Archive for the ‘Acura’ Category

Navigation Systems Put to the Test: The Results

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Navleadphoto

On Wednesday, we laid out plans to take several navigation systems — the pricey factory systems in an Acura TSX, a BMW 3 Series and an Infiniti G37, plus a $180 handheld Garmin Nuvi 255W — and see how they dealt with a range of simple and challenging routes. We started easy, then threw in everything from pit stops and missed exits to recently constructed highways and brand-new housing developments.



The results were illuminating. By day’s end, each of the systems had stumbled at least once. But when we tallied the evaluation, BMW’s Harman-supplied system won the day.



We’ll explain.



Navinfinitisplit



Leg 1: Easy downtown route



Winners: G37, Garmin

The G37 and Garmin emerged strong. Both made quick work of the first leg, which took us from our Chicago offices to U.S. Cellular Field — downtown to the Dan Ryan Expressway, exiting near 35th Street, turning right to the stadium. The 3 Series and TSX struggled: The TSX’s navigation system couldn’t locate the stadium’s address (333 W. 35th St.), and the 3 Series needed its ZIP code. We procured the destination from a smart phone, thus satisfying the BMW, and found it in the TSX under the point-of-interest finder. But the Bimmer’s problems weren’t over. Stymied by the loops of the downtown parking garage, the BMW took us on a six-block parade of right turns before finally tracking down a highway on-ramp. Arriving southbound at 35th St., BMW’s female navigation voice instructed a left turn. The Sox played, in fact, on the right.

Navacuramap2



Leg 2: Suburbs, missed exits



Winner: 3 Series

From the ballpark to Elmhurst, Ill., the G37 and 3 Series found expedient routes that put us immediately back on the highway — the same routing Google Maps would have us take. The TSX and the Garmin, however, routed editors down 2.5 miles of surface streets before finally merging onto the highway. (That jaunt would cost four extra minutes, according to Google Maps.)



Upon staging a missed exit near our destination — Elmhurst Memorial Hospital — the TSX, Garmin and G37 routed us to the next exit down the highway. (Our intrepid editors in the BMW ended up taking the exit everyone else remembered to skip, so we can’t evaluate how it would have fared. Yarg.) All but the TSX used a four-lane avenue just north of the hospital to reach it; the TSX picked a stop-sign-ridden two-laner west of the hospital to arrive. It costs an extra minute, according to Google Maps.



More concerning: Upon inputting “Elmhurst Memorial Hospital” into the point-of-interest finder, the G37 routed us to the hospital’s business center, some three miles away. (We arrived, found Audis instead of ambulances, and backtracked.) The Acura gave us the option of both locations — specifying that one was a business center — while the BMW and Garmin defaulted to the actual hospital.



“If you don’t know the hospital’s address and are in need of medical care, this would be a very annoying detour,” editor Amanda Wegrzyn noted. That’s putting it lightly.


Navbmwmap3



Leg 3: Detours, New Roads



Winner: 3 Series

Our third leg took us south to New Lenox, Ill. The G37 chose a westbound highway that would eventually join our southbound route. It would’ve cost three extra minutes, Google Maps says. No matter; we ignored it. We had a pit stop to simulate, and it required sticking to the southbound route — the route the TSX, 3 Series and Garmin had automatically plotted. The pit stop landed us right off the interstate at a well-worn Arby’s, with no immediate entrance back onto the highway’s southbound lanes.



After a few moments’ recalculations, the G37, TSX and Garmin had us on a 3.5-mile loop to get to the next on-ramp south. The BMW, meanwhile, instructed a U-turn to head west, back under the freeway and away from Arby’s, and onto a second westbound highway. It joined up with our original southbound route, incurred minimal surface streets and got us to New Lenox with time to spare. Editor Joe Bruzek, who travels the area often, says the BMW took the route he’d choose.



