}} Beginning September 25, 1981, Honda produced a variant of the
Honda Accord badged as the Honda Vigor for Japan only. The first generation Vigor was a higher grade 4-door sedan and 3-door hatchback, with the 1.8 L engine as the only engine available, using Honda's
CVCC-II system. The Vigor was a sportier, faster, "vigorous" Accord with a higher level of equipment over the more sedate Accord. Due to the higher level of luxury-oriented equipment, the Vigor helped "set the stage" for the market to accept a luxury-equipped car from Honda, which appeared in 1985 with the
Honda Legend. The Vigor competed with the
Toyota Cresta and the
Nissan Laurel in Japan. The rear lighting implementation consisted of the license plate installed in the bumper, with a black trim piece between the rear tail lights and the word "Vigor" inscribed. The Accord installed the rear license plate between the rear tail lights. This engine used the
SOHC 3-valve-per-cylinder CVCC-II setup, mated to a 5-speed manual or 4-speed
automatic transmission with a lockup torque converter. Vehicles with a
manual transmission and the CVCC carburetor earned based on Japanese Government emissions tests using ten different modes of scenario standards, and , and at consistently maintained speeds at . Vehicles with PGM-FI earned based on Japanese Government emissions tests using
10 different modes of scenario standards, with , and consistently maintained speeds at . Japanese buyers were liable for a higher annual
road tax over other Honda products with smaller engines. Items that were optional on the Accord, such as cruise control, air conditioning with automatic fan speed control and thermostatically monitored temperature, power windows with driver's one-touch express down, and power steering, were standard on the Vigor. A trip computer that displayed mileage, driving time, and fuel economy, which Honda called in sales brochure literature "Electronic Navigator," was also standard on the Vigor. All Vigors were also equipped with
ELR (Emergency Locking Retractor) seatbelts. One of the optional items on the Vigor was an
Electro Gyrocator, the world's first automatic in-car navigation system. Other items included digital instrumentation, four-wheel
Anti-lock brakes, a choice of stereo systems from
Alpine Electronics,
Clarion, and
Pioneer, alloy wheels (13-inch), and adjustable thigh support on the front passenger seat. As of 1985, the trim levels offered were the MG, ME, and ME-R for the sedan. Earlier trim packages were the VXR, VX, and VL, all using the CVCC-II induction setup. Honda's fuel injection system was offered on the VTL-i and VT-i. The Vigor hatchback was available with the trim packages MX-T and the ME-T until it was replaced by the
Honda Integra 2-door hatchback in 1984. Earlier trim packages for the Vigor hatchback were the TXL, TX, and TU using the carburetor and the TT-i with fuel injection. Vehicles that were fitted with fuel injection no longer used the CVCC system. Some of the standard equipment on the MX-T hatchback and the MG and ME sedans included cruise control, two-position all-wheel auto-leveling suspension, fuel usage computer, AM/FM cassette stereo and two
coaxial loudspeakers, flow-through ventilation, velour interior with split folding rear seats, and a rear cargo cover for the hatchbacks. The higher trim level ME-T hatchback and the ME-R included delayed interior illumination ("theater lighting"), four coaxial speakers with the stereo system, power windows and locks, disc brakes front and rear, and speed-sensitive power steering. The vehicle was the same, but there were some differences in the equipment available between the Accord and the Vigor. Producing a vehicle with two different names allowed Honda to sell the car at different sales channels in Japan; the Vigor was sold at
Honda Verno dealerships, and the Accord was sold at
Honda Clio dealerships. The fully equipped Vigor three-door hatchback offered cargo-carrying flexibility over the first generation
Nissan Leopard coupé, which was not a hatchback, an approach shared with the
first and second generation Toyota Supra. In 1997, Honda reused this approach to add an enhanced version of the mainstay Accord, making a more prestigious model and naming the new car the
Honda Torneo. ==Second generation (CA1-CA2-CA3)==