2021 Lexus IS
I am not sure if you feel me, but I think the new IS will be a car that is similar in style to the UX inside and out. The target is not the United States, it will be China...I also think this is the last dance for Lexus in this type of segment.....which is why it supposed to be "reworked" and not all new... The 3 series does not sell anywhere near what it once sold in the 5-10 years ago....all that said, down the road, a future FCEV or EV in that that is RWD based in the price point of a Tesla 3, I could definitely see happening. Lexus was born without the IS segment, they can live on without it as well...your thoughts Frog?
Last edited by Toys4RJill; Jun 11, 2020 at 03:24 PM.
^
I could see Lexus get rid of RWD completely.
IS and RC are doing minimal #s in sales.
RC should have had a Convertible and GrandCoupe version.
Imagine if it got the 400hp V6tt from LS500 - that would have been a statement and worthy competition especially to the new ugly 4series. This should be a no-brainer.
The more models you have - the better your chances of spreading your costs for new engines and other updates.
Lexus let their products age and then ask why sales suck - well they sold well in first few years but then grew stale as competitors continue to bring new exciting products.
I could see Lexus get rid of RWD completely.
IS and RC are doing minimal #s in sales.
RC should have had a Convertible and GrandCoupe version.
Imagine if it got the 400hp V6tt from LS500 - that would have been a statement and worthy competition especially to the new ugly 4series. This should be a no-brainer.
The more models you have - the better your chances of spreading your costs for new engines and other updates.
Lexus let their products age and then ask why sales suck - well they sold well in first few years but then grew stale as competitors continue to bring new exciting products.
I think you are probably right Jill. It's a temporary stopgap to get them to the next hybrid or full electric...and to see what changes in emission standards. They are behind on electrics, but ahead on hybrids (although the RX Hybrid we tried was disappointing in mpg). I've read lately that Mercedes AMG and Porsche say that because of EU emission standards several engines will be going away. It's an interesting time that's for sure! Yet, some think it will be a long time until we all go fully electric. Full autonomous driving may take longer to fully implement safely as well. My brother works in that field along with vehicle to vehicle communication. The writing maybe on the wall for these gasoline luxury cars, and especially the naturally aspirated Performance variants. The time to buy one and enjoy it if that's your thing is right now. The GS I just purchased is an older design...I ignored it for a while. It lacks Carplay and over the air updates like the BMW I had and LC. But the car is so good, I don't miss those things. So even though the new IS may use some old mixed with some new. I hold out hope it maybe a great car. I heard it may have a LS style to it. Automakers are cost cutting now. Audi and BMW moving their car production on some vehicles to Mexico. So if the refreshed IS uses some older bits, I'm still very interested to experience it. Maybe just because a 2002 IS 300 was my first Lexus.
The UX has been a sales disappointment for Lexus, so not sure taking the IS or anything else down that road makes much sense. Not everything is about China.
Every car doesn't have to be a sales juggernaut either. The point of having lower cost higher selling models within a luxury nameplate is so you can also build truly desirable higher end cars that don't have to sell in huge numbers. IMO you're looking at Lexus strategy the way one looks at economy cars. In order for something to be a luxury good, it has to have a desirability factor beyond what is practical.
If they had great cars like the IS, a small, midsized, and full-sized RWD based GA-L platform crossovers, good sedans built on that architecture and performance models, then enthusiasts wouldn't have such an issue with the UXs, NXs, etc. If BMW, Mercedes, Audi, Genesis can do this, so can Lexus.
No excuse for this IS not to be an all new car on the GA-L Platform IMO.
Every car doesn't have to be a sales juggernaut either. The point of having lower cost higher selling models within a luxury nameplate is so you can also build truly desirable higher end cars that don't have to sell in huge numbers. IMO you're looking at Lexus strategy the way one looks at economy cars. In order for something to be a luxury good, it has to have a desirability factor beyond what is practical.
If they had great cars like the IS, a small, midsized, and full-sized RWD based GA-L platform crossovers, good sedans built on that architecture and performance models, then enthusiasts wouldn't have such an issue with the UXs, NXs, etc. If BMW, Mercedes, Audi, Genesis can do this, so can Lexus.
No excuse for this IS not to be an all new car on the GA-L Platform IMO.
The UX has been a sales disappointment for Lexus, so not sure taking the IS or anything else down that road makes much sense. Not everything is about China.
Every car doesn't have to be a sales juggernaut either. The point of having lower cost higher selling models within a luxury nameplate is so you can also build truly desirable higher end cars that don't have to sell in huge numbers. IMO you're looking at Lexus strategy the way one looks at economy cars. In order for something to be a luxury good, it has to have a desirability factor beyond what is practical.
If they had great cars like the IS, a small, midsized, and full-sized RWD based GA-L platform crossovers, good sedans built on that architecture and performance models, then enthusiasts wouldn't have such an issue with the UXs, NXs, etc. If BMW, Mercedes, Audi, Genesis can do this, so can Lexus.
No excuse for this IS not to be an all new car on the GA-L Platform IMO.
Every car doesn't have to be a sales juggernaut either. The point of having lower cost higher selling models within a luxury nameplate is so you can also build truly desirable higher end cars that don't have to sell in huge numbers. IMO you're looking at Lexus strategy the way one looks at economy cars. In order for something to be a luxury good, it has to have a desirability factor beyond what is practical.
If they had great cars like the IS, a small, midsized, and full-sized RWD based GA-L platform crossovers, good sedans built on that architecture and performance models, then enthusiasts wouldn't have such an issue with the UXs, NXs, etc. If BMW, Mercedes, Audi, Genesis can do this, so can Lexus.
No excuse for this IS not to be an all new car on the GA-L Platform IMO.
