2021 Acura TLX Reviews **2024 TLX Reviews (starting page 70)**
#2401
For me, it's still better than the ski passthrough that I have on my 4G, which is enough for most trips to Home Depot. Otherwise I'll just spend $20 to rent the pickup or have it delivered. Completely a non-factor in my purchase decision.
#2402
I'm guessing there is likely some valid reason for adding it. How much of a difference it makes, who knows.
For me, it's still better than the ski passthrough that I have on my 4G, which is enough for most trips to Home Depot. Otherwise I'll just spend $20 to rent the pickup or have it delivered. Completely a non-factor in my purchase decision.
For me, it's still better than the ski passthrough that I have on my 4G, which is enough for most trips to Home Depot. Otherwise I'll just spend $20 to rent the pickup or have it delivered. Completely a non-factor in my purchase decision.
#2403
I don’t think it was the marketing department; if it were they would have already given it cheesy name like the IconicStiff Rear Strut Brace
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#2404
Something BMW didn't do on the E46 including the M3 models which resulted in cracked rear subframe mounts on the unibody chassis due to poor structural design/engineering of the E46 chassis which in general BMW didn't correct after warranty and in warranty provided a cheap poor solution of using hard foam injection to spread the load/forces. My brother's had five BMW's including a E46 convertible but fortunately sold it before the inevitable subframe mount cracking occurred. There are aftermarket gusseting sheet panels to enhance the load spread, some work others just allow the propagation of the load to further into unibody for other cracks to occur.
What's sad is Pro-E/SolidWorks both had FEA in their tools then, and if BMW would have mounted a car on a continuous hydraulic wheel platform they could have tested the E46 to destruction and discovered the inherent design flaw
Last edited by Legend2TL; 05-10-2021 at 12:15 PM.
#2405
Or perhaps Honda/Acura chassis engineers wanted to strengthen the rear bulkhead structure to provide greater torsional and lateral stiffness to enhance suspension/chassis performance?
Something BMW didn't do on the E46 including the M3 models which resulted in cracked rear subframe mounts on the unibody chassis due to poor structural design/engineering of the E46 chassis which in general BMW didn't correct after warranty and in warranty provided a cheap poor solution of using hard foam injection to spread the load/forces. My brother's had five BMW's including a E46 convertible but fortunately sold it before the inevitable subframe mount cracking occurred. There are aftermarket gusseting sheet panels to enhance the load spread, some work others just allow the propagation of the load to further into unibody for other cracks to occur.
What's sad is Pro-E/SolidWorks both had FEA in their tools then, and if BMW would have mounted a car on a continuous hydraulic wheel platform they could have tested the E46 to destruction and discovered the inherent design flaw
Something BMW didn't do on the E46 including the M3 models which resulted in cracked rear subframe mounts on the unibody chassis due to poor structural design/engineering of the E46 chassis which in general BMW didn't correct after warranty and in warranty provided a cheap poor solution of using hard foam injection to spread the load/forces. My brother's had five BMW's including a E46 convertible but fortunately sold it before the inevitable subframe mount cracking occurred. There are aftermarket gusseting sheet panels to enhance the load spread, some work others just allow the propagation of the load to further into unibody for other cracks to occur.
What's sad is Pro-E/SolidWorks both had FEA in their tools then, and if BMW would have mounted a car on a continuous hydraulic wheel platform they could have tested the E46 to destruction and discovered the inherent design flaw
What surprised me in in 2021 after announcing that the TLX's Torsional Rigidity is up by 50 percent they did not build the structure strong enough to handle the Type-S loads without a brace.
#2406
Yeah the E46 produced from 1997 to 2006 had more than its share of faults. All of the ones still racing, & they are a huge class in club racing, have full cages to stiffen them & provide safety for the driver.E46 lead to BMW's crappy reliability reputation that took a number of years to reduce. That said its now 2021 & they don't seem to be ripping themselves apart with the current structure. Lots of defense of the TLX brace from people who whined about the back seats in previous generation limited trunk usefulness.
What surprised me in in 2021 after announcing that the TLX's Torsional Rigidity is up by 50 percent they did not build the structure to handle the Type-S loads without a brace.
What surprised me in in 2021 after announcing that the TLX's Torsional Rigidity is up by 50 percent they did not build the structure to handle the Type-S loads without a brace.
Last edited by Legend2TL; 05-10-2021 at 01:24 PM.
