FIRST TEST: Lexus GS 450h - hybrid with grunt

Published Jun 5, 2006

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By Sean O'Grady

Lexus GS 450h specifications

Price:

from £38 015 to £47 135.

Engine:

Hybrid powertrain - 3456cc V6 petrol engine coupled to a 150kW electric motor.

Transmission:

Automatic/six-speed manual sequential.

Performance:

250km/h, 0-100km/h 5.9sec, 7.93 litres/100km.

They're not modest, the folks at Lexus, Toyota's prestige brand. On the recent European launch of their new hybrid saloon, the GS 450h, they made remarkable claims about their car.

"Lexus engineers achieved levels of NOx and HC emissions that, combined, are lower than any other combustion engine on the market."

"The new Lexus is comprehensively equipped with the most technologically advanced pre-emptive, active and passive safety systems available today."

"The world's most technologically advanced drive train."

If you're exposed to Lexus propaganda for too long you start to wonder what God might have found himself doing if the Lexus engineers had been around during the Creation. Making tea, probably.

Despite the hyperbole, you may already know this Lexus not as the most fabby car on the planet but the one that David Cameron decided to save the planet in. The Lexus 450h is the official car of the leader of the British Parliamentary Opposition, or rather, the car that the Tory leader's chauffeur, paperwork and clothes travel in behind Mr Cameron when he's riding his bicycle and being all green for the media.

You may remember when this particular bit of political stuntery was exposed. Whatever you made of it, the most welcome outcome of all the fuss is that the ideal of greener motoring and awareness of the alternative technologies already on the market have gained wider currency.

So now we've all heard of the hybrid Lexus 450h, what are we to make of it? Like all Lexus cars, it is a superbly built, comfortable, fast cruiser, full of fun technology (like the colour reversing-camera). To be sure, this is a very clever machine. As with all hybrids, it uses power otherwise wasted while braking and decelerating to charge batteries that can drive an electric motor.

Most impressive motor

That motor can pull the Lexus along on its own for very short periods at very low speeds. More often, it helps the petrol engine out, cutting its efforts, improving performance and fuel consumption.

Perhaps the most impressive thing about it is the strength of that electric motor, which has a maximum power output of 150kW - on its own about the same as that found in the V6 Jaguar X-type's petrol unit, say.

Coupled, as it is in this hybrid, with the Lexus's smooth 3.5-litre petrol V6 and its 220kW, you have a car that has very capable performance indeed - about the same as a 4.5-litre petrol V8, for the sake of argument, which is why Lexus has given it the model designation 450.

Electric motors also deliver their power smoothly and Lexus has added a sort of mini-auto gearbox within the electric unit that helps it deliver even more low-down punch. You may not have thought of a hybrid as a performance machine - and it isn't perfect - but the electric motor and petrol engine are an intriguing combination.

The downside is the constantly variable transmission (CVT) gearbox, which has a whiney, thrashy quality, and the extra weight of the batteries, which will take the edge off performance. Having said that, this Lexus is equipped with an override that turns the CVT box into a six-speed sequential one. Maybe those Lexus engineers are almost as clever as they say they are.

Six seconds to 100

There are various buttons and gearbox settings you can select that push your Lexus along the spectrum from slightly wallowy vaguely green limo to full-on sports saloon. If you choose to exploit all of this machine's performance, you'll find it getting you to 100km/h in less than six seconds an on to a governed 250km/h.

All that, and an official average of 7.93 litres/100km. Emissions of CO2 and other noxious substances are very low for a car of this size and bulk. The official verdict is that this Lexus pumps out 186g of CO2 every kilometre. That's about the same as a Mondeo, but it's not that far astray of the equivalents for the Lexus's main opposition, the German diesels.

So the BMW 530d manages 179g/km and the Mercedes-Benz E320 a credible 194g/km. True, being a petrol rather than a diesel machine, the Lexus has the edge on particulate pollution, and it is way better than its petrol counterparts, but it's not that great either.

A diesel hybrid might be a different matter, but given that Lexus is aiming at the US market, and the US doesn't love diesel, I doubt we'll see one soon.

Cameron's stated reason for passing on the offer of the Lexus's smaller brother, the Toyota Prius, was that there wasn't enough room in it. Well, when he opens the boot of his Lexus, he's going to get a nasty surprise. There's not much room in there for anything more than a change of boxers and all his party's policy documents, which is not very much at all.

Basically a conversion

You can squeeze in a couple of suitcases but the hatchback Prius is a more capable carrier. Its boot holds 408 litres against the Lexus 450h's 286. The Prius is narrower than the Lexus and there is less legroom but there isn't that much in it in the cabin either.

Whereas the Prius was always designed as a hybrid green machine (aerodynamic shape, thoughtful mechanical layout) the Lexus is basically a conversion of an existing, conventional sports saloon. For all their cleverness, the Lexus engineers haven't been able to create space where there was none. So they're not that wonderful.

THE RIVALS

Mercedes-Benz E320 CDI Sport

Europe's favourite exec saloon, but it has lost ground in the States to Lexus, presumably because Americans are less snobby about badges. There's a mildly facelifted and safer version out now. - The Independent, London

BMW 535d SE

Interior ambience and mechanical competence highly impressive. Fine diesel combining excellent performance, economy and low CO2. Downsides are, arguably, styling and the iDrive system.

Citroën C6 2.7 HDI Exclusive

Imposing and luxurious, in truth it won't divert that many potential Lexus customers, who presumably rate reliability above all. However, it's an interesting alternative to the usual suspects.

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