Last week’s tale began with two drivers in our household and ended sixteen years later with two drivers. Between that time there was a lot of activity around here, which included periods of three, four or five drivers. Which required (say it with me) more cars!
We did not hold out long after our eldest got his driver’s license. On the second try. But that is another story that involved a deceptively placed (he said) sign. We have never been the parents who wanted to provide each kid with a car as soon as possible. I had bought every car I ever owned, and Marianne’s father had been in the car repair business, so it was convenient for him. I figured that we could make do for awhile on the fleet as it was, with a kid asking to use a car from time to time. But there was an important factor that changed my thinking – Catholic School.
Our kids attended Catholic grade schools and then began Catholic high school. This is relevant because there are none of those big yellow buses that public school parents use to keep their personal fleets down to a minimum. It was up to us to get our kids to school and back home again and we eventually settled on a system. I dropped the kids off in the morning on the way to work and Marianne picked them up in the afternoons. When the eldest hit high school that became two schools that each of us needed to hit – twice daily. If another car could save us from that time-suck, well then, we would just need another car.
The ’93 Crown Victoria, it was decided, would be a fine car for kid duty. Each of the kids learned to drive on it and it was old enough and cheap enough for decent insurance rates. Plus, there was the benefit that with so few eggplant-colored CVs on the road, there would be little doubt whose car it was if someone we knew spotted some teenaged mischief in one.
But with that issue nailed down, I was once again in one of my favorite places: Needing to find another car. Of course, most normal people would have gone out and bought another new car. But you know by now that I am not most normal people. I have always liked new cars, but anyone with a decent job and a halfway decent credit score can buy a new car – one that is just like every other new car of its kind. Not just anyone can pick a gem from the (cess)pool that is the vast universe of used cars. I have never been in the demographic that can afford truly special new cars. But the next best thing is to find a car that is special for being a really well preserved specimen that is near the bottom of its depreciation curve. So buying another new car would just be a waste of my superpower.
The last time I was in this spot I looked in the newspaper and ended up with a ’68 Chrysler. But time had moved on and the newspaper was no longer where people advertised their cars. It was the spring of 2009 and we were in the heyday of the List of Craig, so that was where I went. In the past I had meandered around with no particular idea of what I wanted, but this time was different – I knew exactly what I was looking for, and it was one of two specific things, with no preference between them.
One option was a Lincoln Town Car. One of these was, essentially, my ’93 Crown Vic with a longer wheelbase, leather and Lincoln emblems all around me. I was very familiar with these and there were lots of them that had been owned by careful, elderly owners – the kinds of people who had preserved so many of my previous rides before I got to them. The alternative was a Miata. These hit the other end of my bipolar automotive spectrum and were equally attractive to me. Why? Because one would be great fun, that’s why. I figured that with a Crown Vic and a Honda Fit in the fleet, I could get by with a zippy little two-seater for my daily use. I spent a few days keeping up with new ads hitting the local listings, scrolling through endless Grand Ams, Tauri and Chevy pickups as I kept my eyes peeled for one of my choices. Then came the day when I saw the ad for . . . . a 1996 Honda Odyssey?
I had remembered these when they were first out. Why, I wondered then, would anyone pay a premium price for a minivan that was 1) too small and 2) badly underpowered? Yes, Hondas were really popular, but one of these stickered for what a new Club Wagon had cost – around $24k for the mid-line model and about $30k for the high end. Being the cars-by-the-pound guy I am, I found these just short of ridiculous. The sales figures said that I was not alone. But now? I was intrigued.
This Odyssey fit the same pattern as all of my best used cars. It’s owner lived in a very nice neighborhood, which indicated someone who could afford to give a car proper care. The owner was a guy in his early 60’s who had bought it used and owned it for several years. He was selling it because he just bought – an older Town Car, just like the one I wanted. The Odyssey was really clean and straight and drove perfectly (if slowly). The problem? It had a touch over 200k miles on it.