#2407
Had to run out. Just wanted to add my own experience with the E46. Had a 2004 330Ci ZHP 6MT convertible. That was the M440 convertible of its time. Sold the car when I bought the 2013 135IS 6MT that I still have. The 04 had no major warranty work in the 4 year 50,000 mile limit. Brakes were pretty much to only mechanical parts replaced by BMW as freebies under the free maintenance package. After warranty I did all the work on the car. More sets of brakes, 4 O2 sensors, a main fault of the E46 top end gasket leaking oil about 90,000 miles. Spark plugs with the gasket since I had to remove some top end stuff. Two rubbery intake hoses dried out & had to be replaced. That was pretty much it over 125,000 miles,
The E46 was a reliability gamble but I figured I could manage it if something broke. Gamble paid off & the experience with that car led me to buy the 2011 335IS DCT. So far so good with all of them including the two that were modified.
The E46 was a reliability gamble but I figured I could manage it if something broke. Gamble paid off & the experience with that car led me to buy the 2011 335IS DCT. So far so good with all of them including the two that were modified.
#2408
I'm guessing the engineers wanted as stiff a structure as they could design/engineer so they took a stiff chassis and made it stiffer. The K and V bracing are some of the most efficient geometric force/load structure there are in mechanical engineering. Acura/Honda are not the first to use it, many other cars have added it to their structural designs to stiffen up a chassis. K or V bracing are used all over modern unibodies, sometimes added exclusively to certain models.
I built this car from a 1981 280ZX T-Top. When you cut the roof off a closed car it has all the rigidity of a banana skin. It has a fabricated second frame including upper body work support. Car survived 3 kids going through high school & university, one on her first job. Car was donated to Make A Wish about 6 years ago when I needed garage room to built the car Nexx gets all upset over. The trunk lid is the T-Top rear hatch with the glass removed & sheeted over. A cowel was built behind the seats to connect the two sides & is tube supported. Top is a modified TR-8 frame with custom fabric.
It seems we agree that they added the brace to stiffen the unibody. Part I don't care for it they did not directly reinforce the unibody structure itself but added something JC Whitney would sell. Guess they were trapped into it by having to build to a price. Its a good inexpensive solution. But think how much nicer the whole lineup would be with the upgraded unibody. Marketing could say we stiffened the car by 70% instead of 50%. But based on a lot of the comments made here about how great the brace is I guess in this case they know their customers.
#2409
Yeah the E46 produced from 1997 to 2006 had more than its share of faults. All of the ones still racing, & they are a huge class in club racing, have full cages to stiffen them & provide safety for the driver.E46 lead to BMW's crappy reliability reputation that took a number of years to reduce. That said its now 2021 & they don't seem to be ripping themselves apart with the current structure. Lots of defense of the TLX brace from people who whined about the back seats in previous generation limited trunk usefulness.
What surprised me in in 2021 after announcing that the TLX's Torsional Rigidity is up by 50 percent they did not build the structure strong enough to handle the Type-S loads without a brace.
What surprised me in in 2021 after announcing that the TLX's Torsional Rigidity is up by 50 percent they did not build the structure strong enough to handle the Type-S loads without a brace.
But if a square brace doesn't cut it, what Acura should have done is to bolt the back seat shut to cover the /\ brace on the Type-S. What good is a backseat opening that can be seen through but cannot be used.
Just give the Type-S a non-fold-down back seat with a ski bag pass through, just as it has always been for the 4G TL.
#2410
It is best if the extra support is a square structure. Then at least the opening, no matter how small, can still be used.
But if a square brace doesn't cut it, what Acura should have done is to bolt the back seat shut to cover the /\ brace on the Type-S. What good is a backseat opening that can be seen through but cannot be used.
Just give the Type-S a non-fold-down back seat with a ski bag pass through, just as it has always been for the 4G TL.
But if a square brace doesn't cut it, what Acura should have done is to bolt the back seat shut to cover the /\ brace on the Type-S. What good is a backseat opening that can be seen through but cannot be used.
Just give the Type-S a non-fold-down back seat with a ski bag pass through, just as it has always been for the 4G TL.
502bhp cars trunk brace solution not very cool or add worthy:
#2412
Thread Starter
AZ Community Team
Joined: May 2014
Posts: 3,481
Likes: 1,622
From: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Not a review but good info for people that are trying to compare reliability of the German vs. Japanese cars: https://jalopnik.com/honda-and-acura...car-1846918768
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
The following 3 users liked this post by Tony Pac:
#2413
Not a review but good info for people that are trying to compare reliability of the German vs. Japanese cars: https://jalopnik.com/honda-and-acura...car-1846918768
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
#2414
Well I just got the new TLX as a loaner for my 21 RDX. I got the RDX after my old TLX lease
All I can say is wow. I instantly regretted not leasing the new TLX instead. It's faster. Drives better. The sound system is better. More luxury. Felt more comfortable behind the wheel. I honestly felt like home in it lol
I guess this taught me that I am not the type of person who wants a crossover suv when my lease is up
Sadly, I have 28 months left on the lease lol. Only put 1,800 miles on it though.