The Garmin-toting TSX group arrived second, having both taken the 3.5-mile detour toward the next on-ramp south of Arby’s. The systems differed near the end: The Acura wanted editors to exit the highway some four miles early to take rural roads to New Lennox. It would have added about six minutes, Google Maps says. We stuck with the Garmin’s highway route, which had the TSX arriving 10 minutes after Team BMW.



Alas, the G37 had a mind of its own. Like the TSX, it directed us toward the next on-ramp south of Arby’s, followed by directions for the next highway interchange — but toward the northbound off-ramp, the opposite direction of New Lenox. It had editors driving a mile north, exiting an overpass and re-entering on the southbound side.



Naturally, the G37 was last to arrive.

Navchallengecarsend



The Winner: BMW 3 Series



All four systems took recently completed sections of the I-355, and all four found a new subdivision in Plainfield, Ill., though the BMW’s showed a few more roads than the others. In the end, the 3 Series’ system put us on the most expedient routes, even lopping off some time at the end. After a rough start, it completed the evaluation with few of the G37’s wrong-headed instructions and none of the smaller routing issues the TSX and Garmin incurred. It’s not the cheapest or most feature-packed system, but for simply getting the job done, BMW’s system won the day.

Labor Day Deals for Luxury-Car Shoppers

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Mercedes-Benz SLK350

As Labor Day weekend approaches, we wanted to give car shoppers one more rundown of this weekend’s incentives – this time for luxury makes. Many luxury shoppers choose to lease cars, so we're breaking down both the best lease deals and the best deals for financing a car purchase.

Some of the top lease deals can be found at Acura, Audi, Lexus and Lincoln dealerships. Acura has an event going on that is especially noteworthy, offering $0 due at signing and the first month’s lease payment free.

The best financing deals can be found at Cadillac, which is offering six-year loans at 0% interest on most of the remaining 2010 models.

Both loan interest rates and leasing deals often vary by region. Like our APR interactive map showed us earlier this week, the best financing deals are offered to Midwest and East Coast residents. Western states seem to have the most attractive lease deals.

In the listings below, we've given a range of prices when the deals vary by region; otherwise, the numbers reflect a nationwide offer. Most of the deals we've listed end on Labor Day or Tuesday.

Acura lease deals  

  • 2010 MDX: $570/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), with $0 due at signing 
  • 2010 TSX: $360-$370/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), with $0 due at signing 
  • 2010 TL: $430/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), with $0 due at signing 

Acura financing deals 

  • 2010 MDX, RDX, RL, TL, TSX, ZDX: 0.9-1.9% APR for 24-60 months 

Audi lease deals 

  • 2011 A4: $379-$449/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $1,673-$2,894 due at signing 
  • 2011 Q5: $469-$619/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,874-$4,368 due at signing 

Audi financing deals 

  • 2010 A3 A4, A6 A8, TT, TTS: 0.9% APR for 36 months 

BMW lease deals 

  • 2010 5 Series Gran Turismo: $689/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $5,614 due at signing 
  • 2010 X3: $419/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $4,594 due at signing 
  • 2011 X5: $529/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $5,804 due at signing 
  • 2011 X6: $589/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $6,214 due at signing 

BMW financing deals 

  • 2011 1 Series, 3 Series, 5 Series, 7 Series, X3, X5, X6, Z4, M3: 0.9% APR for 24 months 
  • 2010 M6, 5 Series Gran Turismo: 0.9% APR for 24 months 

Cadillac lease deals 

  • 2010 CTS: $349/month lease for 27 months (22,500 miles), $1,999 due at signing 

Cadillac financing deals 

  • 2010 CTS, CTS-V, CTS Sport Wagon, DTS, Escalade, Escalade EXT, ESV, STS: 0% APR for 72 months 

Lexus lease deals 

  • 2010 IS 250: $339-$349/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,489-$4,038 due at signing  
  • 2010 ES 350: $339-$399/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,499-$3,695 due at signing 
  • 2010 HS 250h: $339/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,499 due at signing 
  • 2010 RX 350: $449-$469/ month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,499-$3,695 due at signing 

