Back in the driver’s seat, if parallel parking isn’t your thing, the LS600hL also has it sorted. Line up next to a parked car and select reverse. From there you place the rectangle in your desired spot via the LCD screen and hold on; the car literally reverses and turns the wheel into your parking space. In theory, it works great, but in practice it’s a relatively useless gimmick. By the time you activate the system, you could have parked, run your errands and made it back home in time for the stock report.
At $233,000 for the five-seat model and $240,000 for the four-seat model (being test driven), it does significantly undercut its German competition (think S-class, A8 and 7-series), it has nothing on them when it comes to the drive though.
The LS600hL – even in sport mode – wallows through corners. The lack of steering feel and the sheer mass of the car prevent it from fitting any type of sporty image. This isn’t too much of an issue though when you consider that it will predominantly be used for ferrying passengers – opposed to tacking tight bends, but it is one aspect that the Lexus’s competitors have over it.
Lexus claims a combined fuel economy figure of 9.3-litres/100km. If that figure is true, I was born on the moon. The closest I could get with a mix of city and highway driving was 13.5-litres/100km. The other far-fetched figure is the 0-100km/h time of 6.3-seconds. Again, my outer-space birth place stands if that figure can be achieved, the closest I could get was around 7.0-seconds.
As far as a luxury hybrid car goes, the Lexus LS600hL has all bases covered. The features list really is endless, it includes things you didn’t even know existed – all as standard fitment.
It’s not a driver’s car though, it really is built for passengers. If that doesn’t concern you, you really can’t go wrong with the LS600hL. But if it’s an all-rounder that you’re after; you will have to look at its German opposition. If you do that though, be prepared to reach deeper into your wallet, as they certainly don’t come cheap.
Anthony Crawford:
First and foremost Lexus means luxury. Few, if any, will ever argue that point. But then, there’s the build quality. On par with the world’s most prestigious marques, and that includes Rolls Royce and Bentley.
If you take into account the colossal R&D, which has gone into the LS series cars, then I doubt the company books would show anything but a loss. But you simply cannot view such outstanding automotive achievements in this way.
Do you remember that TV advertisement many years ago, where an LS Lexus drove into or out of (can’t quite remember the details) one of those Posh US country clubs, whose car park resembled a multi-franchise BMW/Mercedes Benz showroom, and the voice over said something like, “there goes the smartest guy here.” |