At least now I know I wouldn't have a problem leasing it in the future.
All I can say is wow. I instantly regretted not leasing the new TLX instead. It's faster. Drives better. The sound system is better. More luxury. Felt more comfortable behind the wheel. I honestly felt like home in it lol
I guess this taught me that I am not the type of person who wants a crossover suv when my lease is up
Sadly, I have 28 months left on the lease lol. Only put 1,800 miles on it though.
At least now I know I wouldn't have a problem leasing it in the future.
#2415
Not a review but good info for people that are trying to compare reliability of the German vs. Japanese cars: https://jalopnik.com/honda-and-acura...car-1846918768
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
"The data that ANcites specifically refers to “the lowest U.S. service and warranty costs [...] in the first three months of operation.”
Since you don't pay anything for warranty work or normal maintenance for 4 years/50,000 miles or so how does this chart work?
Last edited by BEAR-AvHistory; 05-19-2021 at 08:50 PM.
The following 2 users liked this post by BEAR-AvHistory:
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#2416
They said :
"The data that ANcites specifically refers to “the lowest U.S. service and warranty costs [...] in the first three months of operation.”
Since you don't pay anything for warranty work or normal maintenance for 4 years/50,000 miles or so how does this chart work?
"The data that ANcites specifically refers to “the lowest U.S. service and warranty costs [...] in the first three months of operation.”
Since you don't pay anything for warranty work or normal maintenance for 4 years/50,000 miles or so how does this chart work?
#2417
AutoBlog
https://www.autoblog.com/2021/05/18/2021-acura-tlx-a-spec-long-term-update-drive-mode-selector/?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLmdvb2 dsZS5jb20v&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAA3QlUJkrmm8lIviF t2zlKp4OoZ7AAkxQe_YvimOxCZ4vHAApxDYScm4Ca62F1GwJbW cK0sZJ17Z1HODmNxPo5f6nuIMifzw4nbaaZv97TdiYvOliLX2K 7V2p2TqqJ_ExS-RnvMS1US0LJgizrFy3koJ14bVNXfRVNrWiSJoz5xg
Joel Stocksdale
May 18th 2021 at 11:00AM
In most cars, drive modes are typically chosen via a nondescript button tucked away in the center console. Sometimes the selector is buried in an infotainment menu. But in the TLX, it’s a huge, gleaming knob placed front and center in the main control stack. It would be impossible to miss. It’s actually even more prominent than the buttons for shifting.
With the size and placement, it’s a nice dial to grasp, and works with smooth action and a solid stop in either direction for flipping through modes. But what really brings it together is the speed at which modes are selected, and the sound the infotainment system makes upon choosing one. In some cars it can take a long time for the system to acknowledge your selection and engage it, but the Acura activates it nearly as soon as you’ve let the dial snap back to center. And it confirms your choice with sort of whoosh-y electronic clink through the speakers. It’s the kind of quick reaction and sound design you get from high-quality video game menus.
All of these aspects make the TLX nicer to use and feel more premium. It doesn’t feel like a hassle to change drive modes since it takes very little time and works well. That’s especially welcome if you like driving it in the sport mode, since the car defaults to the normal mode on start-up. It also makes the car feel like it has fast-acting software befitting a premium car.
It may seem like a small thing, but small things matter when cars have become so good. And I appreciate that Acura took its time with this seemingly little component.
Related Video:
2021 Acura TLX Long-Term Update | Drive mode selector is a surprise delight
It's a perfect example of how a physical control can improve the experience
Joel Stocksdale
May 18th 2021 at 11:00AM
In most cars, drive modes are typically chosen via a nondescript button tucked away in the center console. Sometimes the selector is buried in an infotainment menu. But in the TLX, it’s a huge, gleaming knob placed front and center in the main control stack. It would be impossible to miss. It’s actually even more prominent than the buttons for shifting.
