We were less than impressed by our test model's $1845
Leather/Ecsaine interior trim package with power front seats;
earlier we described it as being suede-like, but it could
also be considered cloth-like. Another $300 for the full
leather seems like a bargain (which is not to say that $2145
for leather and power seats is a bargain). The cockpit reflects
an attempt at driver-oriented and contemporary styling in
a theme of graphite-tinged plastics and machined metallic
finishes. Drilled aluminum pedals, a polished metal ball
shift lever rising from a notched
gate rimmed by chrome, and doorsills covered with stainless
steel scuff plates studded with rubber cleats add an appearance
of high technology. A graphite plate on the driver-side
door panel surrounds rocker toggles that power the windows,
door locks and both exterior mirrors.
The instrument panel includes a round analog speedometer
containing three smaller analog gauges: temperature, voltmeter
and instant fuel mileage. It's designed to resemble a sports
chrono-graph wristwatch, and in its attempt to be cute,
cool, clever, unique, whatever, it fails the no-nonsense
test: the instant fuel gauge is too small to be useful,
as a tiny needle flips in a tiny semicircle between 0 and
80 mpg. The watch face cluster stands between a half-moon
tachometer on the left, whose clarity is compromised by
the clutter of the faux chronograph, and quarter-circle
fuel gauge to the right, above a digital display for gear
selection and trip odometer.
The vents and pods for audio and climate controls drop
down from the center of the dash to the console, with a
new armrest for 2002. The power bucket seats felt a bit
hard and wide, compared to the fantastic optional sport
seats in the
BMW Z3 Coupe we had just climbed out of,
but they felt better as that memory faded. When we drove
the SportCross hard through the curves, there was adequate
lateral support, and the suede-like cloth-like Escaine surface
was good and grippy.
A very attractive stitched leather three-spoke steering
wheel (spokes at 3, 9 and 6 o'clock) tilts manually and
contains left and right sets of finger buttons that enablethe driver to shift up or down one gear at a time without
removing his or her hands from the wheel. The front button
downshifts with the thumb and the back button upshifts with
the middle finger.
The sedan's firm rear bench will accommodate three in a
pinch, and has a fold-down armrest that conceals a small
pass-through portal to the trunk. The SportCross model's
five-door configuration, with the 60/40 rear seatbacks dropped,
produces 21.8 cubic feet of cargo space, more than twice
as much as the trunk of the sedan. The wheel wells protrude
quite a bit into the cargo area, making the space hourglass-shaped,
which reduces cargo capacity.
Chief engineer for the IS300, Nobuaki Katayama, is a
passionate racing fan who admits that his personal driving
style is dynamic; he likes to pitch his car. So he designed
the chassis and suspension of the rear-wheel-drive IS300
to accommodate such a style. He did a great job. Last year
we were impressed by the agility of the sedan, and the 2002
SportCross corners even better than the sedan, given its
slightly better weight distribution (53/47 versus 54/46)
and wider rear tires. But the five-speed, with its stiffer
sport suspension, should corner best
of all. Katayama started by mounting the engine (and battery)
as far back as possible. The double-wishbone inde-pendent
suspension was specifically designed to resist lateral roll
in corners and front-end dive under hard braking, and it
thoroughly succeeds. Meanwhile, the speed-assisted rack-and-pinion
steering provides precise cornering with excellent feedback.
But it was the car's balance that was downright dazzling.
We drove it very aggressively (Katayama-san would have approved)
through our favorite remote twisty section IN THE WET, and
we kept trying and trying to get the tail to hang out, but
the car would not oversteer. Our SportCross was not equipped
with the optional Vehicle Skid Control, but it did not seem
to need it, and that's saying a whole lot. Still, for $350,
the VSC option remains a steal. Think fail-safe. Think ice.
The SportCross handled better in the wet than the front-wheel-drive
Acura TL Type-S, for one, did in the dry. Of all the cars
we tested in the last year, only the all
Subaru WRX was more fun in corners; and
that list includes such excellent sports cars as the
BMW Z3,
Audi TT,
Honda S2000,
Toyota MR2,
Mazda Miata, even the
BMW M3.
It probably wasn't Katayama-san who programmed the IS300
transmission. We loved the operation by buttons on the steering
wheel, but the mapping of the five-speed manual automatic
gearbox is problematic. Manual is a misnomer. Even in the
manual mode, it's often automatic, which is both frustrating
and confusing
when you're driving hard. It overrides you, especially downshifting,
and when it does, the digital readout on the dash often
doesn't change, so it's actually inaccurate; the readout
indicates the last gear you selected (the gear you want
to be in), not the gear the car actually is in. Drive into
a corner hard, begin clicking the button on the steering
wheel to downshift, and often it won't respond. It's a mechanism
to prevent abuse to the transmission and/or over-revving,
but it's set way too conservatively; one time it wouldn't
even downshift for us at a modest 3800 rpm. Sometimes, accelerating
away from curves, it even leaves you below the powerband,
which is reasonably broad. Also, it won't do short-shifts
when you want heavy throttle at lower rpm.
Bottom line: If you really want to control shifting with
the IS300, you should get the manual transmission.
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Turning to the ride and brakes, the IS300 gets great
again. The ride presented remarkable equanimity, which is
to say it felt the same over every kind of surface. High-speed
ripples, firm and steady; low-speed bumps, firm and never
harsh. Out on the freeway, it delivered a nap-inducing smoothness.
And the brakes, with big ventilated discs in front and solid
discs in back, were always there. The anti-dive suspension
design works. We abused the brakes during our longest cornering
session and they never faded; we drove into rain-slicked
second-gear turns too fast and too late, relying on the
anti-lock system to save us, and it did, with rock-steadiness
and without protest.
The engine, using Lexus's continuously variable valve timing
system, offers keen acceleration, but the three models are
not equal. The five-speed is quickest, the sedan next, and
Sport Cross the slowest because it's the heaviest. According
to Lexus, 0 to 60 times are 6.8, 7.3, and 7.4 seconds respectively,
and quarter-mile times are 15.1, 15.3, and 15.6. Finally,
we were both puzzled and impressed by the performance of
the traction control with optional limited-slip differential;
the rear wheels spun quite easily on wet pavement (accelerating
lightly from uphill stop signs, for example), but when we
pounded the throttle to see just how bad it was, the limited-slip
kicked in with a shudder, and prevented the wheels from
further spinning. We can't say what role the Bridgestone
Potenza summer radials played in this. But we can say that
they did a great job gripping the wet road, back on those
memorable curves.
The IS300 sedan offers a viable
alternative to the
BMW 3-Series, equaling or bettering the German benchmark vehicle
in ride, handling, power, brakes, comfort and price. That's
a strong statement. The IS300 SportCross is an excellent (if
not original) concept with tremendous promise. If it had an
available roofrack and either a manual gearbox or sportier
programming of the manual automatic transmission, it would
fulfill that promise.