|
A Triple Scoop
of Lexus Styling
LOS
ANGELES (By Dan Neil, LATimes) December 7, 2005
If
watchers of automotive styling wondered where all the flares, waveforms and
undulations went on the latest BMW 3-series, I've found them: They're on Lexus'
new IS sport sedans. Inspired by the company's new design language, called
L-Finesse which sounds like the name of a Mexican wrestler the luxury
division of Toyota has managed, not quite consciously, to build the 3-series
that Munich would have built if they hadn't gotten a straitjacket on design
chief Chris Bangle.
Man, this is one frothy bit of
styling. Even the taillight lenses have little meringue-like peaks whipped into
them. The cat's-eye headlights are right off Grandma's nightstand. The dorsal
contours plunge down the roof rails, onto the hood and into the bumper in the
shape of a divining rod over an east Texas aquifer. The triangular fog-light
apertures and bumper opening follow the same V-shaped contours, which ultimately
has the effect of giving the car kind of a happy, slightly stoned grin. Heading
aft, the rising shoulder lines leave the midsection of the car looking thick and
slack below the windows and create something like an optical illusion: The rear
wheels look smaller than the fronts.
Football and car styling are games of inches. The GS 430 sedan also an
L-Finesse styling exemplar has an easy fluidity about it, a stately
aerodynamic flow. The same styling language on the IS almost 9 inches shorter
looks crowded and turbulent. As El Finesse might say, "Ay caramba!"
This is Lexus' second edition of an entry-level rear-drive sport-compact sedan.
The first try, the IS 300, introduced in 2000, was a stubby little vest gun with
chronographic gauges and seats that fit like an Eisenhower jacket. It was
competent and likable but bereft of serious sports-sedan mojo. I personally
really liked the SportCross variant and hope another sport wagon remains in the
product plan. In any event, younger sport-sedan buyers stayed away in droves.
Lexus started burnishing its sport-sedan credentials in 2005 with the GS sedans,
the GS 300 and GS 430, which are meant to bracket BMW's 5-series. The company
seems to like this pincer-like strategy, and so the new IS comes in two flavors:
the 2.5-liter, 204-horsepower IS 250 and the much horsier 3.5-liter, 306-hp IS
350.
I drove the first example I could get my hands on, which was an IS 250, but now
that choice seems inspired. For one thing, the IS 250 can be had with a
six-speed manual transmission (a six-speed automatic is the sole gear-swapper on
the IS 350). All-wheel drive is also exclusive to the IS 250, although that
could easily change in the next model year.
Then there's the not inconsiderable matter of price. The IS 250 is $5,450
cheaper ($29,990 MSRP) than the IS 350. The extra horsepower of the IS 350 costs
about $53 per horse. Another way to look at it is by acceleration. The IS 250
bolts to 60 mph in about 7.9 seconds; the IS 350 gets to that mark in around 5.3
seconds (it's the fastest car in its class). Each second shaved off costs
$2,180. Talk about fun with calculators.
Both models get newly developed direct-injection engine heads that improve
efficiency and emissions. Our test car, an IS 250 with the six-speeder manual,
is rated at 20 mpg city and 29 highway, which is commendable, though not
best-in-class. The automatic-equipped model returns extremely sexy mileage of
24/32 mph city/highway.
Even with the smaller engine, our IS felt friskier than a grotto-full of Hef's
houseguests. Dremmel only wishes it made a drill this smooth. The engine spirals
freely to redline actually, when you approach max rpm, a ring of gold LEDs
lights up around the tach and the induction and exhaust sounds are nicely
harmonized in the cabin so that it sounds sporty without being obnoxious. As a
longtime Saab fan, I am pleased to see Lexus bring back the springy, rubbery
gearshift with the pull-ring for reverse gear. I thought these had been banished
forever.
The car does miss the extra ponies once in a while, particularly on steep
on-ramps, but once it reaches the highway, the performance is exemplary. At
interstate speeds or even a little better the car hums along like it's
powered by the sun. The ride quality, although less pillowy than even the GS
cars, is supple and well damped for a car with so short a wheelbase. The
interior has the soundtrack of a Vicodin overdose a long, remote whoooosh
.
In terms of driving dynamics, it turns out the whole BMW thing is a straw man.
Though by the numbers the Lexus may corner as hard and stop as short as Munich's
favorite, the driving is a very different experience. Generally, all the Lexus'
driving sensations the fine thread of vibrations working their way from the
suspension to the seat cushions, the mechanical whisper of tread contact coming
through the steering column, the gathering resistance under the ball of your
braking foot, the axial rotation as the car pitches around a corner all of
these have been washed through layers of electronic intermediaries. This is not
to fault the car. This is the way Lexus dynamics guys want the car to feel.
Heck, they could teach it to deal poker if they wanted to.
As you would expect of any Lexus, the IS is tight, solid and completely
of-a-piece. Adding a soupηon of aggression, our test car came with the Sports
Suspension package, which includes 18-inch, low-profile summer tires.
All of Lexus' dynamic safety systems are deployed on the IS, including the
optional Vehicle Dynamics Integrated Management, which orchestrates the car's
flight control systems, things such as anti-lock brakes, traction and stability
control. The car is also available with adaptive front headlamps, intelligent
cruise control and eight air bags, including knee bolster air bags. It's
car-tech heaven in there.
The wheelhouse of the IS is flawlessly constructed. You will look in vain for
those little push-in covers that other manufacturers use to hide interior
screws. The front driver seat cradles you like you're starring in your own
four-door crθche. Other reviewers have complained about rear-seat space, but I
found the car quite tolerable in the back, even with the front seats well back
in their tracks. The cabin is loaded with comfort and convenience features,
including push-button start, leather seats, power moon roof and in our test
car an A/V geek's Valhalla, a 14-speaker, 300-watt Mark Levinson
surround-sound system compatible with DVD audio and video. Which is great,
fantastic, wonderful. Now can someone show me how to dim the nav display at
night so it doesn't blind me?
Will the IS cars steal sales from BMW? I rather doubt it. BMW's customers have a
different set of imperatives and the Lexus doesn't offer enough driver
involvement to guile them away. But in the everybody-but-BMW segment, the IS is
a force to be reckoned with. I give it an A-, maybe a B+ if I'm grading on the
curves.
2006
Lexus IS 250
Base price: $29,990
Price, as tested: $38,795
Power train: 2.5-liter, 24-valve
direct-injection V-6 with variable-valve timing; six-speed manual transmission;
rear-wheel drive.
Horsepower: 204 at 6,400 rpm
Torque: 185 pound-feet at 4,800 rpm
Curb weight: 3,455 pounds
0-60 mph: 7.9 seconds
Wheelbase: 107.5 inches
Overall length: 180.1 inches
EPA fuel economy: 20 miles per gallon
city, 29 mpg highway
Final thoughts: Capt. Nemo gets a
sports sedan
| |
|