- 2021 Acura TLX A-Spec
- Image Credit: Zac Palmer
With the size and placement, it’s a nice dial to grasp, and works with smooth action and a solid stop in either direction for flipping through modes. But what really brings it together is the speed at which modes are selected, and the sound the infotainment system makes upon choosing one. In some cars it can take a long time for the system to acknowledge your selection and engage it, but the Acura activates it nearly as soon as you’ve let the dial snap back to center. And it confirms your choice with sort of whoosh-y electronic clink through the speakers. It’s the kind of quick reaction and sound design you get from high-quality video game menus.
All of these aspects make the TLX nicer to use and feel more premium. It doesn’t feel like a hassle to change drive modes since it takes very little time and works well. That’s especially welcome if you like driving it in the sport mode, since the car defaults to the normal mode on start-up. It also makes the car feel like it has fast-acting software befitting a premium car.
It may seem like a small thing, but small things matter when cars have become so good. And I appreciate that Acura took its time with this seemingly little component.
Related Video:
Acura TLX Information
#2418
Looks like the drive reviews are starting to go out. Not a terribly in-depth analysis here but at least a first impression.
https://www.motortrend.com/cars/acur...-drive-review/
https://www.motortrend.com/cars/acur...-drive-review/
#2421
#2422
Car and Driver's review here: https://acurazine.com/forums/automot.../#post16721560
#2423
Not a review but good info for people that are trying to compare reliability of the German vs. Japanese cars: https://jalopnik.com/honda-and-acura...car-1846918768
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
They said :
"The data that ANcites specifically refers to “the lowest U.S. service and warranty costs [...] in the first three months of operation.”
Since you don't pay anything for warranty work or normal maintenance for 4 years/50,000 miles or so how does this chart work?
"The data that ANcites specifically refers to “the lowest U.S. service and warranty costs [...] in the first three months of operation.”
Since you don't pay anything for warranty work or normal maintenance for 4 years/50,000 miles or so how does this chart work?
https://jalopnik.com/what-do-you-wan...ype-1846808326
As BEAR pointed out, "in the 1st three months"
And the comments are fucking gold because the article is ridiculous
Of course don't forget to smash the like post button because good vibes over actual facts.
#2424
Driver had trouble keeping up so can't take much away from the vid. There were aids out there to help him. Follow the path of the pace car, use the cones for the apex, watch the brake lights & corner distance markers for braking. Think his max on the straight was a shade over 100MPH.
NON PRO drivers through the course. 100 mph...yep, saw that...OK...the point wasn't to see how fast these NON PRO testers could run that track. The Type S is not
a "track car" to begin with. It's a "sports sedan" with great handling, very strong power, lux inside, great ride, etc, Great all around "sports sedan" that to me is much
better that the A-Spec. As it should be.
Watch the review by www.tflcar.com. Paul is a pro driver and knows his tech. He did a GREAT job describing how the SH-Awd works....better than anyone else that is
part of the "car tester world" has explained it. He gave a real...honest perspective of this car based on his many years of racing and driving about everything out there.
He drove, while there, the Audi A4....bottom line....the Type S was much better. It outclasses that veh. by a long shot. Others??? we don't know for a little while.
All....IMHO.
#2425
Best reviewer/tester...IMHO
Watch Paul from www.tflcar.com give his analysis and driving impressions AND his great description of how the SH-Awd system works....so most anyone can
"get it" on how it "torque vectors." I've always known..since I've owned many Acuras with the system...and this 4th gen is the best.
He is a pro driver and tester and has driven most everything....and he doesn't have skin in the game....just honest impressions and gut feeling on how it handled
around the track and on the streets. I like how he drove it in Sport + without using the paddles....and that trans, especially configured for the Type S, shifted up
and down as needed. No, not the fastest shifting...it's not a dual clutch system...BUT, it was pretty quick...faster than the other TLX's since this trans is not
exactly the same. Mapped differently and the internals are built stronger, etc.
And folks....this is not a car built for the track...it's a "sports sedan." The Mustang GT500 was built for the track, and happens to be a very good street driving car too.
Appreciate the new Type S for what it IS and what it has to offer, esp. for the price point.
I think that if we all were to get some "seat time" we'd be very impressed...esp. IF we all keep in mind...this car was not built to beat every "hot rod" car out there. Let it
"stay in it's own lane"....and appreciate what it is. Don't compare it to a Corvette....LOL!! Or 500 hp sedans that cost almost twice as much.
Can certain sedans beat it by a few tenths zero to 60...sure...but, so what?! A great all around "sports sedan" is a sum of all it's capabilities....it's price point, how well it
holds up....repair costs...company reputation etc.
"get it" on how it "torque vectors." I've always known..since I've owned many Acuras with the system...and this 4th gen is the best.
