The 2014 Lexus IS is expected to make its official debut at the 2013 NAIAS in Detroit
#182
EDIT: well i just checked, and apparently I was mistaken. The LED tubes in the outer taillights do come on as the brake lights as well.
Last edited by raptor22; 09-03-12 at 02:30 PM.
#183
Instructor
Thread Starter
Joining the Bavarian automakers, Lexus’s future lineup of sedans will be better described as “small, medium, and large” than as 3 disparately styled vehicles. We’ve learned from sources on a number of continents that when the next IS comes to market for the 2014 model year, it will draw heavily on the look of the new GS and revised LS. The smaller IS could be even more aggressively styled as the company tries to make a name for what has been a relatively anonymous entry. It’s possible we’ll see the car as early as September, at the Paris auto show.
“When you’re a challenger brand . . . you can’t afford to be evolutionary,” a Lexus exec recently told Australia’s The Age newspaper. To that end, we’re expecting a rakish IS sedan, which may be shaped to look particularly low and wide, like the current IS F. The teaser image above, released earlier this year, shows the IS’s corporate “spindle” grille—an attractive design feature that probably didn’t need as much attention as Lexus has given it—along with a liberal use of high-intensity lighting, including LEDs.
We’ve also learned that the U.S. is unlikely to see the hybrid version of the next IS. It’s being developed with Europe in mind, where Lexus has defined its brand as a luxury hybrid company. (In England, for instance, the RX and LS are offered exclusively in hybrid form.) In the U.S., however, Lexus’s hybrid-focused marketing strategy has had only mixed results. The CT200h sells pretty well, and roughly one in eight RX sales are for the hybrid. But customers never warmed up to the last-gen GS450h, and Lexus dealers move fewer than 10 LS hybrids per month. Adding heavy, expensive, complicated batteries and motors to the IS probably just isn’t worth it for a few dozen sales, which can instead go to the ES and CT hybrids.
Unfortunately, our sources haven’t been able to pass along any info about the next high-performance IS F. But we haven’t given up yet.
#184
Instructor
Thread Starter
Your welcome, I can imagine it's been a long wait for everyone since the facelift in 2008 and then test mules in 2010.
Yep, it's been a long 7 1/2 years we've all been waiting. I thought we would have seen some spy images sooner, but thankfully after over 2 weeks it seems the very first spy images have shown up at MotorTrend. Hopefully within 2-3 months we'll see something. Since it's likely not a facelift, it means we might have to wait 3 months rather than the two on the LS facelift.
Yep, it's been a long 7 1/2 years we've all been waiting. I thought we would have seen some spy images sooner, but thankfully after over 2 weeks it seems the very first spy images have shown up at MotorTrend. Hopefully within 2-3 months we'll see something. Since it's likely not a facelift, it means we might have to wait 3 months rather than the two on the LS facelift.
#185
Instructor
Thread Starter
This was posted in the IS forums as a possible spy pic of the new IS:
http://wot.motortrend.com/files/2012/08/Mystery-spy.jpg
http://wot.motortrend.com/files/2012/08/Mystery-spy.jpg
#186
Does the 3 Series get the same screen as the 7 Series? What about the same seats? This consistency talk can go on all day long.
Companies like Benz and Lexus have flagships that push the whole luxury market forward. Truthfully, the A8 and 7 Series have never really pushed the luxury market forward that much. Historically it has been the S-Class and LS, so of course the S-Class and LS always have features the other vehicles in the lineup don't have, as an example.
More importantly, we haven't yet seen what the new IS actually looks like. People as usual making ridiculous conclusions based on a heavily-camouflaged spy pic of the car.
Companies like Benz and Lexus have flagships that push the whole luxury market forward. Truthfully, the A8 and 7 Series have never really pushed the luxury market forward that much. Historically it has been the S-Class and LS, so of course the S-Class and LS always have features the other vehicles in the lineup don't have, as an example.
More importantly, we haven't yet seen what the new IS actually looks like. People as usual making ridiculous conclusions based on a heavily-camouflaged spy pic of the car.
:-)
#187
From the spy pic it does look as if the new IS has lost its coupe'ish profile, which is great news, showing Lexus has listened to its customers and improved its rear passenger room and trunk space.
#188
Lexus Champion
#192
Lexus Test Driver
Losing coupe-like profile is a bad thing, not a good thing. We enthusiasts want our sedans to look sporty, not homely. In the car above, the greenhouse appears taller, but not too different.
Wheel gap is horrible.
Parts of it look like an Infiniti, other parts look Lexus.
Still too early to make a conclusion.
Wheel gap is horrible.
Parts of it look like an Infiniti, other parts look Lexus.
Still too early to make a conclusion.