In the hybrid gas-electric LS 600h L, Lexus pulls out all the stops to create the technologically most advanced luxury car in the world. I SING THE BODY ELECTRIC Déjà vu In a famous 1962 Twilight Zone episode written by Ray Bradbury, the father of a trio of motherless children takes the children to an automotive factory to pick out a new car. When the car arrives, young Tom and Karen are quickly smitten by the car's hybrid electric technology. But older daughter Anne is suspicious of the new car. She says it lacks passion and will let her down. After time, however, Anne grows to love the car when she realizes all that it's capable of and proves to be even more reliable than their old internal combustion-engine car. Narrator Rod Serling then cuts in, "A fable? Most assuredly. But who's to say at some distant moment there might not be an assembly line producing a gentle product in the form of a hybrid whose stock in trade is love? Fable, sure - but who's to say?" Okay, that's not exactly how it went down. The part of the hybrid electric car was played by an electric robot grandmother, who replaced - not an internal combustion-engine car - but the children's original grandmother. Nonetheless, the sentiment is strikingly similar, with today's doubting Thomases sounding like Anne in the Twilight Zone episode. Ray Bradbury's "I Sing The Body Electric" was inspired by an 1855 Walt Whitman poem of the same name. Both works challenged the public to broaden its pre-conceived notions. Whitman believed that the parts making up the human body all contribute to the soul, and that the souls of all humans deserve to be celebrated. With Bradbury, the passion and soul of the robot grandmother came from all the people that designed her, planned her, built her, and set her running. Passion and Prejudice With the hybrid gas-electric LS 600h L sedan, Lexus challenges us to rethink the luxury car. Like Anne and the electric grandmother, hybrid vehicles have their detractors. Some have even charged hybrids as lacking in passion. I wonder, however, if the detractors have driven the LS600h L. I did, for several days - and I can report that the LS 600h L is a passionate vehicle. Like the electric grandmother, one can really feel the care and attention that the designers of the LS 600h L built into the vehicle. The perfection of the stitching over the leather surfaces over the dashboard, doors, and interior nook and crannies is simply amazing. The sound system - the Mark Levinson Reference Surround System - is the best factory system I've ever heard (and this audiophile has heard virtually all of the top factory systems). Full article
In the hybrid gas-electric LS 600h L, Lexus pulls out all the stops to create the technologically most advanced luxury car in the world. I SING THE BODY ELECTRIC Déjà vu In a famous 1962 Twilight Zone episode written by Ray Bradbury, the father of a trio of motherless children takes the children to an automotive factory to pick out a new car. When the car arrives, young Tom and Karen are quickly smitten by the car's hybrid electric technology. But older daughter Anne is suspicious of the new car. She says it lacks passion and will let her down. After time, however, Anne grows to love the car when she realizes all that it's capable of and proves to be even more reliable than their old internal combustion-engine car. Narrator Rod Serling then cuts in, "A fable? Most assuredly. But who's to say at some distant moment there might not be an assembly line producing a gentle product in the form of a hybrid whose stock in trade is love? Fable, sure - but who's to say?" Okay, that's not exactly how it went down. The part of the hybrid electric car was played by an electric robot grandmother, who replaced - not an internal combustion-engine car - but the children's original grandmother. Nonetheless, the sentiment is strikingly similar, with today's doubting Thomases sounding like Anne in the Twilight Zone episode. Ray Bradbury's "I Sing The Body Electric" was inspired by an 1855 Walt Whitman poem of the same name. Both works challenged the public to broaden its pre-conceived notions. Whitman believed that the parts making up the human body all contribute to the soul, and that the souls of all humans deserve to be celebrated. With Bradbury, the passion and soul of the robot grandmother came from all the people that designed her, planned her, built her, and set her running. Passion and Prejudice With the hybrid gas-electric LS 600h L sedan, Lexus challenges us to rethink the luxury car. Like Anne and the electric grandmother, hybrid vehicles have their detractors. Some have even charged hybrids as lacking in passion. I wonder, however, if the detractors have driven the LS600h L. I did, for several days - and I can report that the LS 600h L is a passionate vehicle. Like the electric grandmother, one can really feel the care and attention that the designers of the LS 600h L built into the vehicle. The perfection of the stitching over the leather surfaces over the dashboard, doors, and interior nook and crannies is simply amazing. The sound system - the Mark Levinson Reference Surround System - is the best factory system I've ever heard (and this audiophile has heard virtually all of the top factory systems). Full article
mmm good review. I sat in the LS600h L last Friday. For the 2 mins or less in the driver's seat, I was in heaven lol. The leather on the steering wheel is sooooo smoooth, nothing and I mean nothing else will feel as good after touching the LS' wheel. Not even other Lexus steering wheels felt nice any more.
mmm good review. I sat in the LS600h L last Friday. For the 2 mins or less in the driver's seat, I was in heaven lol. The leather on the steering wheel is sooooo smoooth, nothing and I mean nothing else will feel as good after touching the LS' wheel. Not even other Lexus steering wheels felt nice any more.
WOW.. I looked at that article and drooled so hard I have a puddle at my feet. Only question is how much is it gonna cost?
WOW.. I looked at that article and drooled so hard I have a puddle at my feet. Only question is how much is it gonna cost?
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(socalprius07 @ Sep 13 2007, 11:41 AM) [snapback]512010[/snapback]</div> I think you drooled so much that you forgot to scroll to the bottom. US$104,000.... or Cdn$132,000
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(socalprius07 @ Sep 13 2007, 11:41 AM) [snapback]512010[/snapback]</div> I think you drooled so much that you forgot to scroll to the bottom. US$104,000.... or Cdn$132,000
and, and..."I sing the body electric" by hybrid jazz/rock band Weather Report, 1972. Coincidentally, Joe Zawinul, their hybrid keyboard player, died the other day. edit: removed redundant death notice
20mpg City/22mpg Hi-way WOW! We have our first Hybrid Poser Car. I would cash in some bonds to buy one, but they need to put a transporter in it, so that I do not have to sit in traffic or follow slower vehicles just like every other POS on the road. Sorry to rain on your snob parade.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(clearview22 @ Sep 13 2007, 08:50 PM) [snapback]512323[/snapback]</div> To be honest, that's the same as a V6 family car (check out the average V6 family car fuel economy). That's pretty good for a car with 438hp and weighs that much. The old LS430 (which had good FE and low emissions) was struggling to get 18mpg with a smaller 4.3 litre engine and 290hp.
ok, that car is beyond words. i drooled over it at hybridfest. i'd love one. but seriously, our 18 year old v6 gets about 23 mpg highway.
But it doesn't weigh that as much as the LS600h L! and it certainly doesn't have all the cameras and radar on that car.