Lexus financing deals 

  • 2010 IS 250: 0.9-1.9% APR for 60 months 
  • 2010 ES 350: 1.9% APR for 60 months 
  • 2010 HS 250h: 1.9% APR for 60 months 

Lincoln lease deals 

  • 2010 MKZ: $349/month for 24 months (21,000 miles), $3,164 due at signing 
  • 2010 MKX: $399/month for 36 months (31,500 miles), $4,963 due at signing 
  • 2010 MKS: $399/month for 24 months (21,000 miles), $4,393 due at signing 

Lincoln financing deals 

  • 2010 MKZ, MKX, MKT, MKS: 0-1.9% APR for 60 months 
  • 2010 Navigator 0.0-2.9% APR for 36-60 months 

Mercedes-Benz lease deals  

  • 2011 C300: $349/month for 27 months (22,500 miles), $2,607 due at signing 
  • 2011 GLK350: $459/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $4,253 due at signing 
  • 2011 SLK-Class: $499/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $4,844 due at signing 
  • 2011 M-Class: $529/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $5,074 due at signing 
  • 2011 E350: $689/month for 36 months (30,000 miles), $3,159 due at signing 

Mercedes-Benz financing deals 

  • 2011 C-Class, GLK-Class, R-Class, E-Class: 1.9% APR for 24-36 months 
  • 2010 S-Class: 1.9% APR for 24-36 months 

*Lease and finance deals vary by region and year/model/trim availability. Higher lease rates apply for lessees with lower credit ratings. Lease excludes taxes, titles and fees.

Navigation Systems Put to the Test

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Navchallengecars1

One of the most popular options available for new cars is a navigation system. Often these add $1,000 to $3,000 to the sticker price and can even be wrapped into more expensive packages.



It’s certainly easier to swallow that slightly higher monthly payment if the navigation system you just paid for works the way you think it should. But after testing hundreds of cars over the years, we know they don’t all deliver. So we took three luxury cars with the expensive add-ons and a simple $180 Garmin aftermarket unit — the kind you stick to your windshield — to the test around the bustling Chicago metro area.



With three navigation-equipped cars on hand — a 2010 Acura TSX, a 2011 BMW 3 Series and a 2010 Infiniti G37 — we put their routing to the test. All three cars use different navigation suppliers, and all three systems vary in price and features.

  • The G37’s $1,850 navigation system requires upgrading, at minimum, to the G37 Journey — one rung up from the base model. It includes Zagat restaurant ratings, traffic and weather, Bluetooth streaming audio a larger hard drive for storing music, DVD capability and voice recognition. With upgraded graphics and technology for 2010, this system represents that latest and greatest Infiniti has to offer, spokesman Ray Daniels told us.
  • BMW’s $2,100 navigation system is available on any 3 Series. Besides a traffic display, it also adds the automaker’s iDrive system, now in its latest generation, with improved graphics, a host of shortcut buttons and the requisite additional configuration menus.
  • The TSX’s navigation system is part of a hefty $3,100 Technology Package that includes upgraded ELS audio, a six-CD changer, traffic and weather, a backup camera and nominal enhancements to the Bluetooth and climate control systems. Its grainy graphics reveal its age: The only DVD-based system in the test, the TSX’s navigation will be replaced by a faster hard-drive unit for 2011, spokesman Gary Robinson said.
Navgarmin

To establish a baseline, we brought along a Garmin Nuvi 255W. Purchased last April, it retails today for $180. We configured all systems, including the Garmin, to eliminate any routing preferences, meaning highways and toll roads were fair game.



Most systems allow for route choices — a quick route or a short route, for example. We always selected the quick route. More importantly, we also eliminated traffic-based routing. Traffic conditions, reported to each car through a streaming data feed, can change by the minute. A slight variance in traffic could result in a navigation system directing a car another way, skewing the results simply because it was last in the convoy.



The routing is what counts. With three teams of drivers, we set out to see how the systems handle a series of progressive route complications. After all, seldom does a road trip go without a missed turn or a bathroom detour.



