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Comments
Does anyone else have any comments about the IS300's snow performance? Do the extra traction controls make up for the fact that its a RWD? Sure, if I lived in Phoenix I'd be looking RWD all the way, but since there's snow on the ground from Dec-April where I live, I'm more concerned.
Also, how does the IS compare to other RWDs in its segment for winter performance (i.e 3 series, G35, etc)
Thanks.
I don't know if that's short enough for your clearance needs, but it's smaller than OEM.
Lexus shows a roof rack part number on their website, but it does not specify SportCross. I saw a pic in the accessory catalog at the dealer, but again, it only said "IS300". Worth a call maybe to the parts counter to see, then you can go wholesale on the web.
The wheels are the 11-spoke 17"ers, which you can now option on any IS if you so desire. I found them kind of fussy, but then I firmly believe real wheels have five spokes, period!
All in all it looks nice.
Been driving a bit. After the little ones are snug in their beds, I kiss the Mrs. and go out for an hour or so.
Saturday night was funny. I'm of course being cautious for the first 1K or so, and restricting use of gas pedal and brakes a bit. So I'm cruising fast, but it's not like I'm looking for thrills or anything; every pubescent dipstick in Daddy's 330 or A6 apparently felt obligated to climb up my backside and drop the hammer on a lane-change boogie! Happened four times in 45 minutes!
Ah well, I was a pubescent dipstick once upon a time, too. No, really!
...and when I WAS that age, I was driving such things as a '59 Ford Anglia [we should have a club] or a '61 Beetle, or a '62 Peugeot, none of which were capable of any performance more demanding than going to and from school and work with a minimum of fuss and fury. Oh well...
Small world. I got mine as a gift when I was 15 from an old friend of the family who owned a garage (British car service). It had been abandoned and was in pretty dire shape (no rust though). His idea was to teach how to rebuild it and keep me out of trouble at the same time. It mostly worked. Mostly. Well the car worked anyway...;)
Great little car BTW. I gave it to my sister when my Dad gave me his Olds.
Had to buy a new Raiders cling today. New car, new cling. It's hard work to find a Raiders cling I can live with. Most of 'em are stinkin' huge, like, for pickup trucks or semis or somethin'. It's all the rage in the East Bay to fill up the entire rear window with a huge logo. Not my cup of tea, thank you very much! The only reasonably sized shield I could find says "Orgullo Y Porte" across the top. Not that I have anything against pride and poise, or Spanish in general, but I just wanted the shield! So I cut off the top.
Lordy, I love this car...:)
There's escaine on the door, color-matched in grey. I haven't cleaned my escaine parts, nor read about it in the manual yet, so I can't tell you the proper method. Maybe one of our other owners can shed some light.
Shop said they had it on display over at the Pebble Beach ProAm.
I have been looking for an IS300 and there are very few that I see with the VSC and LSD. I am looking for advice on whether the traction control by itself is sufficient enough or if I should keep looking for one with VSC and LSD. I live in East Tennessee and it only snows very lightly a few times each year, so traveling in snow is not something I would have to do very often. Any advice would be appreciated.
Also, does anyone think the IS looks good in absolutely red? Thanks.
I just have an experience for you. I live in Dallas and we seldom snow - but today we have a big sleet/rain/snow storm. It's should be around 1 - 2 inches on the ground, without VSC/LSD, I'm stranded on the road; lucky enough - I almost got home with someone pushing my sportscross to reach my sub-division but I can't climb to my drive way into the garage. It took me 4 hours to drive 20 miles! Anyone in Dallas care to share?. Nevertheless, it is absolutely fun to drive.
n.b. Haven't seen a red one, but I love black except it's hard to keep it clean.
Re silver: Early experiences with clear-coat over silver evidenced that the clear coat fried from the inside out, resulting in clouding, then flaking of the top coat, while the silver metallic underneath was still in good shape. I couldn't tell you if that's still a problem for anyone anymore, but I'd think regular care should keep it glossy for as long as you own it.
My experience (limited) is that red is still the worst oxidization offender, and that fastidious regular maintenance is required. My experience is also that it's well worth it!
BTW, I have used Lexol on leather in three cars now. The stuff is unbeatable in my book.
I like the graphite colored wheels. The others you speak of are polished. I hate the way they look.
The graphite's nice looking, but I'm a traditional kind of guy, so silver was for me. Actually, the rims are painted silver with the hard-edge elemnts on the spokes being polished and clear-coated.
I can't think of a mfr who sells a plain polished wheel anymore, but if you find one, run, don't walk, the other direction as fast as you can. Polished rims are the biggest pain in the keester ever!
The bra and leather shift knob arrived yesterday. Little disappoinment there. I was under the impression that the knob would be a ball wrapped in leather, but it's a small contoured knob instead. Comfy enough, but not what I thought. They sent the wrong bra too. Sedan has different lower fascia and foggers, so they have to send me a new one.
Ah, well. I think I'm going to try the clear bra method anyway. There are already two tiny chips down low on the lip; I can see that multiplying as summer and faster cruising come along.
