2014 gs????
#16
New GS is getting great reviews almost ready to pull the trigger. The concern is that the most apparent shortcoming is the carryover engine and 6 speed. I wonder if there might not be a 2014 upgrade to a 3.7 or something with the Lexus 8 speed. The GS will be the only new car with a six speed in the Lexus lineup. RX, IS and LS all have the 8 speed. Didn't Lexus carryover the 3.0 when they came out with the 3rd gen GS, and then upgrade to the GS 350 the next year after the introduction? Wouldn't want to have buyers remorse and not have the new new GS especially if it has a performance boost to put it on par with the A6.
I don't know if I would expect more than a bump to an 8 speed for the 2014 GS but who knows with Lexus... and more gears doesn't seem to have helped the 8 speed BMW or 7 speed Mercedes much as the GS is quicker, with better gas mileage than either even with it's "carryover power train".
Just like the LS1 boys showed the Mustang guys for years,(Ford quad cam, 4 valve dohc verses cam in block 2 valve heads in the LT1) technology just for technologies sake doesn't always give you what you expected... And Hyundai has a 10-speed transmission in the works…
#17
New GS is getting great reviews almost ready to pull the trigger. The concern is that the most apparent shortcoming is the carryover engine and 6 speed. I wonder if there might not be a 2014 upgrade to a 3.7 or something with the Lexus 8 speed. The GS will be the only new car with a six speed in the Lexus lineup. RX, IS and LS all have the 8 speed. Didn't Lexus carryover the 3.0 when they came out with the 3rd gen GS, and then upgrade to the GS 350 the next year after the introduction? Wouldn't want to have buyers remorse and not have the new new GS especially if it has a performance boost to put it on par with the A6.
Toyota is working on a new powertrain, which will be so brilliant that it will shine just like when the 2GR-FSE bow to the public initially in 2006.
#18
I don't get why people are so hung up on the 6 speed transmission. There is very little difference in Automatic as they all shift smoothly and you can hardly feel it as a 6 or 7 or 8 speed. Lexus decided on the 6 speed because it shift much better manually than the 8 speed. I will take a smooth 6 speed over a clunky 8 speed anytime.
Why people keep asking for V8? It is a heavy engine and will hurt the balance and the lightness of the car. So what if it is 0.5 second faster to 60mph?
We should judge a car on how you feel while driving it. How much do you enjoy driving it. Not that it has the best stats on the sheet. Otherwise, we all should be driving American Muscle cars.
I don't see any break through technology in a couple of years that will add too much on a very good car. I am very happy with my 2013 GS FS now and foreseeable future.
Why people keep asking for V8? It is a heavy engine and will hurt the balance and the lightness of the car. So what if it is 0.5 second faster to 60mph?
We should judge a car on how you feel while driving it. How much do you enjoy driving it. Not that it has the best stats on the sheet. Otherwise, we all should be driving American Muscle cars.
I don't see any break through technology in a couple of years that will add too much on a very good car. I am very happy with my 2013 GS FS now and foreseeable future.
#19
Just think of the people who bought a 2006 GS300. What are their feeling when one year later, the 2007 GS350 has a much much better engine (which even has more hp than the V8 GS430); and also it has better brake system directly borrow from the V8 variant? Will they regret? - Of course they defenitely will.
Toyota is working on a new powertrain, which will be so brilliant that it will shine just like when the 2GR-FSE bow to the public initially in 2006.
Toyota is working on a new powertrain, which will be so brilliant that it will shine just like when the 2GR-FSE bow to the public initially in 2006.
at very best, it will be superb turbo, but as such it will have deficiencies compared to GR V6, such as throttle response time.
#20
I do drive a muscle car(C6), and am spoiled by torque. The largest complaint on the RL board has been the lack of torque. The A6 just moves out at any speed and the 8 speed tranny is very smooth, and seems to always be there in the right gear. Unlike the 5 series that is tuned to always go in the highest possible gear, and always seems to hesitate, the A6 is mapped for the enthusiast. In the GS given the AWD, a little higher torque and a extra couple of cogs may not improve the bottom line acceleration numbers much but I bet no one would complain of the extra grunt and the car would feel even quicker.
#21
Here is another example. I am still using the first iPad. It does everything I plan to do on it and it does it well. Now the "iPad3" has come out, but it did not add enough new features that make me want to switch. Same thing on the iPhone4 and iPhone 4S. Should I change phone just to get Siri? NO.
