Based on the popular ES 300 sedan, the RX offers most of the cues and packaging elements that are important to sport/utility users: the weather-be-damned security of optional all-wheel drive, a commanding view of the road, and a handy cargo area with fold-down rear seats. Yet it spares you some of the drawbacks. For example, the step-in height is lower than in most sport/utes, for easier entry and exit.
There's only one engine choice available. The 3.0-liter/220-horsepower DOHC all-aluminum V-6 cranks out power equaling that of many V-8s, and delivers it to the ground in very sophisticated fashion. It's smooth, revvy, quiet, and the VVT-i technology allows this V-6 to make a surprising 80 percent of its torque available as low as 1600 rpm. Freeway onramps are a breeze, as are most passing maneuvers.
The electronically controlled four-speed automatic transmission (no manual is offered) even packs a Sport mode for more aggressive shifts. There is no transfer case or low range, as in most "pure" sport/utes. But this is by design, and in keeping with the RX 300's mission to excel in all-weather driveability and light-duty off-roading, as opposed to maximum rock crawling.
Anyone climbing inside this well-optioned SUV would have a tough time telling it from any Lexus sedan. Rich wood and sumptuous leather trim are spread throughout the cabin, with a full complement of power accessories. Rear passengers enjoy adjustable seats and their own heating/air-conditioning vents. The front console is a unique design, as it doesn't extend back between the front seats. Lexus' trademark vacuum-fluorescent gauges are clearly visible through the handsome three-spoke steering wheel, while heating, A/C, and entertainment system functions are monitored via the 5.8-inch liquid crystal display screen in the center of the dash. There's no fishing around the cargo area to load CDs, as the six-disc changer unit is handily located in the glovebox.
What separates the RX 300 from most truck-based SUVs is its exceptionally polished road manners. The ride is luxury-car compliant, yet it doesn't exhibit the body roll often associated with higher-riding sport/utilities. Road feel from the power-assisted rack-and-pinion steering is reassuringly communicative, as is the stopping power from the four-wheel disc brakes and ABS.
Lexus' design prototype that pre-dated the production RX 300 was called the SLV, for Sport Luxury Vehicle. Had they not decided to call it RX, that name would have fit just fine.
-Matt Stone
Thumbs Up
True carlike levels of ride and luxury
Super-easy to maneuver and park
Friendliest ingress/egress
Thumbs Down
Lack of "low range" gearing limits off-road capability
Space pod styling not for everyone
Ride-biased tires don't maximize on- or off-road performance
Mercedes-Benz M-Class
The Most Technologically Sophisticated Sport/Utility Vehicle
Sport/utilities have come a long way, baby. Once a bastion of bare-bones, don't-fix-it-if-it-ain't-broke technology, today's upper-crust, luxury SUVs boast engineering that's pushing the overall automotive envelope. For proof, one need only look at the electronically controlled air-spring suspension systems on the Range Rover or Lexus LX 470 or advanced automatic four-wheel-drive systems of several sport/ute models. For sheer, bristling innovation and sophistication from bumper to bumper, though, Mercedes-Benz' M-Class is tough to beat.