Navchallenge1

Whether a system costs $200 or $2,000, wonky logic can still send you blocks — or miles — out of the way to get back on track after a detour. Old map databases can direct you the wrong way down a one-way street, or refuse to shortcut you down roads built a year or two ago. We’ve experienced both.



“You have maps that, even though they are coming from different companies, are being integrated and aggregated,” said Mark Boyadjis, an analyst who is on the automotive team at iSuppli, a California-based electronics consultancy. “All navigation systems have a proprietary routing system, or routing engine. ... It’s that sort of software that determines how a car gets from point A to point B. So there might be variations.”



Our evaluations took us from our downtown Chicago offices along the following routes:

  • A five-mile simple urban route from downtown to U.S. Cellular Field, home of the Chicago White Sox.
  • A 20-mile suburban route from U.S. Cellular Field to Elmhurst, Ill., including a simulated missed exit off Chicagoland’s I-294 toll way.
  • A 34-mile exurban route from Elmhurst to New Lenox, Ill., including a simulated bathroom break off I-294 with no clear entrance back to the highway and traveling along sections of I-355 that were completed at the end of 2007.
  • Finally, to see the currency of each system’s map display, we checked out one of the numerous new subdivisions in Plainfield, Ill.
By day’s end, each team had detailed impressions — on routing, address entry and more. A fair fight? Weigh in with any thoughts below, and stay tuned for tomorrow’s results.

2010 Acura TSX: Love/Hate

Friday, August 27th, 2010
2010AcuraTSX

I've had the opportunity to drive a few luxury sedans over the past

month, making it easier than usual to see how the Acura TSX stacks up

against its competitors. After spending some time in the more expensive

Infiniti G37x recently, I wasn't expecting to be wowed by the TSX. The

V-6 engine in our test car, however, won me over.



Love: V-6 Performance

The TSX looked nice enough at first glance. The exterior is sleek, and

the interior is well-appointed without being fussy. Before I realized

this car had a V-6, I figured the driving experience would be similarly

understated. What I discovered is that this car can move. Acceleration

to highway speeds was incredibly smooth and made merging onto the

interstate fun. What I initially thought of as a straightforward luxury

sedan began to look a whole lot more sporty to me. The V-6 engine

increases the price significantly, though, so shoppers may want to keep

that in mind when comparing cars in this segment.

2010acuratsxscreen



Hate: Digital Display

The center LCD screen in the TSX can be used to display satellite radio,

CD and iPod information, assuming the driver isn't using the navigation

screen. If the navigation screen is in use, you're stuck with a narrow

digital display bar below the screen that is crammed with the time,

cabin temperature and satellite radio station number, among other

information. Unless you've memorized the station guide, it may take a

minute to ascertain exactly what station or song you're listening to.

Sure, it's a minor inconvenience (or major nuisance if Miley Cyrus'

music makes you see spots), but other systems have a nice split-screen

that shows both map and stereo information.



2010 Acura TSX Review

2010 Acura TSX: Love/Hate

Friday, August 27th, 2010
2010AcuraTSX
I've had the opportunity to drive a few luxury sedans over the past
month, making it easier than usual to see how the Acura TSX stacks up
against its competitors. After spending some time in the more expensive
Infiniti G37x recently, I wasn't expecting to be wowed by the TSX. The
V-6 engine in our test car, however, won me over.

Love: V-6 Performance
The TSX looked nice enough at first glance. The exterior is sleek, and
the interior is well-appointed without being fussy. Before I realized
this car had a V-6, I figured the driving experience would be similarly
understated. What I discovered is that this car can move. Acceleration
to highway speeds was incredibly smooth and made merging onto the
interstate fun. What I initially thought of as a straightforward luxury
sedan began to look a whole lot more sporty to me. The V-6 engine
increases the price significantly, though, so shoppers may want to keep
that in mind when comparing cars in this segment.
2010acuratsxscreen

Hate: Digital Display
The center LCD screen in the TSX can be used to display satellite radio,
CD and iPod information, assuming the driver isn't using the navigation
screen. If the navigation screen is in use, you're stuck with a narrow
digital display bar below the screen that is crammed with the time,
cabin temperature and satellite radio station number, among other
information. Unless you've memorized the station guide, it may take a
minute to ascertain exactly what station or song you're listening to.
Sure, it's a minor inconvenience (or major nuisance if Miley Cyrus'
music makes you see spots), but other systems have a nice split-screen
that shows both map and stereo information.

