2022 NX *Test Drive* Vids - Post 'em!
#3
Thank you for uploading these videos. Nice to be able to access them all in one place.
Just finished watching all four videos. The second video is probably the most critical.
Here are my takeaways -- and they may not be entirely accurate so please politely correct anything I may have misquoted...
Overall, the 2022 NX reviews are positive. On the other hand, nobody is exactly raving about this vehicle.
The overall consensus seems to be that the ride and handling are excellent. The interior is quiet. Drive is smooooth. Visibility is excellent. Seats are VERY comfortable. The safety systems included are first-rate and on par with the best in the industry. Steering wheel is fully heated and the ventilated seats work exceptionally well (according to one reviewer).
The "Hey Lexus" assistant is very quick and capable.
There are quite a few negatives that were brought up that include...
* Not enough luxury feel inside the vehicle. Too much scratchable piano black. Not enough stitching.
* Quirky shifter
* No soft close doors (they are driving a prototype so that may be introduced in the final version)
* Infotainment system, at times, can be cumbersome to navigate through -- especially when navigating through SiriusXM. No tuning **** or home button.
* Infotainment screen does not extend out to the corner borders (but is full screen for all its functions and maps)
* Laggy climate control *****
* Some system functions completely white out the Infotainment screen temporarily as you adjust -- most notably, adjusting volume. That's not good.
* No power rear flip seats on the battery vehicles
* Passenger front seat lacks extensive comfort/adjustability controls of driver seat
* Sluggish 0-60 acceleration on the 2.4 turbo model
* No panoramic roof on the F-Sport Plug-In
* No power extending thigh cushioning on seat as in other Lexus vehicles
* The HUD is very well rated (though smaller than others), but its controls block the dash cluster when in use. This also occurs while in a phone call.
The third video confirms there are power-folding side mirrors. Yeah!
Not one review on the Mark Levinson system. Still looking through more video reviews so perhaps one of them has thoughts on it.
Look at what I found...
Impressions are that it's a good system, but not an S-tier system (which is the highest-rank) that provides the "WoW" factor you might expect from the more expensive luxury brands. I'm listening to the samples on Apple Pro Max headphones (with noise-canceling) and I can pick up some nice boomy bass for those who enjoy it. It sounds very good, but I don't know how well the actual audio translates to the home listener.
=========
Overall -- and this is just my opinion -- the 2022 NX is a nice luxury vehicle with a comfortable drive. It's just not very exciting. Comparing it to say, the GV70, it really pales in interior luxury and tech. However, I would feel more confident in the NX in terms of overall reliability.
This video briefly compares the NX to the GENESIS GV70 as far as overall luxury and pricing
As someone who is torn between the Hybrid and Plug-In models, I am now leaning towards the latter in luxury trim since it comes with a more powerful engine and more accelerating/passing power. However, I know that will be a difficult vehicle to obtain. One reviewer noted he was getting 37 miles electric which is very nice.
Just finished watching all four videos. The second video is probably the most critical.
Here are my takeaways -- and they may not be entirely accurate so please politely correct anything I may have misquoted...
Overall, the 2022 NX reviews are positive. On the other hand, nobody is exactly raving about this vehicle.
The overall consensus seems to be that the ride and handling are excellent. The interior is quiet. Drive is smooooth. Visibility is excellent. Seats are VERY comfortable. The safety systems included are first-rate and on par with the best in the industry. Steering wheel is fully heated and the ventilated seats work exceptionally well (according to one reviewer).
The "Hey Lexus" assistant is very quick and capable.
There are quite a few negatives that were brought up that include...
* Not enough luxury feel inside the vehicle. Too much scratchable piano black. Not enough stitching.
* Quirky shifter
* No soft close doors (they are driving a prototype so that may be introduced in the final version)
* Infotainment system, at times, can be cumbersome to navigate through -- especially when navigating through SiriusXM. No tuning **** or home button.
