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2010 Lexus HS 250h

2010 Lexus HS 250h
Overall rating:  Product Rating: 3.0

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mkaresh

mkaresh


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The new 2010 HS 250h: a Cimmaron for Lexus?


by mkaresh: Written: Nov 01 '09


Product Rating: 3.0 Recommended: Yes 

Pros: Interior materials, toys, highest MPG in a premium brand car
Cons: Exterior styling, MPG lower than some will expect, rear seat room, ride
The Bottom Line: 

Not a great car, but not an embarrassment either.




Every luxury car brand seems compelled to explore how low it can venture in the American market without hopelessly devaluing itself. Mercedes no longer offers the C-Class Coupe and has shied away from offering the A- and B-Classes in the United States. BMW hasn't offered a semi-affordable four-cylinder on this side of the Atlantic since the 318ti was sent packing a decade ago. The Jaguar X-Type didn't cut the mustard. And Cadillac is still waiting for the world to forget the 1980s Cimmaron. Unfazed by this clear pattern of failure, Toyota for 2010 offers up the Lexus HS 250h. So, shall the ridicule begin?

Lexus HS 250h Styling

A key takeaway from the success of the Prius: Americans prefer their hybrids in custom sheetmetal. So the Lexus HS 250h gets its set from the Euro-market Toyota Avensis. This would be a neat trick, if the Avensis was either distinctive or attractive. But it's neither. The windshield and backlight are more steeply raked than a Corolla's, requiring Prius-like little windows in the A-Pillars, and the HS's exterior dimensions are a half-size larger than the compact Toyota. Problem is, most eyes will see a Corolla tarted up with so much of the requisite Lexus chrome trim that it's clearly overcompensating for either its ungainly proportions or its low birth.

Things get better once you're inside the HS 250h. First off, the door sounds very Lexus when pulled shut. The interior design has shades of econobox, but the solid-looking center stack slopes downward stylishly and both it and the instrument binnacle are upholstered. The only other Lexus with any upholstered bits on the IP is the LS 600h flagship. Is the material leather or leatherette? It's certainly not the creamy stuff slathered all over the interior of the 600h, but is at least a good imitation of basic leather. As in recent Cadillacs, upholstering parts of the IP takes the interior ambiance up a notch or two. This is overcompensation I like. Ditto the definitely LS-like semi-aniline leather that trims the heated and ventilated seating surfaces in the Premium trim.

Lexus HS 250h Accommodations

From the start Lexus has outclassed other luxury brands in ergonomics, and the HS 250h carries on this fine tradition. Logically sized and arranged knobs and buttons handle many functions. Secondary settings and the nav system are operated, as in the RX SUV, via Lexus's response to iDrive. A comfortable palmrest, force-feedback, and slick graphics provide the console-mounted toggle pad with much of the familiar feel of a computer mouse. Where iDrive is often frustrating, "Remote Touch" (I didn't name it) can be downright fun. An available 15-speaker Mark Levinson system provides another sign that the HS 250h isn't a Toyota anymore.

Good stuff in the Lexus HS 250h continues with the front seats. They're very comfortably contoured, and provide good support despite being much cushier than any from Germany. The rear seats-not so good. Externally, when compared to the Corolla, the HS 250h is a half foot longer, and inch wider, and 1.6 inches taller. And yet the Lexus has nearly two inches less legroom. Somehow two generations of sluggish IS sales have not taught Lexus that Americans aren't big on luxury sedans with tight rear seats. You don't want to go below 36 inches of rear legroom. The HS 250h offers 34.5. Where did all of those extra inches go? I'm guessing those raked windows and the hybrid battery pack that sits between the rear seat and the also compromised trunk.

I've never been a fan of cars with A-Pillars so steeply raked they require windowlettes, and I'm not going to start with the HS. If I wanted to feel like I'm driving a minivan, I'd own a minivan. At least the view over the IP is otherwise good-no acres of plastic.

For those times when the guy in the SUV feels compelled to pull as far forward as you are when you're both trying to turn onto a busy street (as if he can't see over your car), the Premium-only Technology Package includes a wide-view front monitor. Via an ultra-wide-angle camera mounted in the nose of the car, this monitor gives you a good, long view in both directions, at once. Look closely, though, because objects in this view are very small and MUCH closer than they appear.

The wide-view front monitor is only one of many features that should (but won't) guarantee that the Lexus HS 250h will never trade paint with another automobile. We've also got ABS, brake assist informed by a radar-based pre-collision system, TRAC, VSC, adaptive cruise, auto-dimming steering-linked LED headlights, a trio of auto-dimming mirrors, a rearview monitor, front-and-rear obstacle detection, lane departure warning, lane departure prevention (when the warning fails), and a driver attention monitor. In the case that all of this fails (perhaps because the driver is too busy toying with the Remote Touch), a bevy of ten airbags can deploy to cushion the impact and an automatic collision notification system will dial 911.

