Category: | $55,000 to $60,000 Premium Hybrid Sport Sedan |
Who should buy this car: | A person who refuses to compromise between a luxury sedan and an all-out performance sedan, but wants to be kind to the environment |
People looking at this model might also want to consider: | Audi A6, BMW 5 Series, Cadillac STS, Infiniti M45, Jaguar S-Type, Mercedes E-Class |
Lexus will start selling its second hybrid vehicle in May, and this time its not all about fuel efficiency and clean air. This time the focus is on power.
The car is the GS450h, a two-ton, rear-wheel-drive, mid-size sport/luxury sedan which will blister the macadam from a dead stop to 60 mph in 5.2 seconds – enough to put this Lexus in a dead heat with a Porsche 911 equipped with an automatic transmission.
The GS450h will also keep pace with or outgun its V-8 powered rivals up to its governor-limited 131 mile-an-hour top speed, carve a cleaner path through the atmosphere and return up to 25 miles per gallon of premium fuel in the city and 28 on the highway.
Labeling the newest hybrid the most technologically advanced production vehicle in the world, Carter ticked off these benchmarks: first truly high-performance hybrid . . . first rear-drive hybrid sedan . . . among the quickest Lexus vehicles ever built.
And, on the subject of mosts, the GS450h, with a base price of $54,900, replaces the V8-powered, $52,070 GS430 as the most expensive of the recently redesigned Lexus mid-sizers.
The principles that governed the engineering of the GS450h are not much different from those which underpin the entry-level Toyota Prius, but the execution required ground-breaking technology.
That was the easy part. The real trick was to devise a transmission that could effectively deliver hybrid power to the rear wheels and build it to approximately the same size as a conventional six-speed automatic transmission.
It was accomplished in a way that will be understood best by those who know the meaning of Ravingeux gearset and planetary arrays. To the rest of us, it functions as a continuously variable transmission, which is to say that it can adjust gear ratios to all power requirements without the constraints of six predetermined speeds found in a conventional automatic shifter.
While all of that is impressive, the ultimate concern to anyone thinking of purchasing a GS450h is how it rides and drives.
Despite limited time behind the wheel, driving partner Charles Ofria, major domo of this website, and I were able to get a pretty good sense of the car as we put it through its paces on some snaky stretches of two-lane macadam in the Lake Mead National Recreational Area.
Leadfoot Charlie, apparently determined to see if the car really had a 131-mph cutoff, beat a path to the Red Rocks area in what may have been the days record time. We experienced and re-experienced – the cars tremendous rush of acceleration, but the restrictions of two lanes and occasional lumbering recreational vehicles kept him a few miles per hour short of reaching the Lexus upper limits.
I the older, more mature, more sensible motorist – took a different approach on the return trip. I kept my top speed to a modest 105 mph and maintained a much more leisurely pace, say in the neighborhood of 80 to 90 mph.
From this exuberant test of Lexus hybrid hot rod we were able to make a few important determinations.
When we returned from our excursion, we determined one more thing a prospective buyer needs to know. The battery pack gobbles up trunk space, leaving a mere eight cubic feet for the owner’s stuff. There is enough room for two golf bags, but the space will never work for a vacationing family of four.
To be fair, Lexus has not positioned the GS450h as a mainstream car. Its real mission is to educate consumers that hybrid power can be more than just an exercise in fuel savings and reduced emissions. The premium brand of Japanese manufacturer Toyota has set its U.S. sales goal for the GS450h at a very modest 2,000 a year.
Still, Lexus estimates that, driven similarly to the V-8 sedan, the hybrid will save 200 gallons of fuel a year and, probably most important to many, over a 150,000-mile life expectancy it will release 17 tons less carbon dioxide into the air than its V-8 competition.
The guess here is that Lexus will find enough well-heeled buyers who want to indulge their slightly guilty pleasures with a relatively clear conscience.
Engine Type | 3.5-liter V6, DOHC 24 valve with continuously variable valve timing with intelligence (VVT-i). |
Horsepower | 292 @ 6,400 RPM |
Torque | 267 lb.-ft @ 4,800 rpm |
Fuel Recommended | Premium Unleaded. |
Hybrid Power System | Series/parallel system with gas engine and 2 electric motors |
Transmission | Electronically-controlled Continuously Variable Transmission (ECVT) with 2-stage torque multiplication, power and snow modes |
Motor Generator 1 (MG1) | Primary generator, engine starter, controls engine speed 180 hp |
Motor Generator 2 (MG2) | Drives rear wheels; regenerative braking 197 hp |
Drive Type | Rear-wheel drive |
Tires (std) Tires (opt) | 245/40R18 Z-rated summer tires 245/40R18 all-season run-flat tires |
Overall Length | 190″ |
Wheelbase | 112.2″ |
Width | 71.7″ |
Turning Diameter | 36.7 ft Curb to Curb |
Curb Weight | 4,134 lbs. |
Fuel Tank | 17.2 Gals. |
Miles Per Gallon | EPA city 25, hwy 28. |
Acceleration 0 to 60 | 5.2 Seconds |
Base Sticker Price | $54,900 + $650 destination charge |
(partial list)
Any information provided on this Website is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace consultation with a professional mechanic. The accuracy and timeliness of the information may change from the time of publication.