The same generation improvement is really marginal.
My suggestion is if you are happy with what you are driving right now, then wait. If you really want to get a new ride, find what is best for you at the time and just do it (if you can afford it).
The same generation improvement is really marginal.
My suggestion is if you are happy with what you are driving right now, then wait. If you really want to get a new ride, find what is best for you at the time and just do it (if you can afford it).
#22
My hope is that they add valvematic to any new engine and carryover the Ft-86 steering ecu to any mid-cycle refreshes of the GS.
Apparently the steering feel of the Ft-86 is the best implementation of electronic steering yet, besting the new Porsche and 3 series in feel and feedback.
Apparently the steering feel of the Ft-86 is the best implementation of electronic steering yet, besting the new Porsche and 3 series in feel and feedback.
#23
If the car is beating the 5 Series, A6 and M37 in the tests, there would seem to be no need to enhance the performance for a while. That is, unless they want to go after the M5 or S6, which will then make sense. The GS is selling well as is. No need to change it until the compeitors change or the sales numbers start to sink, and I doubt that will be next year.
The word is getting out that the GS is a great car.
The word is getting out that the GS is a great car.
#24
Back in 2005, few can imagine that Lexus will bring a engine that put out more than 300hp using just 3.5L displacement. Trust me, Toyota will always bring out something unbelievable every 6-7 years. Technology do advance.
#25
I do drive a muscle car(C6), and am spoiled by torque. The largest complaint on the RL board has been the lack of torque. The A6 just moves out at any speed and the 8 speed tranny is very smooth, and seems to always be there in the right gear. Unlike the 5 series that is tuned to always go in the highest possible gear, and always seems to hesitate, the A6 is mapped for the enthusiast. In the GS given the AWD, a little higher torque and a extra couple of cogs may not improve the bottom line acceleration numbers much but I bet no one would complain of the extra grunt and the car would feel even quicker.
#28
You raise some interesting (and valid points) EXCEPT:
I would have to disagree on this one. As superb as the 2GR-FE is, it is obviously no match for the performance of the 1UR engine (like the one in the 3GS - GS460). I've personally test driven one and you can really feel the mid-end torque of an eight cylinder.
I test drove a GS460 without D4-S direct injection (1UR-FE) so a reduction of 40 hp as well as 40 Nm torque compared to the Direct Injection model. For me, acceleration feel was more linear and torque availability is more spread out.
Fact is, the more you increase your cylinder count, the greater you increase the availability of your torque throughout the rev range (hence wider powerband)
In the end yeah, that was probably the best legacy (for me) of the 3rd generation GS in that the GS460 had one hell of an engine
I'm thinking that Lexus may come with an eight cylinder for the GS in the near future. Think about it. If history is an indication, the GS460 arrived during the MMC facelift of the 3GS.
I, for one, would welcome an EIGHT CYLINDER for the 4th Generation Lexus GS (it might come out in a possible GS-F)
Two cents
I test drove a GS460 without D4-S direct injection (1UR-FE) so a reduction of 40 hp as well as 40 Nm torque compared to the Direct Injection model. For me, acceleration feel was more linear and torque availability is more spread out.
Fact is, the more you increase your cylinder count, the greater you increase the availability of your torque throughout the rev range (hence wider powerband)
In the end yeah, that was probably the best legacy (for me) of the 3rd generation GS in that the GS460 had one hell of an engine
I'm thinking that Lexus may come with an eight cylinder for the GS in the near future. Think about it. If history is an indication, the GS460 arrived during the MMC facelift of the 3GS.
I, for one, would welcome an EIGHT CYLINDER for the 4th Generation Lexus GS (it might come out in a possible GS-F)
Two cents
#29
I do drive a muscle car(C6), and am spoiled by torque. The largest complaint on the RL board has been the lack of torque. The A6 just moves out at any speed and the 8 speed tranny is very smooth, and seems to always be there in the right gear. Unlike the 5 series that is tuned to always go in the highest possible gear, and always seems to hesitate, the A6 is mapped for the enthusiast. In the GS given the AWD, a little higher torque and a extra couple of cogs may not improve the bottom line acceleration numbers much but I bet no one would complain of the extra grunt and the car would feel even quicker.
it is very nice engine. No wonder passing numbers are in some cases better than 535i andeven A6, despite them having a lot more torque.