This was a new threshold for me. When I had bought my first car in 1977, something with 100k miles was generally considered to be one repair away from the scrapyard. But by this time, I had lived long enough to break the 100k barrier several times and consider it normal. But 200k? Then again, this was a Honda. One of the good Hondas from the mid 1990’s. Other than the reading on the odometer, there was nothing about this car that looked or felt like it had over 80k on it. I took a breath, talked to Marianne, and then reached an agreement on the price (I think it was a little over $2k) and bought the car.
This car suffered from the one feature I had never loved about our ’88 Accord. Honda’s four cylinder powerplant was a real honey, but that 4 speed automatic was a terrible hindrance, and the thing had not been all that fast. Now, with the Odyssey, add a bunch of weight. But in the intervening years, a funny thing happened – where once I would have been grumbling about how miserably slow this Oddity was, I reached a zen-like state of acceptance. “Drive the car the way it wants to be driven” came the little voice from inside me, “not the way you want to drive it.” That was all it took for me to fall in love.
I loved the height. I loved the room. I loved the flip-down rear seat that made conversion from people to stuff so painless, unlike a certain large van in my recent past. The a/c worked (front and rear), the power windows worked, the CD player worked and the smooth Honda four never used a drop of oil. I came to regard this car as the modern equivalent of those Fluid Drive DeSotos of the early fifties, with their underpowered but stout flathead sixes. Just like those, this Honda was slow and not the least bit stylish, but made up for it by being designed and built to last seemingly forever.
I have always had an odd fascination with windshield wipers. The opposing wiper design was really cool, with an odd articulation device on the passenger side that provided entertainment during every rain. In general, the little Odyssey was a great answer for full-family errands, though I noticed some wheel bearing grumble from the rear when it got really loaded up.
I knew that a timing belt was a crucial service item on these, and I had been told by the seller that it was nearing time to replace it again. After two or three months of driving I decided that the car was a keeper so I popped for the wonderful Honda timing belt service, which included a water pump and some other things while the tech was working in that area. With those mechanical refreshments, my goal for the 200k Odyssey became 300k miles. I had gotten onto an Odyssey forum and, without exception, these people loved their Gen1 Oddys. 300k miles was a number that seemed quite reachable, given the experiences being posted on the discussion boards. And I was looking forward to that milestone.
Because my Odyssey shared a garage with a Gen1 Honda Fit, I noticed something intriguing. The Fit, a design that debuted as a 2002 model elsewhere in the world, looked like an early Odyssey cut down to 3/5 scale. The visual similarities were uncanny, from the sloping nose and the little fixed window up front to the general shape of the greenhouse design towards the rear. There was, of course, little similarity in their driving manners, but they were plainly related to one another and it was fun to drive the same thing in two sizes and personalities.
The Oddy was in fabulous condition, especially for its age and miles. The interior showed virtually no wear at all. I wasn’t crazy about the odd (lack of) color that was some combination of silver and beige (sleige?). The unexpected benefit from the color is that it never needed washing because it never showed dirt. Probably because it was the same color as the dirt. As I think back, I am not sure if I ever washed the thing while I owned it. I think this also may have been the first Honda that almost totally vanquished Honda’s perennial foe – body rust. Even in my climate, almost every old Odyssey looked as rust-free as this one.
The only thing wrong with this particular Oddity was that there had been a small dent in the lower part of the left rear door that someone had done an amateurish job of hammering out from the inside. Someone (presumably that person) added a series of thin black tape stripes to the lower body that did a pretty good job of disguising the imperfection. The only problem with those tape stripes is that every time I looked at my Odyssey, I saw a the stipes of a mid-90’s Oldsmobile Silhouette. This association irritated me and I eventually pulled the tape stripes off.