* Infotainment screen does not extend out to the corner borders (but is full screen for all its functions and maps)
* Laggy climate control *****
* Some system functions completely white out the Infotainment screen temporarily as you adjust -- most notably, adjusting volume. That's not good.
* No power rear flip seats on the battery vehicles
* Passenger front seat lacks extensive comfort/adjustability controls of driver seat
* Sluggish 0-60 acceleration on the 2.4 turbo model
* No panoramic roof on the F-Sport Plug-In
* No power extending thigh cushioning on seat as in other Lexus vehicles
* The HUD is very well rated (though smaller than others), but its controls block the dash cluster when in use. This also occurs while in a phone call.
The third video confirms there are power-folding side mirrors. Yeah!
Look at what I found...
Impressions are that it's a good system, but not an S-tier system (which is the highest-rank) that provides the "WoW" factor you might expect from the more expensive luxury brands. I'm listening to the samples on Apple Pro Max headphones (with noise-canceling) and I can pick up some nice boomy bass for those who enjoy it. It sounds very good, but I don't know how well the actual audio translates to the home listener.
=========
Overall -- and this is just my opinion -- the 2022 NX is a nice luxury vehicle with a comfortable drive. It's just not very exciting. Comparing it to say, the GV70, it really pales in interior luxury and tech. However, I would feel more confident in the NX in terms of overall reliability.
This video briefly compares the NX to the GENESIS GV70 as far as overall luxury and pricing
As someone who is torn between the Hybrid and Plug-In models, I am now leaning towards the latter in luxury trim since it comes with a more powerful engine and more accelerating/passing power. However, I know that will be a difficult vehicle to obtain. One reviewer noted he was getting 37 miles electric which is very nice.
Last edited by NJRonbo; 10-07-21 at 05:29 AM.
#4
This is probably the best "rave" review so far
There are almost a dozen more YouTube reviews posted this morning that I didn't want hog up my personal space posting here.
I did want to include this from my favorite YouTube car reviewer, Unfortunately, he has not posted overall scores yet but it is a very comprehensive review that I am certain he will update shortly. This is a guy you would want to subscribe to on your YouTube feed if you enjoy quality vehicle reviews
There are almost a dozen more YouTube reviews posted this morning that I didn't want hog up my personal space posting here.
I did want to include this from my favorite YouTube car reviewer, Unfortunately, he has not posted overall scores yet but it is a very comprehensive review that I am certain he will update shortly. This is a guy you would want to subscribe to on your YouTube feed if you enjoy quality vehicle reviews
Last edited by NJRonbo; 10-07-21 at 03:32 AM.
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Solara350 (10-11-21)
#5
The infotainment and steering wheel control are a mixed bag as I suspected. Skip to minute 9 on the video from TheStraightPipes. I'm not so enthused any more, and all future Lexus models with have this system..
#6
Andy, I have this awful feeling about the NX. I either buy one and have the comfort of knowing I own a vehicle that will serve me reliably for years to come, or I buy something that's just more exciting and take my chances with service.
There is nothing about this vehicle that is head-turning. Lexus played it very safe where they had the chance to hit it out of the park. It's not a bad vehicle by any means -- just doesn't look fun to drive.
#7
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It boggles my mind that in 2021, they can't implement all these items in an infotainment system. I mean, just copy and paste from all the other good systems and get it right. Also, the fact that the built in nav is now subscription based after the trial period bothers me on a 50k plus vehicle.
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#8
Andy, I have this awful feeling about the NX. I either buy one and have the comfort of knowing I own a vehicle that will serve me reliably for years to come, or I buy something that's just more exciting and take my chances with service.
There is nothing about this vehicle that is head-turning. Lexus played it very safe where they had the chance to hit it out of the park. It's not a bad vehicle by any means -- just doesn't look fun to drive.
There is nothing about this vehicle that is head-turning. Lexus played it very safe where they had the chance to hit it out of the park. It's not a bad vehicle by any means -- just doesn't look fun to drive.
