Lexus GS 300/430
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Lexus GS 300/430 overall verdict
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The Lexus GS is a large sedan. Not the prettiest of lumpen beetles for those who consider themselves to have normal eyesight, but the driving experience is both satisfying and silent, in a slightly techy way.
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Comfort
So it won't cream a BMW when it comes to drilling an apex, but it will make you painfully aware that where a 5-series winds you up by encouraging you to go faster, the GS will de-stress you with the gentle sound of silence. Run over pedestrians and you'll be isolated from their screams by superb insulation and the bump thump of jaywalkers passes under the wheels virtually unnoticed.
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Performance
Flavours of basic GS come in two versions; the 183kW 3.0-litre V6 and the slightly more potent 208kW 4.3-litre V8. Both get a brilliant six-speed auto 'box that slurs gears better than a drunk slurs words. You'll be looking at a 0-100km/h time of 7.2 seconds and a top speed of 238km/h for the smaller engine and a sprint of 6.1 and 249km/h limiter for the V8. No diesel though...
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Cool
Respected for its tech ability, but too damn ugly to be cool.
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Quality
Built with a wonderfully anal attention to detail. Even other premium marques look at Lexus panel gaps and wince. The GS is a car that seems to try very hard at feeling well put together, and then fails slightly for us by tripping over small cultural differences. For instance, some of the interior colour combinations look cheap and the wood is so over-processed it looks like plastic. It is also one of the few modern cars in production with a cassette player in the dash. No, really.
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Handling
The GS can fling its rather lardy bottom around with surprising alacrity once you've got the hang. It's never particularly encouraging about going fast though - any car this heavy on the servo-assistance isn't that keen on making you ‘at one' with the blacktop.
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Practicality
The GS is big, but space in the rear for larger people can get a bit claustrophobic thanks to that rotund rump. The boot is similarly weird; it's big but very long, so you almost have to climb inside to retrieve anything that's rolled to the back. Huge 84-litre fuel tank makes range very reasonable.
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Running costs
The base model gets 9.8L/100km. The V8 gets 11L+. And there's no diesel.


