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Few rivalries better highlight the crossroads of modern performance philosophy than the Tesla Model 3 Performance Mk1 and the Honda Civic Type R FL5. On paper, the Tesla’s 480 PS and instant electric torque suggest brute force, while the FL5, with its 315 PS turbocharged K20C1 and featherweight chassis, stands for the relentless pursuit of FWD precision. But the stopwatch never tells the whole story. What unfolds on track is a nuanced battle of engineering ethos—one car leveraging digital muscle and all-wheel drive, the other relying on analog feedback and chassis mastery.

At power circuits with long straights, the Model 3 Performance’s electric punch is hard to deny. Its dual motors deliver seamless, relentless thrust, making even heavyweight status (4072 lbs) an afterthought on corner exit. At Circuit of the Americas, the Tesla, prepped with race rubber and piloted by Dai Yoshihara, stops the clocks at 2:23.8, a massive 13.7 seconds clear of a Type R FL5 driven by a novice on 200-treadwear tires. The advantage here isn’t just raw acceleration; it’s the AWD’s ability to deploy torque with ruthless efficiency, letting the Tesla slingshot out of tight bends and erase mistakes with a simple squeeze of the right pedal. For less experienced drivers, or tracks where traction and response rule, the Model 3’s electronics flatten the learning curve and protect the bold.

Yet, the FL5’s magic emerges when the stopwatch narrows and the corners multiply. Honda’s latest Type R is a study in front-drive composure and feedback. The steering rack is laser-sharp, the limited-slip diff claws for grip, and the chassis begs to be rotated on the brakes—a dynamic completely foreign to the Model 3’s digital stability. This pays dividends at a circuit like Spa-Francorchamps, where the FL5 clocks a 2:52.04 on A052s, 9.7 seconds ahead of a stock-tire Model 3. Here, the Civic’s lighter mass and confidence under sustained lateral load allow it to carry more speed through high-speed transitions, exploiting every inch of available grip in a way the Tesla’s weight and software limitations can’t quite match as the lap unfolds and thermal management becomes a factor.

On more technical American layouts, the pendulum swings back and forth. At Laguna Seca, the Model 3’s medium-prepped build and sticky 200-treadwear Nankangs result in a 1:37.3, just edging the FL5’s 1:38.06 on Cup 2s. The Tesla’s traction and torque flatten the uphill run to the Corkscrew, but it’s a narrow margin—the Civic fights back with its sublime brake feel and willingness to rotate on entry, rewarding the committed driver who’s fluent in weight transfer and patient with the throttle. This is the FL5’s hallmark: a car that turns lap time into an act of skill rather than brute force, inviting drivers to exploit every tenth with surgical precision.

Dig deeper and you see this pattern repeated. At Buttonwillow 13CW, the Model 3’s all-weather pace and tire-limited stability translate to a 1:48.647, trouncing a well-prepped FL5 by over eight seconds. But switch to tracks like Spa or VIR, and the Civic’s consistency and thermal resilience claw back the advantage. This isn’t just about lap times—it’s about philosophy. The Tesla sacrifices feel for speed, insulating the driver from the ragged edge. The Honda, conversely, trades outright grunt for connection, turning every braking zone and apex into an opportunity for driver expression.

Ultimately, the choice is as much about temperament as it is about pace. The Model 3 Performance is the tool for those who want instant results—a car that democratizes lap time and rewards aggression, especially for drivers still learning the game. The FL5 Type R is the instrument for purists: an honest, transparent chassis that turns every session into a lesson in patience and finesse. For the thinking driver, for the one who wants to dissect every corner and feel every slip angle, the Civic remains the enduring benchmark. The Tesla, meanwhile, represents the new age—where speed is abundant, but mastery is measured in tenths wrung from every corner, not just kilowatts deployed down the straight.

última atualização: Mar 6, 2026

Especificações

Especificações Tesla Model 3 Performance Mk1 Model 3 Performance Mk1 Honda Civic Type R FL5 Civic Type R FL5
Anos do Modelo 2018-2023 2023-2025
cavalos de potência 510 315
binário (N_M) 546 420
Peso (KG) 1,851 1,446
Potência por Peso 0.28 0.22
Rank #118 #146
Pneu 300 PILOT SPORT 4S
235/35/20
300 PILOT SPORT 4S
265/30/19
Descrição do motor Dual motor AWD (265kW rear + 137kW front), 82 kWh battery 2.0-liter turbocharged inline-4 (K20C1)
Caixa de velocidades SINGLE SPEED 6-SPEED MANUAL WITH REV-MATCHING
Tipo de tração AWD FWD
Entre-eixos (MM) 2875 2736
Largura (MM) 1854 1890
Comprimento (MM) 4699 4547
Altura (MM) 1422 1407
0 - 60 MPH 2.9 SEGs 5 SEGs
Velocidade máxima (KPH) 225 272
Preço MSRP $ 70,000 $ 38,000
Valor Atual $ 36,000 $ 43,000
GERAL VS TEMPOS DE VOLTA MÉDIOS -2.91s +0.01s

Tesla Model 3 Performance Mk1 Model 3 Performance Mk1 — Tempos de Volta vs Média

Desgaste/NÍVEL DE MOD Stock/Leve S/L Médio M Pesado/Corrida H/R
>200 +6.52s -3.03s
141–200 +1.11s -3.57s -5.01s
100–140 -4.12s
0–99 -4.48s -6.84s -6.84s

Honda Civic Type R FL5 Civic Type R FL5 — Tempos de Volta vs Média

Desgaste/NÍVEL DE MOD Stock/Leve S/L Médio M Pesado/Corrida H/R
>200 +1.23s -1.01s -1.01s
141–200 +1.11s -1.31s -4.05s
100–140 +0.74s -1.31s
0–99
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