Jaeger
Registered Member
Greetings all. I've spent the last few weeks looking for an upgrade to my 2011 Sonata 2.0T. New cars considered and test driven include:
Acura TLX
Infiniti Q50
Nissan Maxima SV
What was different to all my prior new car shopping adventures is that for the first time I considered buying used. And the forum was to blame. This thread on the great used buy that a used LS can be, combined with Ron prattling on about the awesomeness of his more than decade old LS 430 had me considering what the used car market might have to offer. I am here to tell you that CDN$30 – 35k can buy you one HECK of a car – though full cash buyers are better positioned to grab the perfect car when it arises as well as avoid the decidedly higher financing rates that attach to a used purchase. While I didn't ultimately find the right car at the right price at the right time, I drove multiple examples of the following vehicles and could easily see myself as being happy with any of them, notwithstanding some significant differences:
2011 Lexus LS 460 AWD
2013 Lexus GS 350 AWD
2012 / 13 Hyundai Genesis 5.0 R Spec
2102 / 13 Hyundai Equus – arguably the most intriguing of the bunch and one of the serious sleepers of the used car market.
Oddly, what got me right back to where I started from (apologies to Maxine Nightingale) were the odd “demo” model 2015 Genesis sedans that cropped up in my used vehicle search. One such possible example was a Manhattan Brown model on beige leather – a combo that ranked high on my fave list. Funnily enough, Patrick was able to confirm that this was in fact a press vehicle – so the very one I had seen in a number of Canadian reviews (including right here on Autos.ca).
Anyway, I called my local dealer just to check if they had any demo 2015s, and was told no, but they had one remaining NEW 2015 in Luxury trim that they were motivated to move. I wasn't really counting on a very high level of motivation on their part, but boy, was I proven wrong. The colour combo – Cassablanca White on black leather with grey piping – wasn't my top pick, but ranked tied for second on my wish list. And the deal was simply too good to pass up, on a car I wanted and at a better price than I had seen on a few used offerings.
Which brings us to today, where I handed over my well-loved 2011 Sonata Turbo and drove away in this:
I'll update once I've been driving it for a while. But some bullet points on things that made a strong positive impression:
* Exterior styling – wholly subjective but I think this ranks as one of the better looking BIG sedans on the road, period.
* Interior styling / quality – remarkably close to Lexus level. You'd be down to picking nits on a few isolated examples of switchgear but the overall impression is one of actual parity. And I give the Genesis MAJOR props for the use of open pore wood which I VASTLY prefer to the multiple layers of glossy clear coat polyurethane. That look works in older luxury rides but seems out of step in a contemporary vehicle. The brown Ash wood in my car is really a study in the beauty of natural grain. And the combination of touchscreen, redundant buttons and rotating knob controller is far easier to use than the Lexus mouse, or frankly, any non touch screen interface. Exceptionally comfortable seating front and rear, with the latter providing notable spacious accomodations.
* Powertrain. The V6 is strong, smooth and emits a nice aggressive growl in the last 2000 rpm before redline. Real engine sounds – not a synthetic soundtrack piped through the speakers. The transmission does what you expect of a good auto – it gets to the right gear promptly and smoothly and basically doesn't call attention to itself by responding in any way OTHER than expected.
* Ride / handling. Not a sports sedan but very capable in the handling department for such a large sedan. Certainly a lot closer to the Lexus GS than the LS in this department, and the GS can REALLY dance. When not clinging to curves, the ride is – counter-intuitively – closer to the LS than the GS. The GS never quite gets to that serene glide of its big brother – or even really close, truth be told. The extra long wheelbase of the Genesis certainly helps here. In fact, a lot of ways the Genesis splits the difference between the two in space, comfort and handling.
Acura TLX
Infiniti Q50
Nissan Maxima SV
What was different to all my prior new car shopping adventures is that for the first time I considered buying used. And the forum was to blame. This thread on the great used buy that a used LS can be, combined with Ron prattling on about the awesomeness of his more than decade old LS 430 had me considering what the used car market might have to offer. I am here to tell you that CDN$30 – 35k can buy you one HECK of a car – though full cash buyers are better positioned to grab the perfect car when it arises as well as avoid the decidedly higher financing rates that attach to a used purchase. While I didn't ultimately find the right car at the right price at the right time, I drove multiple examples of the following vehicles and could easily see myself as being happy with any of them, notwithstanding some significant differences:
2011 Lexus LS 460 AWD
2013 Lexus GS 350 AWD
2012 / 13 Hyundai Genesis 5.0 R Spec
2102 / 13 Hyundai Equus – arguably the most intriguing of the bunch and one of the serious sleepers of the used car market.
Oddly, what got me right back to where I started from (apologies to Maxine Nightingale) were the odd “demo” model 2015 Genesis sedans that cropped up in my used vehicle search. One such possible example was a Manhattan Brown model on beige leather – a combo that ranked high on my fave list. Funnily enough, Patrick was able to confirm that this was in fact a press vehicle – so the very one I had seen in a number of Canadian reviews (including right here on Autos.ca).
Anyway, I called my local dealer just to check if they had any demo 2015s, and was told no, but they had one remaining NEW 2015 in Luxury trim that they were motivated to move. I wasn't really counting on a very high level of motivation on their part, but boy, was I proven wrong. The colour combo – Cassablanca White on black leather with grey piping – wasn't my top pick, but ranked tied for second on my wish list. And the deal was simply too good to pass up, on a car I wanted and at a better price than I had seen on a few used offerings.
Which brings us to today, where I handed over my well-loved 2011 Sonata Turbo and drove away in this:
I'll update once I've been driving it for a while. But some bullet points on things that made a strong positive impression:
* Exterior styling – wholly subjective but I think this ranks as one of the better looking BIG sedans on the road, period.
* Interior styling / quality – remarkably close to Lexus level. You'd be down to picking nits on a few isolated examples of switchgear but the overall impression is one of actual parity. And I give the Genesis MAJOR props for the use of open pore wood which I VASTLY prefer to the multiple layers of glossy clear coat polyurethane. That look works in older luxury rides but seems out of step in a contemporary vehicle. The brown Ash wood in my car is really a study in the beauty of natural grain. And the combination of touchscreen, redundant buttons and rotating knob controller is far easier to use than the Lexus mouse, or frankly, any non touch screen interface. Exceptionally comfortable seating front and rear, with the latter providing notable spacious accomodations.
* Powertrain. The V6 is strong, smooth and emits a nice aggressive growl in the last 2000 rpm before redline. Real engine sounds – not a synthetic soundtrack piped through the speakers. The transmission does what you expect of a good auto – it gets to the right gear promptly and smoothly and basically doesn't call attention to itself by responding in any way OTHER than expected.
* Ride / handling. Not a sports sedan but very capable in the handling department for such a large sedan. Certainly a lot closer to the Lexus GS than the LS in this department, and the GS can REALLY dance. When not clinging to curves, the ride is – counter-intuitively – closer to the LS than the GS. The GS never quite gets to that serene glide of its big brother – or even really close, truth be told. The extra long wheelbase of the Genesis certainly helps here. In fact, a lot of ways the Genesis splits the difference between the two in space, comfort and handling.