He is a pro driver and tester and has driven most everything....and he doesn't have skin in the game....just honest impressions and gut feeling on how it handled
around the track and on the streets. I like how he drove it in Sport + without using the paddles....and that trans, especially configured for the Type S, shifted up
and down as needed. No, not the fastest shifting...it's not a dual clutch system...BUT, it was pretty quick...faster than the other TLX's since this trans is not
exactly the same. Mapped differently and the internals are built stronger, etc.
And folks....this is not a car built for the track...it's a "sports sedan." The Mustang GT500 was built for the track, and happens to be a very good street driving car too.
Appreciate the new Type S for what it IS and what it has to offer, esp. for the price point.
I think that if we all were to get some "seat time" we'd be very impressed...esp. IF we all keep in mind...this car was not built to beat every "hot rod" car out there. Let it
"stay in it's own lane"....and appreciate what it is. Don't compare it to a Corvette....LOL!! Or 500 hp sedans that cost almost twice as much.
Can certain sedans beat it by a few tenths zero to 60...sure...but, so what?! A great all around "sports sedan" is a sum of all it's capabilities....it's price point, how well it
holds up....repair costs...company reputation etc.
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#2426
The pace car was usually the NSX. The idea was not to see IF it could keep up with it...obviously it's not built to do that. Just a great handling sports car to lead the
NON PRO drivers through the course. 100 mph...yep, saw that...OK...the point wasn't to see how fast these NON PRO testers could run that track. The Type S is not
a "track car" to begin with. It's a "sports sedan" with great handling, very strong power, lux inside, great ride, etc, Great all around "sports sedan" that to me is much
better that the A-Spec. As it should be.
NON PRO drivers through the course. 100 mph...yep, saw that...OK...the point wasn't to see how fast these NON PRO testers could run that track. The Type S is not
a "track car" to begin with. It's a "sports sedan" with great handling, very strong power, lux inside, great ride, etc, Great all around "sports sedan" that to me is much
better that the A-Spec. As it should be.
As to the pace car actually they were supposed to keep up with him as he was showing them the correct line through the course which they should have followed. SOP for Charity Track Days "follow the leader" (non track licensed drivers) & early sessions of HPDS.
#2428
You'll have to pardon my venting a bit but, in reading up on as well as watching the reviews regarding both the regular TLX and Type S models, I can't help but think that each should be good for a participation trophy but really not worthy of any other awards. Another also-ran product by the brand still dependent on the laurels of the Honda Accord (which is still the clear benchmark for its segment). Please, just give me an Accord Sport 2.0T with the CTR's motor/6MT and SH-AWD and let's call it a day.
When it comes to 'sports sedans', I think this brand pretty much jumped the shark at this point. But I do look forward to seeing the MDX Type S.
When it comes to 'sports sedans', I think this brand pretty much jumped the shark at this point. But I do look forward to seeing the MDX Type S.
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#2430
The pace car was usually the NSX. The idea was not to see IF it could keep up with it...obviously it's not built to do that. Just a great handling sports car to lead the
NON PRO drivers through the course. 100 mph...yep, saw that...OK...the point wasn't to see how fast these NON PRO testers could run that track. The Type S is not
a "track car" to begin with. It's a "sports sedan" with great handling, very strong power, lux inside, great ride, etc, Great all around "sports sedan" that to me is much
better that the A-Spec. As it should be.
Watch the review by www.tflcar.com. Paul is a pro driver and knows his tech. He did a GREAT job describing how the SH-Awd works....better than anyone else that is
part of the "car tester world" has explained it. He gave a real...honest perspective of this car based on his many years of racing and driving about everything out there.
He drove, while there, the Audi A4....bottom line....the Type S was much better. It outclasses that veh. by a long shot. Others??? we don't know for a little while.
All....IMHO.
NON PRO drivers through the course. 100 mph...yep, saw that...OK...the point wasn't to see how fast these NON PRO testers could run that track. The Type S is not
a "track car" to begin with. It's a "sports sedan" with great handling, very strong power, lux inside, great ride, etc, Great all around "sports sedan" that to me is much
better that the A-Spec. As it should be.
Watch the review by www.tflcar.com. Paul is a pro driver and knows his tech. He did a GREAT job describing how the SH-Awd works....better than anyone else that is
part of the "car tester world" has explained it. He gave a real...honest perspective of this car based on his many years of racing and driving about everything out there.
He drove, while there, the Audi A4....bottom line....the Type S was much better. It outclasses that veh. by a long shot. Others??? we don't know for a little while.
