n/a
Before you start writing me hate mail about being an elitist scum, please read a little further. My everyday car is an IS350 variant I bought pre-owned. I think the car is underrated and that a case can be made for it as a relatively affordable car because it fills two roles. First, it is an excellent 2 + 3 seat sedan, or 2+2 coupe, that gets real world mileage of about 24 mpg overall. On the highway it can get near 30 mpg. That is not great, but read on. I consider the IS350 to be a combination of sports car, family sedan, and luxury car. It is a good looking car too which makes it a nice date-night car. By owning this rear-drive, 306 hp car with paddle shifters, one can effectively drop whatever sports car they might have had as a second car. Before my IS350 I had a ?07 Miata and this car is a much more capable on-road sports car than that car was. As a Lexus sedan it also has a low cost for insurance relative to other cars at the price point and it holds its value well. Therefore, I argue that this car can take the place of say a Mustang and a Camry, or a Miata and Ford Fusion. It is even available as a hard-top convertible if you want a bald-spot tanner.
I would try to buy this car now too because the all new 2013 IS350 is coming, thus, dealers might be very interested in moving their inventory to avoid having both models on the lot. Also, there may be some great certified pre-owned deals as owners of IS models come in to move up to the new, larger IS. The IS is not a pure sports car. However, it does go from 0-60 mph in about 5.2 seconds and it is rear drive. The car does everything very well except steer, but that is an ailment for our times as every manufacturer has had to move to electric steering. Even the new Corvette, BMW 3 Series, and all the Porsche models.
Utility Vehicle Acura RDX
I would consider this section, ?what would I buy if I had to live with just one vehicle?? My choice would be a vehicle that has good cargo space, can seat 5 very comfortably, and is also relatively fun to drive and somewhat safe, because my kids would be in it. For me that car is the Acura RDX. I like the V6 power, high up driving position the crossover offers, all-wheel drive for winters and the price point. At $40K this car has the content I want, but not more than I want. Here in New England I have sworn never to own only a sedan again. That is because it is unsafe. The last few winters the snow banks at the end of the streets have been higher than the windows in a sedan like an Accord, but not higher than the windows in my ?07 Highlander. So I can see around corners and sedan drivers cannot. Thus, if I have to own only one car it must be a crossover with good driver?s seat height. I consider anything else unsafe in winter.
The RDX is also fuel efficient. Compare its 27 MPG in all-wheel drive and you will see it is close to the new 4 cylinder Toyota RAV4, 4-cylinder (29 mpg) and stomps on the new Hyundai Santa Fe Sport turbo?s 24 mpg. And it is faster than both.
Green Car Honda Accord Plug-In Hybrid
Like Patrick Rall, TN?s editor, I am also not a ?green-car? guy. However, I do recognize that there are some folks who are for philosophical reasons, and I realize that in certain applications, taxis for example, low fuel consumption cars make good sense. Thinking it through, if I were in a situation where I was to be granted the green car of my choice, say as a car for making sales calls for example, I would select the Honda Accord Plug-In Hybrid (PIH).
I have owned two Honda Accords, a 2003 and a 2006. Both had the V6 and both were excellent cars for on the road selling, which is how I used them. During the time I owned those cars they were ?Ten-Cent? cars. Meaning that the fuel they used cost less than ten cents per mile. The V6 Accord could then, and can now exceed 30 mpg on the highway in actual use, but this new PIH Accord has an EPA estimated 115 mpg equivalent! That is the best energy economy of any mid-full sized passenger car. In fact, when operated in full electric mode, which the Accord can do for about 13 miles or so, the car is 23% more energy efficient than a Tesla Model S (80kW-hr battery pack). Unlike the Model S, the Accord can also be fueled up anywhere in North America and has a range of 574 miles using both its liquid fuel and battery energy which would be great for sales calls in New England and beyond. When used as a hybrid the car gets 46 mpg combined, which is frankly an astounding efficiency for a 5 passenger car this big. This car will be a ?ten-cent? car for the next decade.
The Accord PIH sold in America, like all Accords is built only in the US. Not Canada, not Mexico, in America. I like that. I don?t exclude imported cars (see above), but it is a buying consideration for me. The price is also quite nice. This Accord would only cost me (or my company) about $29,000, the same as a loaded Accord with the 4 cylinder. That is due in part to rebates from the Federal government, and the People?s Republic of Taxachussetts. Rebates which I hate. It kills me that these cars are subsidized with taxpayer dollars, but I am being told to pick a green-car, so there you have it. Finally, Accords are relatively reliable. Just a quick list of the parts that failed on my two Accords over about 100K miles are; the transmission, two struts, the exhaust system, the sunroof (shattered before that became popular), and various interior parts. So I figure with all those failures I am due to own an Accord trouble free due to the law of averages.
What do you think of these picks, Patrick?s, and Aaron?s? What would be your choices?
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