FThanks for having a nice discussion.
If I remember correctly, the RXh uses a hybrid system that was supposed to give V8 power, but V6 fuel economy. Think GS430/GS450h at the time. Lexus 4.7V8 at the time in the GX would have been the alternative.
GS is just not my cup of tea..but happy you love it.
Very overrated...I rarely if ever use it in the new Avalon.

And that is just it...you have to think of what the Lexus brand positioning is for the small rwd segment...it is not great...it will very hard to supplant C class or 3 series BMWs as the market contracts....with that, BMW has an even smaller 2 series four door and Mercedes is also in there
The irony of some of the FWD hate is that BMW has a sedan now that is FWD and Mercedes has TWO (might be wrong)....where Lexus just has the ES....and the Lexus ES starts at more money than both.
Frog, with all the hate about old platforms etc, I leave you with what the CEO of Toyota said today:
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
If I remember correctly, the RXh uses a hybrid system that was supposed to give V8 power, but V6 fuel economy. Think GS430/GS450h at the time. Lexus 4.7V8 at the time in the GX would have been the alternative.
Very overrated...I rarely if ever use it in the new Avalon.

Frog, with all the hate about old platforms etc, I leave you with what the CEO of Toyota said today:
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
Last edited by Toys4RJill; Jun 11, 2020 at 03:44 PM.
I wont buy another vehicle without it. I hate that the Pacifica doesn't have it.
The irony of some of the FWD hate is that BMW has a sedan now that is FWD and Mercedes has TWO (might be wrong)....where Lexus just has the ES....and the Lexus ES starts at more money than both.
Why are we still talking about China? From all signs so far, the new IS won't be sold in China. Its trademark for the 2021 model year has yet to even be registered.
Who is this IS even designed for?
Who is this IS even designed for?
what was their excuse for delaying the LS.
Why did they delay the LC-F which was already planned to be launched in 2020....now its pushed back to another 2-3yrs.
They brought the GSF - 4 years after the GS came out....
Its just a pattern of inconsistency and lack of commitment.
Why did they delay the LC-F which was already planned to be launched in 2020....now its pushed back to another 2-3yrs.
They brought the GSF - 4 years after the GS came out....
Its just a pattern of inconsistency and lack of commitment.
Totally, and to me Toyoda is a man full of inconsistency, he wants "no more boring cars" and he wants "cars that are driver focused" but then he axes or fails to invest in the cars that achieve those goals (IS, GS, GA-L crossovers), instead choosing to make strange sport versions of cars where that makes no sense (see TRD Camry and Avalon, Rav4, sporty-fling the LS) and fails to invest in new powertrains that bring driving excitement back to the brand (why is the excellent 3.5TT thats been in the LS since late 2017 in absolutely nothing else 3 years later?).
One of the most confusing figures in the car world IMO. Where I thought the brand would be when Toyoda first came on the scene and we got the 4GS and 3IS and then the LC came to fruition and where we are now and where we seem to be going could not be more different.
One of the most confusing figures in the car world IMO. Where I thought the brand would be when Toyoda first came on the scene and we got the 4GS and 3IS and then the LC came to fruition and where we are now and where we seem to be going could not be more different.
Totally, and to me Toyoda is a man full of inconsistency, he wants "no more boring cars" and he wants "cars that are driver focused" but then he axes or fails to invest in the cars that achieve those goals (IS, GS, GA-L crossovers), instead choosing to make strange sport versions of cars where that makes no sense (see TRD Camry and Avalon, Rav4, sporty-fling the LS) and fails to invest in new powertrains that bring driving excitement back to the brand (why is the excellent 3.5TT thats been in the LS since late 2017 in absolutely nothing else 3 years later?).
One of the most confusing figures in the car world IMO. Where I thought the brand would be when Toyoda first came on the scene and we got the 4GS and 3IS and then the LC came to fruition and where we are now and where we seem to be going could not be more different.
One of the most confusing figures in the car world IMO. Where I thought the brand would be when Toyoda first came on the scene and we got the 4GS and 3IS and then the LC came to fruition and where we are now and where we seem to be going could not be more different.
Frog, with all the hate about old platforms etc, I leave you with what the CEO of Toyota said today:
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
So does that mean they somehow recouped those already invested funds incurred by RD for those expensive now delayed platforms? How does that exactly work, for instance on the now cancelled Lexus 5th Gen GS project which has morphed into the 2nd gen Toyota Mirai?
Same thing is the cloud of doubt that surronds the IS with the naysayers. Is this going to be ground up project that has been in the secret F lab to offer a breath of fresh air that almost even TGNA based bestowed upon their respective nameplates (heck even the camry has some added dynamics with its new TGNA-K) or are we getting a very very very facelifted 3rd gen is?
The reveal will answer all lol
Last edited by coolsaber; Jun 11, 2020 at 05:08 PM.
This guy doesn't care about Lexus or maybe he does but he for sure doesn't understand it or have time for it. His passion is Toyota and as long as he is in the bed with bean counters so Toyota stays in deep black he gets what he wants - sporty rides.
Frog, with all the hate about old platforms etc, I leave you with what the CEO of Toyota said today:
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
"The coronavirus-caused crisis “exceeds the Lehman shock,” said Toyoda,
“We are different today from what we were during the financial crisis.”
I have been saying forever (and getting rude comments for it) that Toyota purposely delayed all of their more expensive platforms on purpose as Toyota was waiting for an economic downturn..(never did I say pandemic)...once the bottom is hit, Toyota can more accurately make cars for the post-downturn (now pandemic) world.
Last edited by bitkahuna; Jun 12, 2020 at 11:38 AM.