All....IMHO.
#2431
If the Type-S is indeed in the 4.7s range for 0-60, the 2021 A4's 0-60 of 4.8s by C&D makes it a closer competitor than what people think. It doesn't have the flashy brakes or bracing or sport diff, but if no one will track either car, then who cares right.
#2432
Reading some of the reviews & this popped up
Jalopnik
"The brakes are exceptional. The four-piston Brembos are strong enough to haul this big dude down from mega speeds in short order, repeatably, for at least three laps of Laguna Seca at a time. Good feel, good stopping, overall good."
C&D said
"those on-track TLXs were fitted with track-oriented pads that Acura promises to recommend to interested customers."
I had made a statement earlier about pads like HAWK being a good idea if you are going to push the 4200lb car. Also said the Brembos are exceptionally easy to change pads on.
Only problem I had with this on the test day is braking is a huge part of getting around the track quickly especially one like Laguna Seca & feel this is a cheat.....think C&D is the only one that said the brakes were ringers. If they were worried about brake fade they should have brought more cars to allow a cooldown period between drivers. Dropping from 100mph to slow corner speed take a lot out of a cars brakes.
I have done some flog the car by invitation & they always had enough cars to allow the use of all standard equipment parts. In one case on a two day session I killed the Michlen PSS front tires on an M240 before lunch on the second day. They replaced the tires with the same stock rubber that died a valiant death.
Jalopnik
"all that weight is still going to be hell on parts. Tires, suspension, brakes, fluids, and more will wear out faster as the weight of a car climbs. I’d hate to have the consumables and maintenance bill for a thing this stout and fast."
Things in common among the writers. All like the SHAWD (good reason to choose Laguna Seca over VIR). All thought it was a very good car. Most thought it was too heavy. Most thought it was underpowered. They all liked the brakes (see note above). Interior pleased everybody with only the touch pad thing being an issue for some. All seemed to like the Gold paint.
Personally the only shocker to me was Mr. Honda Jalopnik who gave the car an excellent review saying this in the last sentence
"From now until the day I die, every time I see one of these on the road, I’ll get a little bit excited. Just not excited enough to buy one."
Jalopnik
"The brakes are exceptional. The four-piston Brembos are strong enough to haul this big dude down from mega speeds in short order, repeatably, for at least three laps of Laguna Seca at a time. Good feel, good stopping, overall good."
C&D said
"those on-track TLXs were fitted with track-oriented pads that Acura promises to recommend to interested customers."
I had made a statement earlier about pads like HAWK being a good idea if you are going to push the 4200lb car. Also said the Brembos are exceptionally easy to change pads on.
Only problem I had with this on the test day is braking is a huge part of getting around the track quickly especially one like Laguna Seca & feel this is a cheat.....think C&D is the only one that said the brakes were ringers. If they were worried about brake fade they should have brought more cars to allow a cooldown period between drivers. Dropping from 100mph to slow corner speed take a lot out of a cars brakes.
I have done some flog the car by invitation & they always had enough cars to allow the use of all standard equipment parts. In one case on a two day session I killed the Michlen PSS front tires on an M240 before lunch on the second day. They replaced the tires with the same stock rubber that died a valiant death.
Jalopnik
"all that weight is still going to be hell on parts. Tires, suspension, brakes, fluids, and more will wear out faster as the weight of a car climbs. I’d hate to have the consumables and maintenance bill for a thing this stout and fast."
Things in common among the writers. All like the SHAWD (good reason to choose Laguna Seca over VIR). All thought it was a very good car. Most thought it was too heavy. Most thought it was underpowered. They all liked the brakes (see note above). Interior pleased everybody with only the touch pad thing being an issue for some. All seemed to like the Gold paint.
Personally the only shocker to me was Mr. Honda Jalopnik who gave the car an excellent review saying this in the last sentence
"From now until the day I die, every time I see one of these on the road, I’ll get a little bit excited. Just not excited enough to buy one."
Last edited by BEAR-AvHistory; 05-22-2021 at 01:09 PM.
#2433
Then issue is the A4 isn’t supposed to be competitive with the Type S. That’s not good.
#2434
Reading some of the reviews & this popped up
Jalopnik
"The brakes are exceptional. The four-piston Brembos are strong enough to haul this big dude down from mega speeds in short order, repeatably, for at least three laps of Laguna Seca at a time. Good feel, good stopping, overall good."
C&D said
"those on-track TLXs were fitted with track-oriented pads that Acura promises to recommend to interested customers."