The end of our automotive Odyssey came one evening in February of 2010 when Marianne and I ran out for some errands. After filling up with gas at our nearby Costco we headed for home. Our neighborhood is south of a four-lane highway with a 50 mph speed limit. Most everywhere we go is north of that highway, and there is a traffic light there that we have experienced literally hundreds, if not thousands of times. Maybe 3% of those times we catch that light at a green for our street and red for the highway. It always feels a little like winning the lottery, given how many hours we have sat stopped at that intersection.
That evening we approached the intersection and I was excited that we were going to make the light on a green. I was driving about 35 mph, or maybe a bit more. An oncoming car made a left turn in front of me, but I was far enough away that it wasn’t an issue. Then the pickup truck behind that car made the same left turn. It was not an immediate threat, but was close enough to me that I backed off the gas. Then came the problem – an older lady in a red Honda Accord was following that pickup. She must have figured the way was clear, but she couldn’t see me and I couldn’t see her. Until we we saw each other heading for the same piece of road. I stood on the brakes and steered right, but there was no avoiding some Honda-to-Honda contact. Fifteen years earlier I had experienced this in my ’83 Colt and felt the 3-point belts give me a bear hug. This time I got to experience the sensation of air bags going off a split second after I heard the loud “BANG” from the impact. At first I was afraid something was on fire, but it turned out to be the byproducts of the exploding air bags.
I knew right away that the Odyssey was toast. It had always been the color of toast, but now it was as useful for driving as a piece of toast. Over the next few days I was right back to where I had been when the Colt got totaled. The Odyssey was a car that I had become really attached to and that I expected to drive for quite awhile, and now it was gone after a mere 11 months. Also like with the Colt, I had to fight the other driver’s insurer. The accident was clearly the other driver’s fault. “No, I don’t want a compact car as my rental. Your insured wrecked a minivan, and I want a minivan.” I got my minivan. In keeping with the toast theme, this was my first experience with a new toaster-style Town & Country. The bigger problem came settling on a price for my wrecked Odyssey. The insurer wanted to pay for an average, high mile Odyssey. My Odyssey wasn’t average, but was far, far nicer. This time it took hiring an appraiser to negotiate value with an insurer I will not name but which I would not use if I could buy their policy for $3 a year.
By now I had learned a thing or two about buying older used cars. You never find an exceptional older car (the only kind that interests me) by looking for one. You only find them by the stumble-upon method. I checked every source I could find for an Oddy like mine. A Honda dealer a county away had one. We drove there and looked at it. I had no idea what the smell was on the inside of that car, but my long-deceased mentor Howard Shideler’s words came ringing back to me – “If something is wrong and it was easy to fix, the dealer would have fixed it.” Another candidate was at a small car dealer on the near south side of Indianapolis. The thing was in terrible shape, only soldiering on because of the innate goodness Honda had baked into them. I had never bought a used car in an alley and my new rule said never buy a used car from a little lot in a crummy part of the city.
I had given it my best shot, but I knew I could not wheedle much more rental car time out of the insurance company. I also knew that I was going to have to get something that was not a first generation Odyssey.
This is another vehicle that I will still occasionally see. Every time I see one I get some serious pangs of “I really want that.” But every time I see one, it is either not for sale or when I have no use for another car and cannot justify dumping what I have. The last time was about a month or so ago – a really clean white (of course) 1995 with 155k on it where the owner was asking $4,400. At this stage I had now owned three Hondas. Every single one of them had been an A+ car. (OK, maybe the Fit is just a regular A.) Each had minor faults, but most of those were more about lacking what I really want in a car and not about the car itself. “It’s not you, it’s me.” Maybe I have matured (I hope so) but I had reached the point where I understood that relationships are a two-way street. Each of my Hondas was willing to meet me more than halfway and I reciprocated by showing the love, support and loyalty that the cars deserved.
