By Gary S. Vasilash
One of the things that Japanese OEMs do that American OEMs tend not to is to recognize when something isn’t working and then moving on.
There isn’t a tendency to say, “Gee, maybe if we add some exterior trim and increase the amount of stitching on the seats people will buy it.”
Rather, the vehicle goes out of production.
Case in point is the Acura ZDX. It lasted from model years 2010 to 2013.
The vehicle design was something of an amalgam of a car and an SUV. It has a fast sloping roofline such that people who were trying to get into the back seat could get a nice bump on the head. And there is a sharp backward-angled cutline for the rear door which helped with the awkwardness.
Acura had made much of the vehicle prior to launch, given that it was something that it hoped would have the success of something like the MDX, which is was then and is now unmistakably an SUV.
But the so-called “Luxury Four-Door Sports Coupe” simply didn’t appeal to anyone, so it went away.
Oddly, Acura has brought back the ZDX moniker for the electric SUV that was officially debuted today at Monterey Car Week.

It will be available with a standard single motor in the entry A-Spec and with a dual motor setup in the sportier Type S. The former will produce an estimated 340 hp, a 325-mile range and a starting price of around $60K. The latter will produce 500 hp, have a 288-mile range and start at some $70K.
On the subject of the “increased styling and packaging freedom EVs offer,” Dave Marek, Acura Executive Creative Director, said, “Embracing that creative liberation, our team was energized designing ZDX, Acura’s new modern expression of performance.”
To be sure, the vehicle is far more fetching than the other vehicle that carried the name.
Which makes one wonder why the previous name was brought back.
Sure, Acura reselected the name “Integra.” But unlike the original ZDX, the Integra was a success in the market.