delivering 60 mph in 6.9 seconds if you crank up the gas and volts. But its athletic reaction to brake application is way more important. "Bless you, Honda brakes," we've whispered more than once after the traffic ahead has unexpectedly jolted to an ABS halt. However, during normal stopping, you can sometimes feel that deceleration momentarily sag as the V-6 engine switches off and the electric motor (generator) takes up the slack. It's also odd that the Accord rides as if its suspenders are cinched a notch to support its battery weight--strange, because the supple-riding Camry outweighs it by 131 pounds.

2005 Honda Accord Hybrid
"That's one helluva car," drivers muttered after climbing out of the Camry Hybrid. And they're right--meaning Toyota may be wrong in scheduling only seven percent of Camry production to be fitted with HSD. Too low, we reckon, particularly given its positioning below the premium 268-horse Avalon-engined XLE and a price that's four grand cheaper than the Honda's (the Accord Hybrid being the model's flagship).

2007 Toyota Camry Hybrid
Two experiences bracket the Camry Hybrid's versatile personality. One was while photographer Brian Vance was returning from the cars' shoot: "I exited the 101 freeway at Highland and drove on electric power alone all the way to the intersection of Sunset and La Brea. That's over a mile at 25 to 35 mph with the engine off." On the other hand, a member of our road-test team sheepishly admitted that, while on his way to our California Speedway test site, he saw 100 mph on the speedo. "Caught in a traffic pincer entering the freeway, I had to nail it," he explained with a shrug. This may be the only car on earth able to satisfy performance junkies and ecoconservatives. It's a uniter, not a divider.