It is true – my cars are still a relationship thing for me. And as we get older, we get more and more comfortable in a long, solid, stable relationship. Marianne and I will be married 33 years this May and I expect that we will be married until one of us reaches the goal line of life. I don’t expect a car to last me that long (at least not yet, ask me in another 15 years) but once settled in I become a happy and supportive partner. I would have been a happy and supportive partner to that Odyssey for a long time, but its premature death made that impossible. Which meant that I was back into the car-dating pool. And quite unwillingly.
Road grime grey is the best colour for cars it never needs washing my C5 is this colour.
Very true – it never looks good, but then again, it never looks bad.
Silver and gold colored cars don’t show dirt either. They also tend to disappear into the surroundings unlike the yellow and lime green cars I see from time to time.
I too have had a car that was gone before I wanted to get rid of it. Hurricane Ian took care of that for me.
Nice read! I understand the “pain” of losing a good vehicle due to a so-called accident. My son’s ’08 Civic was totaled by a deer jumping on….and off his hood last Spring. Curiously the replacement became a ’15 Honda Fit. 🙂
Hondas can grow on you; maybe never really FUN TO DRIVE like a Miata, but overall very competent vehicles that pa$$ gas stations! Of course, when manuals were available, there was some “hint” of driving fun”!!! 🙂
Your next vehicle, way down there in the almost southern part of Inndeeeannurr??? DFO
I would call this one the antithesis of fun to drive, but it was so competent and well thought-out that it was pleasing to drive in an anti-fun kind of way.
As for the next vehicle, you will just have to tune in next week. 🙂
What a sad ending. Thankfully you and Marianne were unhurt.
Driving a car the way it wants to be driven is good advice; perhaps having done such at earlier times in life may have tempered my sharp opinions about some drivelines and minimized my scorn.
In regard to the Odyssey, isn’t it amazing what one can find when not looking for it?
Actually, I did end up with a shoulder injury in that one. It is amazing how much you use your shoulders – something I noticed when using it hurt. It was resolved after a few months, thankfully.
“isn’t it amazing what one can find when not looking for it” – truer words were never spoken.
I always liked these first gen Odysseys too. Sorry about losing yours so soon, that thing looked amazing for the age and miles.
“that thing looked amazing for the age and miles.”
I know, right? Sometimes pictures make a tired car look better than it is in real life. This one was every bit as nice in real life as it shows in the photos. Without a 6-digit odometer, nobody would have ever guessed the number of miles on that thing (including me).
Early morning reads of good writing is always a pleasure that puts a smile on my face.
” So buying another new car would just be a waste of my superpower.”
Being able to find a good used car is a skill I sadly lack. Plus, even if I find one, then there’s the actual cash/check trusting exchange stuff, the DMV lines, licensing, and inspection stuff, and then the realization that I missed a number of obvious faults and needed repairs. I do not have that super power!
“One option was a Lincoln Town Car … The alternative was a Miata.”
More smiles; I like the way you think – keeping your options open. And ending up with a minivan was the icing on the search algorithm’s result.
” … I reached a zen-like state of acceptance. ‘Drive the car the way it wants to be driven’ came the little voice from inside me…”
Ah-ha! I no longer have to think that I drive like an old man (even if that is accurate), instead, I have reached a very cool zen-like state of acceptance.
Works for me.
Sorry about the lost Odyssey; glad no one was hurt.
Thank you for that compliment up top.
I think finding a good used car gets harder and harder, as the cars become more complex and expensive and the cost of making a bad choice has skyrocketed. Or maybe my superpower is fading with age.
200K miles and it still looked that good…I wonder how it racked up all of those miles.
I say this as there was a time when just about everyone I knew had one of these. They were ALL this color (I can’t readily recall that I’ve ever seen an Oddy in something other than silver, and I’ve seen a lot of Odysseys). And after being in heavy duty child and dog transport duty, none of them looked that good after only about a 10th of the miles yours had when you got it. Most of those were 2nd generation Odysseys, but that’s because they were bought new when my cohort’s kids were that minivan age…about 2005. There were days back then when the pick up line at any given elementary school in the area looked like the Odyssey production line at the Honda factory. And I will say that pretty much all of the owners loved those vehicles.
