I have had "Performance Luxury Sedans" all the way back to the first VW Quantum with its tiny 12" tires thru to my latest E Class. My daughter has an RSX and my son has a Suzuki Grand Vitari. My wife has had Lexus models for over a decade. I have been one of the biggest supporters of the Genesis but there is a definite issue with the way this car rides. I am not looking for a softer ride. I do not like cars with soft rides. I want to know what is going on with the vehicle in relationship to the road. What I want is a consistent and predictable driving experience so that I know what the car can safely accomplish and be able to push it to those limits on the rare occasion that traffic, weather, etc, present themeselves. Taught accurate steering, firm ride, minimal lean or roll and just a touch of understeer make me happy. I expect a luxury performance sedan ride to be well dampened in all conditions.
That said, the drive train of the 4.6 is incredibly smooth and powerful, the steering is accurate and well weighted(aside from crowning issue) and as mentioned before the tautness feel wise is between the Mercedes and the Lexus. The 4.6 displays minimal lean or roll and has less understeer that the 3.8. Both very acceptable to me. But the ability of the car to deal with minor road imperfections is horrible. The Genesis seems to deal with expansion joints at high speed with aplumb but falls apart at 15 mph over an irregular surface. I almost feel at times like I am in a 1960's pickup truck with the shock absorbers under the front seats going off roading. The Lexus, RSX and Suzuki all have a better ride at this point of time on low speed local roads that have an unsmooth surface.
Case in point- we just had our first major snow storm here in NJ. You know how the roads get a little bumpy as the snow gets packed down? In the Lexus you do not even know there is snow, in the RSX (a car noted for the firm suspension and taught handling) you can feel the irregularities in the road in the
wheel but the overall ride is fairly well dampened. The Suzuki has a fairly even distribution of bumps communicated by both the
wheel and the chasis, much more notable than in the RSX, still dampened but to a far lesser degree. But in the Genesis you get a series of jolts from the seat and almost a feeeling that the car is hopping from snowbump to snowbump and mogul to mogul.The powertrain continues along smoothly and the chasis remains level but the driver experience is one of concern... Is the car falling apart? Will I accidently bite my tounge? Why am I so aware of this road's bumps and brusies when I've driven it thousands of times before and never noticed them? The closest I can describe it is like it was when you rode in the back of the school bus and would literally get launched from your seat- but this is happening in the drivers seat at 15mph....
Again this is hard to pinpoint because the Genesis will handle a major expansion joint between road and bridge on RT23 South at 55mph better than the Lexus, much better than the RSX and in another world from the Suzuki. This expanision joint in Wayne has been known to make grown men shudder, but here the Genesis shines.
I am not looking for a "softer ride". I want to be able to drive the local streets not living in fear of a kidney transplant.
So far out of the tire/spring rate/amplitude-selective damping ideas over the root cause of this issue I have to believe it is the tire/damping combo. Daviderle suggested that the ZF “Agility Control” was adjustable “dependent of the tuning philosophy”.
My question to the forum is that for those of you who know suspension systems does this make sense and more importantly is this something that our local dealer can take a crack at adjusting? For me this is sucking major joy from an otherwise fantastic car.