Sorry, but I don't know if the IS300 has the chain or belt. I am thinking 'chain', but not totally sure.
Timing chains do wear out but you should be well over 100,000 miles before have to worry about a chain.
Since Toyota is usually on a 5-year cycle, the car should be up for a redesign soon, depeding on when it came out.
A) Redesign to coincide with re-intro of Supra.
C) Availability of a 4.3L (ridiculous)
Just a few I've seen or heard.
I could see de-badgeing the car, I suppose. I personally see no real value in the Lexus name itself, but spending cash on Altezza stuff?
Kinda hard not to go driving, isn't it. It's remarkable how helpful I've become these days.
"Honey, we're out of Kleenex, could you pick some up on the way home tomorrow?"
"Why wait, dear, I'll go NOW!"
"At 11:30 at night?"
"For you, dear? Anything!"
I was glad to take advantage of Lexus financing as well (3.9%). The car is wonderful , great power, although the ride can be a bit stiff on some roads. The only complaint is a very slight dash rattle when it is cold. Not too intrusive though. Heated seats are very helpful in Chicago (8-10 degrees). BMW 3-series in very overpriced IMO. The 325 I drove was around $34,000 with fewer options (although free maintenance is included). I still believe that Lexus has a better build quality and value...
rsr: describe said dash rattle please. I think I've got the same one, but I assumed it was coming from the NAV. I also noticed the eensiest, tiniest chatter from the sunroof on cold mornings.
They sent the correct bra for the car. I find it funny that Toyota/Lexus parts ship from about two blocks away from me, but they went down to Monterey to the dealer and then from there to me. Twice the shipping for a couple of block walk!
I have a bunch of redwood sitting on my side of the garage just now, so l'il mule sleeps outside. As soon as I finish building the the pergola and get the wood out of my spot, I'm going to stick with the bra. I looked at an application of the clear bra, and I like the concept, but as long as I can keep the car clean and dry (garaged here), I prefer the look of the more traditional approach.
I like the GLX wagon, but you're right. It's not available anymore. VW's answer was to make a 'Premium Pkg.' with the GLX's features available on the 1.8T wagon. No more V6 wagons though. I prefer the T anyway (which is what I have), it has about the same power as the V6 (albeit with a little turbo lag), and has much more modification potential than the V6 does.
1) No manual (sedan).
2) MSRP only (both coupe and sedan).
ok, it is a great platform (Nissan Skyline)but MSRP! Forgetaboutit.
The scariest car experience I had though was with a Mitsu Diamante: that car was assembled like a GE toaster...
The RWD thing figured very heavily in the equation. It's a driving dynamic I have missed for quite a while. It's nice to get back to it. I have driven some wonderful FWD cars, but the feeling is quite simply different and AWD isn't the same either.
Anyway, the 325 is a darling and beautiful, but around these parts adding another 3er to the roads is like adding alcohol to Everclear, and frankly my little beast seems a better car to me.
I suppose I can't say it was the only competition; I was seriously considering a 540it with the M package for a while, but I really didn't want anything that big, heavy or thirsty. Wonderful car though from every angle, and a joy to drive. To spend that kind of money for something I didn't really want, though undoubtedly worth the price, seemed foolish.
In the end, I bought the only car out there that I could honestly say seemed like a "gotta have it" to me.
I'm not disappointed in the least.
I like her 323, but my Jetta was cheaper when new and has more luxury features inside (real leather, more power from the 1.8T, Tiptronic, curtain airbags, heated seats, etc) than hers does.
Watch out though, some of the interior magic comes at a cost. The sumptuously padded and covered door panels in our Passat turned out to be particle board underneath. Nasty shock when your elbow sinks an inch or so for no apparent reason (fixed under warranty)!
If you want a real 3-series RWD cheap thrill, I'd suggest a spin in a 318ti. Too bad Americans dislike hatches so much; that was a hot little ride.
I have to check out a 318ti, but they are definitely hard to find.
it is more obvious in cars with powerful engines.
Hondas are wonderful with FWD because of very thin torque most of them have. But try Nissan Maxima or TL-S and you'll see. I've mostly had Hondas and Nissan with 4 cyl. so FWD was perfectly acceptable. My rule of thumb: more than 200 HP, go with RWD or AWD.
In the Lexus lineup, only ES300 is FWD and it is a just a Camry with LS400 features (good deal for non-enthusiast types). But RWD platform is gaining more popularity as people start to realize that handling dynamics are as important as horsepower and suspension types, especially now, with traction control and VSC...
Not that I'm arguing the basic premise, it's just that the flaw can be rather neatly minimized.
Anyway, I like power going to back end. Feels...right!
Later...AH
Back to IS300s: people are now constantly asking me what my car is. "I had no idea they made that", is what I'm getting on a regular basis. I think Toyota marketing dropped the ball on the SportCross in particular, and IS in general. I've seen some press, but I can't even remember the last time I saw a television ad for one...