Lexus HS 250h Performance

The Lexus HS 250h shares its 147+40-horsepower gas+electric parallel hybrid powertrain with the Toyota Camry Hybrid. I sampled a TCH soon after it was introduced, and hated this powertrain. Rough engine, ropy CVT, non-linear power delivery, non-linear brakes...a whole lot of not good. Well, they fixed it. The HS 250h's brakes suffer no obvious transition from regenerative braking to conventional braking. And the 2.4-liter gas-hybrid four-cylinder sounds and feels almost normal in regular driving. There's some scoot off the line, thanks to the assistance provided by the insta-torque electric motor. Acceleration slackens at higher speeds, but never becomes downright slow. Force the Lexus HS 250h's engine up towards the assumed (no tach) redline, and acceleration is more than adequate. More of a concern given the brand: the inescapable noise of a four-cylinder hitched to a CVT. It'll do for those focused on the fuel economy or the Remote Touch rather than performance.

Performance? What about the Lexus HS 250h suggests that the word should even appear in this review? That would be the 225/45WR18 tires. What are WR-rated treads doing on a car limited to 112 MPH? Well, they provide considerably more grip than you'll find in a Prius, and together with mildly aggressive suspension tuning keep the tallish, ungainly-proportioned HS 250h from falling all over itself in aggressively-taken curves. But they contribute to a much flintier ride than people expect in a Lexus. Overcompensation, again, and this time it harms the car's prospects even more than the tight rear seat. While the latter will only occasionally become an issue, and even then not for the driver, a jittery, unsettled ride affects everyone in the car, and often.

Oddly enough, a Touring package that bundles these tires with a sport-tuned suspension (and a rear spoiler and, wait for it, aluminum sport pedals!) is optional on the base HS 250h but not available on the Premium. Is this suspension an undocumented standard feature with the Premium? It's hard to believe that Lexus would offer the car with an even harsher suspension.

This being a non-performance hybrid (well, apart from the sport pedals and low-profile rubber), people are going to expect great fuel economy. The 35/34 city/highway ratings are better than those of, say, an Acura TSX (21/30), but are a far cry from those of a Prius (51/48). Good enough? Perhaps for those who do most of their driving in city conditions. But no one's going to be ecstatic. Toyota might want to figure out how Ford squeezed 41/36 out of the Fusion Hybrid.

Lexus HS 250h Price Comparisons and Pricing

The Lexus HS 250h starts at $35,075, and fully optioned runs over $48,000.

It has no direct competitors. The Acura TSX probably comes closest, but has no hybrid powertrain and isn't quite as nice inside or as heavily equipped when fully loaded. When both cars are comparably equipped, the Acura runs $6,000 less at MSRP and $5,000 less at invoice after a $1,000 adjustment for the Lexus' extra features.

A BMW 335d's EPA ratings of 23/36 don't match the Lexus' in the city, but better it on the highway, while offering far stronger performance. The 335d is about $10,500 more after a $900 tax credit, but BMW has been providing a $4,500 "Eco Credit" (rebate by another name). Anyone interested in performance will spend $6,000 extra for the BMW. BMW offers less powerful diesels in Europe that would more directly compete in performance and price with the Lexus HS 250h.

Prices change frequently, and differences will vary based on feature level. To quickly generate these and other comparisons with the specific features you want, visit my Web site, TrueDelta.com. (It's the only site that provides true "apples-to-apples" price comparisons.)

TrueDelta's page for the HS 250h:

http://www.truedelta.com/models/HS.php

Last Words

In the end, the Lexus HS 250h is saved by low expectations. Based on the exterior appearance and specs you expect it to be awful, only to find that the performance and handling achieve adequacy and that some aspects of the car-the interior trimmings, the front seats, the toys-are surprisingly good. Even the bad bits, the cramped rear seat and crunchy ride, will only stunt sales of the car. A luxury brand can survive these disabilities, homely exterior styling, and the confused silliness of sport aluminum pedals and speed-rated rubber on an econo-tuned hybrid. The one thing the HS 250h could not afford to seem, especially with an all-boxes-checked $48,000 sticker ($44,770 as tested), is cheap. And, thanks to the good bits, it does not.

A Note on Lexus HS 250h Reliability

I cannot practically cover reliability within the context of this review. However, many people are interested in such information, so I've been collecting my own data. Results are posted to TrueDelta.com, with updates every three months. Unlike other sources, TrueDelta clearly identifies what difference it will make if you buy a Lexus HS 250h rather than another vehicle by providing "times in the shop" stats.

To report results, TrueDelta needs reliability data on all cars--not just the HS 250h--from people like you. To encourage participation, those who help provide the data will receive free access to the site's reliability information. Non-participants pay an access fee.

Details here:

http://www.truedelta.com/reliability.php

Alphabetized links to my other vehicle reviews can be found on my profile page.
Amount Paid (US$): 44,770
Model and Options: HS 250h Premium
Product Rating: 3.0
Recommended: Yes 
Seat Comfort:  
Build Quality  
Roominess:  

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