I will say that I knew very few people who had the misfortune of crash testing one…glad you and yours came out well and the Oddy did its job.
It is true – the popularity of the Odyssey exploded after the 1999 design that finally seemed to crack the code that had made Chrysler so successful.
I am one of the few who was never a fan of that 2nd generation (1999-2005). First, the structure was terribly flexible, where the original was quite taut. Second was the transmission debacle. The only real fix seemed to be a factory reman unit – rebuilding them locally seemed to give poor results. We had a client that did major mechanical work and they quit doing rebuilds on those transmissions because they kept failing and coming back. The 2nd gen has almost completely disappeared from the road.
These original versions (1995-98) have developed an almost cult-like following. And yes, I am a member of that cult. 🙂
Yep. They loved those 2nd generation Odysseys, but most had bad transmissions and if I recall correctly something constantly wrong with the rear brakes (and wheel bearings?). I guess that answers the question of where did all of those vans go, since for the gazillions of them that were on the roads around here, they’ve all seemingly vanished.
A sad ending. I always liked the look of the first-gen Odyssey and wished I could have found one at a price I was willing to pay when I was minivan hunting in that era.
I did have luck once replacing a totaled car with one of the same year, make, and model. But given that the car was only six years old at the time, that was a much easier thing to accomplish.
The biggest problem with finding another was that they had sold so poorly when they were new. Had I started with a more popular car I might have had better luck. But then again, having a popular car is not something I have a lot of experience with. 🙂
They sold better out here. Eugene was full of them back in the day, and they’re still not an uncommon sight. But the numbers are dwindling pretty quickly.
This gen Odyssey was perfect for Europe and Japan, in terms of its format, but obviously was too small for most Americans. But it did find an enthusiastic and loyal following, obviously.
This could very easily have been a Niedermeyer-mobile. It checks all the key boxes.
I think the main problem here in the midwest was that by 1995, most minivans that sold in decent numbers had moved to V6 power. This and the Previa had the same problem out here, which was that they were both underpowered and expensive. The competition from Ford, GM and (especially) Chrysler got the buyer a lot more bang for the buck in size and power – especially for the typical owner who would keep the thing for 4 or 5 years then trade for a new one.
This style of Odyssey remained in production in Japan for years after these left our shores. I had hoped that when gas got expensive in the late 00’s that Honda might try to bring the JDM Odyssey back over here. But the cost of Federalizing them for U.S. sale was probably too high for the expected sales volume.
I always liked these. Functionally, they are something between a contemporary Accord wagon and a minivan. I guess they would be more-accurately described as MPVs. You’re right that they really taxed buyers’ loyalty toward Honda. They were much more well-built than the domestic minivans, but for that, you gave up a lot of space and power. And they still didn’t exactly look stylish to the masses. Not many people were willing to make those trade-offs. The Toyota Previa was similarly afflicted.
I also feel your pain about totaling a car you wanted to keep. I very recently had a car totaled that I expected to keep for a long while, and that I only had for four months. It was a well-sorted example of an especially trouble-prone British vehicle (having had a brand-new engine installed)…and I was really sorry to see it go.
Lastly, I really need to start writing more COALs. There have been ten or eleven cars I’ve had since my last COAL (the 2015 Grand Cherokee Overland), including when I went on a buying spree and bought four brand-new cars in 2021.
I agree with your take on these – with a little different shaping of the body this could have been an early crossover. These also reminded me a bit of the Mazda MPV, which was another unique vehicle here.
Oh my yes, more of your stories would be great! Buying four new cars in a year is something I would definitely want to read about. 🙂
Yeah, the first-gen Odyssey was a proto-crossover; that’s exactly it! DaimlerChrysler would turn around and make two similar vehicles several years later, the (original) Chrysler Pacifica and the Mercedes-Benz R-Class…which, contrary to popular belief, were *not* on the same platform.