I had much higher hopes for the infotainment redesign. Start with the basics- you need a volume **** (check), tuning **** (no), and home button (no). You need a nice HD screen (check). You need wireless and wired car play and android auto (check). You need a fast processor with minimal to no lag on startup and in day to day use (tbd). And maybe most significantly, make the UI simple and intuitive (tbd).
It boggles my mind that in 2021, they can't implement all these items in an infotainment system. I mean, just copy and paste from all the other good systems and get it right. Also, the fact that the built in nav is now subscription based after the trial period bothers me on a 50k plus vehicle.
It boggles my mind that in 2021, they can't implement all these items in an infotainment system. I mean, just copy and paste from all the other good systems and get it right. Also, the fact that the built in nav is now subscription based after the trial period bothers me on a 50k plus vehicle.
#9
Pole Position
#10
Driver School Candidate
Has anyone seen if the hybrids recommend premium gas? I'd assume not since they're based on the Highlander and RAV4 prime systems and neither of those does but the RXh recommends premium and Motor Trends initial preview from a few months ago says premium is recommended
https://www.motortrend.com/news/2022...t-look-review/
With the two hybrid models, the NX hews closely to its RAV4 cousin. The NX350h is, essentially, a Toyota RAV4 Hybrid with a more powerful electric motor borrowed from the larger Lexus RX450h and its 2.5-liter gas engine tuned to run on premium fuel.
#11
Lead Lap
#12
Driver School Candidate
@NJRonbo
The Mark Levinson test from Daily Motor has volume adjustments where the entire screen isn't covered with the volume level. It's just a box in the upper right corner. It doesn't look like you can get the upgraded sound system in the 450+ but it would be weird to have two completely different systems because of that. One of those infotainment systems has to be on an older firmware version. Hopefully, it's the Straight Pipes video that has the old version.
No chance they'll include soft-close doors. I don't think any vehicle in this class has them.
Looks like it's confirmed that there's no way to fold down the rear seats from the tailgate area without actually reaching forward and grabbed the lever on the rear seats unless you get the heated rear seat option which gives you electronically folding seats. What a great bit of cheapness from Toyota/Lexus.
Infotainment still has lag and choppiness but that's to be expected. I'll be surprised when lag and choppiness don't exist in a vehicle's infotainment system.
All the warnings and notifications in the dashboard are annoying and stupid but to be expected based on other Lexus vehicles. Somehow I doubt that the OTA updates the infotainment system can receive can affect the dashboard display.
The Mark Levinson test from Daily Motor has volume adjustments where the entire screen isn't covered with the volume level. It's just a box in the upper right corner. It doesn't look like you can get the upgraded sound system in the 450+ but it would be weird to have two completely different systems because of that. One of those infotainment systems has to be on an older firmware version. Hopefully, it's the Straight Pipes video that has the old version.
No chance they'll include soft-close doors. I don't think any vehicle in this class has them.
Looks like it's confirmed that there's no way to fold down the rear seats from the tailgate area without actually reaching forward and grabbed the lever on the rear seats unless you get the heated rear seat option which gives you electronically folding seats. What a great bit of cheapness from Toyota/Lexus.
Infotainment still has lag and choppiness but that's to be expected. I'll be surprised when lag and choppiness don't exist in a vehicle's infotainment system.
All the warnings and notifications in the dashboard are annoying and stupid but to be expected based on other Lexus vehicles. Somehow I doubt that the OTA updates the infotainment system can receive can affect the dashboard display.
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Zeus69 (10-07-21)
#14
The video from Straight Pipes is making me re think my decision on the NX. I don’t like how some of the Lexus interface works while driving. So every time I turn the volume **** up or down a blank white screen will appear for a few seconds? No that’s a deal breaker for me. Does this also work the same with the steering wheel control for volume?
#15
Driver School Candidate
The video from Straight Pipes is making me re think my decision on the NX. I don’t like how some of the Lexus interface works while driving. So every time I turn the volume **** up or down a blank white screen will appear for a few seconds? No that’s a deal breaker for me. Does this also work the same with the steering wheel control for volume?