When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
I'm very sorry the V6 is going away. That drivetrain was a gem of reliability.
Jury is still old regarding how the 4 pop will drive. 4 turbos are not smooth.
I will not consider the 23 rx because they are doing away with the 6. I owned an NX with the 4 and although it was smooth I just don’t like the sound of the engine. In an NX it was adequate as far as how fast it was and the NX is lighter than the rx. I just don’t think it will be powerful enough with the 4 not alone you will have to use premium fuel. The present rx uses regular. Now I know those will say if you can afford to buy the car you ca afford to pay for premium fuel. The point is premium is becoming more and more rare and in Florida it is 70 cents more a gallon. That is quite a bit higher than regular. All things considered the rx was always a v6 and very reliable and many of it’s competitors still provide there v6’s. Lexus should have considered a v6 option. I believe Lexus will be surprised on how many customers will be leaving the brand because of it. Time will tell as they say.
I will not consider the 23 rx because they are doing away with the 6. I owned an NX with the 4 and although it was smooth I just don’t like the sound of the engine. In an NX it was adequate as far as how fast it was and the NX is lighter than the rx. I just don’t think it will be powerful enough with the 4 not alone you will have to use premium fuel. The present rx uses regular. Now I know those will say if you can afford to buy the car you ca afford to pay for premium fuel. The point is premium is becoming more and more rare and in Florida it is 70 cents more a gallon. That is quite a bit higher than regular. All things considered the rx was always a v6 and very reliable and many of it’s competitors still provide there v6’s. Lexus should have considered a v6 option. I believe Lexus will be surprised on how many customers will be leaving the brand because of it. Time will tell as they say.
Stevie D.
IMO RX owners will most likely continue to buy if they love their RX. Even this is not V6, it's plenty faster than the current V6. With everything else, it most likely will sell just fine, unless they bump the price up too much.
Lexus said they expect only 30% of buyers will be former RX owners, and 40% will be conquest buyers, while also "going upmarket" in price and benchmarking the BMW X5. So perhaps they aren't as interested in appealing to current RX owners as much as they did in the past.
the 2.4 Turbo isn't as bad as the 2.0-Turbo, but it's definitely a letdown for a few hundred RPM (vs the V6) until the turbo spools and the torque band arrives and remains for most of the rev-range.
.
What you think of the full-time awd? Could tell it was 75:25 or 50:50?
What you think of the full-time awd? Could tell it was 75:25 or 50:50?
To be fully transparent, I don't recall that specifically. Unlike the GR Corolla (which I can talk about 9/14) or the Audi RS 3, there isn't a toggle switch in the RX to force it to be in a certain power/torque-vectoring mode, so I wasn't able to do any a-to-b testing to get a sense of it. This system just calculates for you.
What I will say is that the F Sport Handling and F Sport Performance felt a lot more planted and connected to the road vs the base FWD drivetrain. I'm a guy who primarily drives 400+ hp cars and trucks. I'm most at home in Mustangs, Corvettes, IS 500s, LCs, etc... and these crossovers bring a lot of those sensations to the driving experience (even if it's less visceral).
Leaving the brand to go where? All the Germans have 2.0Ts, you have to go to the MDX to get a 6 - a larger 7 seat vehicle.
Not to say they will go but if they do, the MB 2.0 is faster/more responsive tha the current V6. And BMW does not offer 2.0 as of now. They probably know and chose 2.4 to be in the middle.
Not to say they will go but if they do, the MB 2.0 is faster/more responsive tha the current V6. And BMW does not offer 2.0 as of now. They probably know and chose 2.4 to be in the middle.
Well, the LS and most other bubble cars were margin-driven too, it's just that the margins were in the stratosphere because that's just how wealthy Japan was back then. Not even the LFA's development costs could come close to those of the LS400 ($800 mil vs. $1 bn), and that's before adjusting for inflation between 1989 and 2010.
Lexus will never have to bear those kinds of costs again. Remember the project in the '80s wasn't just to develop an all-new car (with an all-new engine, platform and various new technologies throughout like the damped controls, the sandwich firewall, etc, etc). They also developed a brand, an advertising image, an internal brand philosophy, a dealer body based on revolutionary customer service principles, and a discrete parts network automated like none before. Now, they have all that infrastructure and "only" have to develop the car.