I had made a statement earlier about pads like HAWK being a good idea if you are going to push the 4200lb car. Also said the Brembos are exceptionally easy to change pads on.
Only problem I had with this on the test day is braking is a huge part of getting around the track quickly especially one like Laguna Seca & feel this is a cheat.....think C&D is the only one that said the brakes were ringers. If they were worried about brake fade they should have brought more cars to allow a cooldown period between drivers. Dropping from 100mph to slow corner speed take a lot out of a cars brakes.
I have done some flog the car by invitation & they always had enough cars to allow the use of all standard equipment parts. In one case on a two day session I killed the Michlen PSS front tires on an M240 before lunch on the second day. They replaced the tires with the same stock rubber that died a valiant death.
Jalopnik
"all that weight is still going to be hell on parts. Tires, suspension, brakes, fluids, and more will wear out faster as the weight of a car climbs. I’d hate to have the consumables and maintenance bill for a thing this stout and fast."
Things in common among the writers. All like the SHAWD (good reason to choose Laguna Seca over VIR). All thought it was a very good car. Most thought it was too heavy. Most thought it was underpowered. They all liked the brakes (see note above). Interior pleased everybody with only the touch pad thing being an issue for some. All seemed to like the Gold paint.
Personally the only shocker to me was Mr. Honda Jalopnik who gave the car an excellent review saying this in the last sentence
"From now until the day I die, every time I see one of these on the road, I’ll get a little bit excited. Just not excited enough to buy one."
Jalopnik
"The brakes are exceptional. The four-piston Brembos are strong enough to haul this big dude down from mega speeds in short order, repeatably, for at least three laps of Laguna Seca at a time. Good feel, good stopping, overall good."
C&D said
"those on-track TLXs were fitted with track-oriented pads that Acura promises to recommend to interested customers."
I had made a statement earlier about pads like HAWK being a good idea if you are going to push the 4200lb car. Also said the Brembos are exceptionally easy to change pads on.
Only problem I had with this on the test day is braking is a huge part of getting around the track quickly especially one like Laguna Seca & feel this is a cheat.....think C&D is the only one that said the brakes were ringers. If they were worried about brake fade they should have brought more cars to allow a cooldown period between drivers. Dropping from 100mph to slow corner speed take a lot out of a cars brakes.
I have done some flog the car by invitation & they always had enough cars to allow the use of all standard equipment parts. In one case on a two day session I killed the Michlen PSS front tires on an M240 before lunch on the second day. They replaced the tires with the same stock rubber that died a valiant death.
Jalopnik
"all that weight is still going to be hell on parts. Tires, suspension, brakes, fluids, and more will wear out faster as the weight of a car climbs. I’d hate to have the consumables and maintenance bill for a thing this stout and fast."
Things in common among the writers. All like the SHAWD (good reason to choose Laguna Seca over VIR). All thought it was a very good car. Most thought it was too heavy. Most thought it was underpowered. They all liked the brakes (see note above). Interior pleased everybody with only the touch pad thing being an issue for some. All seemed to like the Gold paint.
Personally the only shocker to me was Mr. Honda Jalopnik who gave the car an excellent review saying this in the last sentence
"From now until the day I die, every time I see one of these on the road, I’ll get a little bit excited. Just not excited enough to buy one."
"Unfortunately, this whole segment of the market kind of falls flat for me right now. Everything got too big, too bloated, too heavy, and too technologically advanced. Acura’s most recent Type-S machine, the TL, weighed some 500 pounds less than this. Car And Driver’s Daniel Pund tested the OG Type-S — the gorgeous and capable 3.2CL — in period and called it out for being capable but not fun. “The Type S is so undeniably good, so well-produced, so good at the process of being what it is supposed to be,” Pund wrote, “that it has left us utterly unmoved.”
It’s a shame to say it, but the new TLX Type-S is more of the same. By that token, it’s perfectly representative of what the Type-S brand exists to do. It’s a damn good car, but it doesn’t stir the emotions the way I thought it might. It sure is quick, though.
If you buy one, get it in gold. It’s such a good color, and it shifts so beautifully in changing light situations. From now until the day I die, every time I see one of these on the road, I’ll get a little bit excited. Just not excited enough to buy one."
The following users liked this post:
a35tl (05-22-2021)
#2435
That’s pretty funny. But just to put things back into the narrative that Acura has written, the S4 does 0-60 in 4.2 seconds (C/D) with slightly less power than the Type S. If the Type S didn’t weigh 400 lbs more than an S4, it could have been a contender.