2010 Acura MDX Video

Monday, May 3rd, 2010
Cars.com senior editor David Thomas explains why the 2010 Acura MDX is a luxury crossover with pretty good value, especially if you get the Technology Package. Check out this video to find out why the package is well worth the $3,000 and why families with more than two children may want to skip the MDX and look at other crossovers.

Recall Alert: 2004-2008 Acura TSX

Friday, April 30th, 2010

2004AcuraTSX

Acura is recalling about 167,000 2004-08 TSX sedans equipped with the 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine. The defect involves a power-steering hose that can deteriorate prematurely and crack, leading to a leak and loss of power steering that may result in smoke or fire. One incident of a fire has been reported.

The recall will begin in May. Owners can have a new power-steering hose, O-ring gasket and fluid replaced at no cost. Owners can contact Acura at owners.acura.com/recalls or at (800) 382-2238.

Cars.com Reviews the 2010 Acura MDX

Friday, April 30th, 2010
MDX

The Acura MDX could be seen as the standard-bearer of the luxury crossover segment. Since its introduction, though, competitors have made every effort to overtake it. Cars.com senior editor David Thomas reviews the 2010 MDX and explains why he’s come to expect so much from it, as well as what changes can be found for the 2010 model year.

2010 Acura MDX Review

Recall Alert: 2010 Acura ZDX

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010
Zdx

Honda has issued a recall of about 1,850 Acura ZDX vehicles from the 2010 model year, according to the automaker.

The recall is to inspect the dashboard surface material, which may prevent the passenger-side airbag from deploying during an accident. There have been no reported incidents of this, but a manufacturing quality check found that some vehicles don’t have the proper laser-cut scoring on the underside of the material. Without this scoring, the airbag might not deploy.

After the inspection, the dealer will replace the dashboard if it doesn’t have this scoring.

Keep in mind this affects only a small number of ZDX vehicles. Owners of the affected models will be notified by mail later this month, but ZDX owners can also call 800-382-2238 or go to Acura’s recall page here.

Cars Not Ready for iPad

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010
Ipaderror1

I had only been in the 2010 Acura MDX for only a day, but one of the first things I wanted to do was check out if my iPad worked with the car’s entertainment system. Acura has updated the navigation and stereo system for the 2010 MDX (also in the new ZDX), and the screen is much sharper than anything Honda or Acura has produced in the past, and I would now say it’s on par with every other manufacturer.



However, the iPad did not work despite its built-in iPod app. The setup is similar to the iPhone, which works flawlessly with the MDX. In fact, you can control your iPhone or iPod content via voice commands in a very similar fashion to Ford’s Sync system.



Sync is also not compatible with the iPad via USB, but the Bluetooth streaming music option does work with the iPad. Acura has the same Bluetooth music capability, but I could not get the iPad itself to find the car’s Bluetooth signal. Ipad1

Honda spokesman Chuck Schifsky said the company is evaluating the iPad but hasn’t even decided whether to upgrade its systems to accommodate it. Ford, too, says it is evaluating future iPad connectivity.



I was very impressed with the MDX system overall, and the lack of iPad integration is not a surprise.



Many automakers think Bluetooth streaming is a legitimate alternative to USB connections. So it’s likely if they offer it, they’re not going to rush to push out iPad updates, which while usually are just a software upgrade, they still require some amount of time and expense for the automaker.  



If you’ve tried to connect your iPad through your car’s USB system, let us know in the comments below.