My Wisconsin sister-in-law had one of these and trust me, it did rust. At least by my West Coast standards it looked pretty perforated after fifteen years. She lives in a rural area on an unpaved road and maybe gravel dings are enough to get rust started. And though she has several outbuildings as tool sheds, root cellar and sauna she has no garage. I only visited once in winter but it seems like a tough place on cars.
By the way, it took me a few days after your previous Honda COAL to wonder if you have ever thought of adding a JDM Jazz badge to your Fit. Knowing your taste in music …
Cars really do rust in Wisconsin, it’s a lot farther north from me.
I had never thought about the Japanese nameplate. But the Fit version with the blue dot over the “i” is cool, though.
In an homage to my T-boned ’07 Fit, I replaced the (IMO) horrid new “FIT” on my ’12 with the earlier upper/lowercase style w/ blue dot, also adding a “Sport” emblem beneath it. 🙂
Yes when these came out several of my co-workers bought them new, which was rather mystifying to me. Nice that you had a good experience right up until you didn’t!
I feel sad that the window has closed on certain vehicles as well, good Jeep XJ Cherokees and Honda Elements are now unobtainable
Odyssey would not have been necessary in Ontario, Catholic schools got full funding starting in 1985!
It seems that the Jeep XJs and Honda Elements never really hit the deep levels of depreciation of most other cars. They were cult cars (for want of a better term) that always had a steady demand. I still occasionally see good ones of each, but they tend to be expensive. And I still harbor a desire for both of them. We actually considered an Element twice, once in 2006 when we bought the Fit and again in 2011 when we drove one of the last new ones available. Once again, it (sadly) wasn’t quite what we needed at the time.
That would be a good CC feature – the cars that never really became ordinary used cars.
This is true. Last month, a family member of mine traded a 200,000-mile, rusty 2007 Honda Element AWD into a dealership and got $7,500 for it.
In the same transaction, she also traded in a trouble-prone 2010 BMW 750Li xDrive and got $5,000 for that.
Fortunately, the car that replaced them both was a 2018 Lexus RX 450h, which will probably outlive her.
You’ve spoken of this van so often that I had been under the impression that you owned it for at least a decade, I had no idea its tenure was so short in your employ, clearly it made a large impression. They are still around here as well, but seen more often in the junkyard nowadays.
A lot of Subarus (especially the base engined ones) are like that Honda in how they like to drive and are perfectly fine, competent and willing companions as long as you acclimate to their pace instead of trying to force yourself on them. That’s probably the secret to a lot of cars that “enthusiasts” deride while millions of people are perfectly happy with them and generally get to their destination pretty much just as quickly and often less stressed…
I only WISH I had owned it for a decade! What is funny is that Marianne never liked it at all. I thought she would love it, because she loved her 88 Accord so much. But she found it dumpy and uninspiring and was not the least bit sad to see it go.
That was fun to read. Thanks!
Out of the 14+ Hondas’ and Acuras’ we’ve had over the years, starting with a ’79 Accord, only one proved problematic and that was after 100k + miles. It was our ’99 Odyssey purchased new. The problem was the tranny which started slipping around 2008. It’s my belief those early renditions of the new- in -’99 redesign had mismatched engines and transmissions. Instead of the 4 banger used until ’99, Honda dropped in a 3 litre 6 perhaps without changing or strengthening the transmission to accommodate the extra torque. Don’t know for sure. That car was trouble free excepting the tranny.
Other than the Odyssey, all Honda products have supported their vaunted reputation.
We just purchased a 2023 CR-V. We’ll see.
It was my understanding that the transmission used in the 99+ Odyssey was a different design. It was not so much a solid unit overcome by too much weight or torque, but a design with some deficiencies including poor lubrication. I will say that from what I knew, Honda stood behind the vehicles and replaced a lot of transmissions for unhappy owners. But I suspect that largesse ended after the vehicles had cycled through a couple of owners. I think I see more 3rd/4th generation Chrysler minivans on the road than I see 2nd generation Odysseys.