#2436
From Motor Authority...
It felt like the Type S was a bit of a pretender on a true racetrack. The double-wishbone front suspension and well-tuned steering held up nicely, but the rest of the car fell a little flat. I’m not sure that there is an easy fix for the TLX Type S as its shortcomings in this environment seem to be more a function of its front-drive architecture and overall heft. The car is rather heavy, tipping the scales at 4,221 pounds (or 4,200 pounds with the lightweight wheel/summer tires equipped). Competitors like the Audi S4 and Mercedes-AMG C43 weigh just under 3,900 pounds each. You don’t really feel the car’s weight on the street, but on a track its heft and imbalance are magnified. Rather than feeling especially agile, it feels like you’re wrestling physics at each turn.
.
While a nice effort, Acura exacerbated the existing imbalance/weight distribution (due to the FWD transverse layout) issue by making the TLX as big and heavy as it is - all the things like torque-vectoring, etc. are bandaids to mitigate the core issues, but you can't beat the laws of physics.
.
This isn't exactly reliability, but the cost to fix problems which arise over the first 3 months of ownership.
Porsche has been one of the tops with regard to reliability, but when something goes wrong, it's expensive to fix.
The cost is going to be less expensive, in general, for the brands which share a lot of components with their mainstream siblings.
The cost for Kia is higher than Hyundai in large part because it's more expensive to fix higher-end RWD models like the Stinger and K900 than something like the Forte.
It felt like the Type S was a bit of a pretender on a true racetrack. The double-wishbone front suspension and well-tuned steering held up nicely, but the rest of the car fell a little flat. I’m not sure that there is an easy fix for the TLX Type S as its shortcomings in this environment seem to be more a function of its front-drive architecture and overall heft. The car is rather heavy, tipping the scales at 4,221 pounds (or 4,200 pounds with the lightweight wheel/summer tires equipped). Competitors like the Audi S4 and Mercedes-AMG C43 weigh just under 3,900 pounds each. You don’t really feel the car’s weight on the street, but on a track its heft and imbalance are magnified. Rather than feeling especially agile, it feels like you’re wrestling physics at each turn.
.
While a nice effort, Acura exacerbated the existing imbalance/weight distribution (due to the FWD transverse layout) issue by making the TLX as big and heavy as it is - all the things like torque-vectoring, etc. are bandaids to mitigate the core issues, but you can't beat the laws of physics.
Not a review but good info for people that are trying to compare reliability of the German vs. Japanese cars: https://jalopnik.com/honda-and-acura...car-1846918768
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This info was posted on True Delta's website. Well done Acura and Lexus for securing the first place!
This isn't exactly reliability, but the cost to fix problems which arise over the first 3 months of ownership.
Porsche has been one of the tops with regard to reliability, but when something goes wrong, it's expensive to fix.
The cost is going to be less expensive, in general, for the brands which share a lot of components with their mainstream siblings.
The cost for Kia is higher than Hyundai in large part because it's more expensive to fix higher-end RWD models like the Stinger and K900 than something like the Forte.
The following 2 users liked this post by YEH:
04WDPSeDaN (05-22-2021),
BEAR-AvHistory (05-22-2021)
#2438
Just my pers. opinion. There are cars for all of us out there. Pick the one you want. But, downing a certain one if it's .3 slower to 60 is silly. Go buy
what you all want. But, that doesn't mean that the Type S is "no good" or "too slow" or whatever. It's in it's "own lane" and doing great there. Not bad
for the price at all.
#2439
My mistake...I realized later that Acura's target car...one of them...was the S4. To me, overall, I think the Type S is a better car. I looked at the S4.
Just my pers. opinion. There are cars for all of us out there. Pick the one you want. But, downing a certain one if it's .3 slower to 60 is silly. Go buy
what you all want. But, that doesn't mean that the Type S is "no good" or "too slow" or whatever. It's in it's "own lane" and doing great there. Not bad
for the price at all.
Just my pers. opinion. There are cars for all of us out there. Pick the one you want. But, downing a certain one if it's .3 slower to 60 is silly. Go buy
what you all want. But, that doesn't mean that the Type S is "no good" or "too slow" or whatever. It's in it's "own lane" and doing great there. Not bad
for the price at all.
#2440
Just curious but what makes the TLX better in your opinion? They cost nearly the same and the Audi is better literally in every way except looks which are subjective. The interior is definitely better in the Audi and the transmission is as well. When getting the performance version of a sports sedan of you don’t care about how fast it can go why not just get the 4 cylinder one?