These have sort of been at the far extents of my radar, but now having read your account, despite my smouldering-like-an-underground-coalfire hatred of my ’07 Accord, I wish I could buy one of these Odysseys. It’d do just about almost perfectly.
“my smouldering-like-an-underground-coalfire hatred of my ’07 Accord”
Mr. Stern, I have decided that life is simply too short to put up with a car that irritates more than it salves or inspires. There is nothing in life’s rulebook that says many years of driving cars you loved must be paid for by an equal amount of time in cars you hate. 🙂
You’ve certainly got a point there. Problem is, the Accord does its core job very well. One flat battery in ’16 shortly after I bought it, and that replacement battery went flat a couple months ago—those are the only two times it wouldn’t go. I put brakes in it a few years back, and an HVAC mode door motor a couple years ago. Yes, it’s an annoying car, but…!
I’ve always liked these first gen models and thought that they were “right sized” for their mission. In America though, “right sized” just doesn’t work compared “give me more!”. I equate that to restaurants, as many popular chains serve huge portions versus “right sized” meals. We Americans love “more”, and that hurt these first gen models. I’m glad that you had such a great experience, but it sure hurts when a good plan is cut short. Glad that you guys were OK.
I’ve gotten to the point that I can no longer eat huge portion sizes, and vastly prefer restaurants that serve smaller ones.
Absolutely agree. I don’t need help eating too much, and prefer to feel “right sized” on fullness!
One of the numerous eye-opening aspects of Tokyo in 2018, our first-ever trip to Japan, was the restaurant portion sizes. They always looked very small, yet they were always exactly the right amount of food.
Agreed on the proportions – my wife and I have taken to ordering a single entre and splitting it between us. We both walk away filled and with no wastage. It seems large sizes are used as a justification for higher prices.
This Odyssey was one of the few cars I genuinely loved that was not really big or really small.
And I agree on the portion sizes of restaurant meals. A meal out almost always converts to two meals for me, with half eaten when ordered and the other half taken home for consumption the following day or two.
I thoroughly enjoyed this COAL. After my second daughter was born in 2001, we bought a ’98 Odyssey – same color as yours but ours had 2 buckets in the mid-row, not the bench, which in retrospect would have been better for us. Ours was the same Heathermist paint.
Regarding size, I bought it because it was the smallest minivan we could find – my wife was coming from a Toyota Tercel and found all the standard sized minivans too hard to adjust to, but the 1st gen Odyssey was far more manageable. I loved the handling (double wishbone suspension) and the fact we got better MPGs in the city, than most others got on the highway. Ours was the 2.3 litre VTEC, which did wonders for the more sluggish 2.2s on the ’95-97s. This generation had exceptional quality, but problem areas for ours was excess oil consumption and the very common rust around the rear wheel arches from the heavy salt diet in Toronto. Excess wind noise around the door mirrors when the windows were open was another annoyance. Canadian Odysseys did not have the rear, ceiling-mounted AC units either.
We kept ours for 10 years before the arrival of our third child led us to trade it for a 3rd gen Odyssey. Now that the kids are independent, I’d dearly love to have another 1st-gen sized Odyssey. We occasionally see JDM imported subsequent generation Odysseys, but they are RHD.
Definitely a car better bought used than new – the drop off in price at the 3-year mark was uncharacteristically steep for a Honda. One of our best buys ever.
I remember reading on the forums that the 98s were a slightly different animal than the 95-97 vans. The earlier ones were sluggish but really bulletproof, while the 98s brought some changes and extra complexity (I think I also remember electronic shifting for the transmission, too) that made them a tick below the earlier cars in being mostly trouble-free.
I always wanted one of these, or its quite rare badge-engineered cousin, the Isuzu Oasis. With a roof rack, please!