2003 Lexus GX470 Sport Utility Vehicle Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 2003 Lexus GX470 review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 2003 Lexus GX470 reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
Car Classifieds Car Dealers Car Prices Car Reviews
 

2003 Lexus GX470 Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2003 Lexus GX470 car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2003 Lexus GX470 ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2003 Lexus GX470 reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
Find this 2003 Lexus GX470 in your area

Lexus GX470 Interior Review

What you get most of with the GX 470 is the luxury that we've all grown used to with Lexus-brand vehicles. This is a big, brawny vehicle that offers the last word in leather and birdseye maple wood glamour, very large and commodious seats, lots of elbow room, and lots of help to make your ride more fun and more comfortable. All of the gauges and instruments are large and easy to read, with simple graphics shared by other Lexus products.

The GX 470 in its eight-seat configuration offers plenty of room and easy in/out at the 60/40 split second row, with a 50/50 split third seat accessible via the folding second seat. The third-row seats can either be folded up out of the way or removed and stored. What starts as a 13 cubic-foot cargo bay can be expanded in steps by folding or removing seats up to more than 77 cubic feet with the lightweight rear seats removed and the second row folded.

We were impressed by two things inside the GX 470: the quiet, and the use of space. At highway cruising speeds, the V8 is barely audible. A normal family of four with one large pet will feel right at home inside the GX, cosseted and comfortable with tall side windows affording a good view out. The quality of materials, fit, and finish, is excellent, and the cabin really works.

For the time being, the only options for the GX 470 are the navigation system, bundled with the Mark Levinson 240-watt sound system ($2700), the DVD entertainment system ($1560), and the third-seat package with rear air conditioning ($2030), a tow hitch receiver ($430), and the Lexus Link concierge service.

One of the beauties of driving any Lexus product is that everything is where it's supposed to be, and everything is clearly labeled. Even something as complex as a navigation system has been reduced to everyday equipment in the GX 470 because it was designed so well.

Our only functional criticism is aimed at the rear cargo compartment, which is accessed by opening the door from the side. We've grown so accustomed to a horizontally split tailgate or a top-hinged liftgate in this market segment that the door design just didn't feel natural to us anymore.



Lexus GX470 Road Test

The Lexus GS 470 is a no-compromise SUV, and during our on-road/off-road adventures with it in and around Park City, Utah, we fell in love with it for the way it drives and handles, seemingly ready for anything this side of a Rockies avalanche. Its array of onboard electronics is unrivalled in this segment at this price, and all systems work in concert to make this machine come alive, whatever the driving conditions. The GX 470 comes ready to play.

The 4.7-liter V8 delivers world-class power, torque, smoothness, and quietness. The V8 is shared with the Lexus LX 470 and is optional with the Toyota 4Runner. It comes coupled with a new five-speed automatic transmission, which offers quicker response and better gearing than a traditional four-speed automatic.

Should you venture off road in this luxurious vehicle you'll have at your command the latest in off-road management systems. It has a full-time four-wheel-drive system with an expensive locking Torsen torque-sensing differential that can shift the power from the front axle to the rear axle continuously. It automatically directs power according to the traction available at each of the four corners. In normal highway conditions, power is split 40/60 percent front/rear. If the rear wheels spin, the differential can change the front/rear ratio to 53/47 percent to control the slippage. Conversely, sending more power to the rear wheels (29/71 front/rear) during steering maneuvers improves tracking through curves.

Downhill Assist Control (DAC) makes it easier to control the truck down steep, slippery slopes: Simply take your feet off the pedals and the GX 470 slowly walks down the incline, using the anti-lock brake system and electronic traction control to keep the GX 470 pointed in the intended direction. Touch the brake or the gas to slow down or speed up, then take your feet off the pedals again and the system takes over. It even works in reverse, in case you have to back down a hill and try again. Downhill Assist Control is very neat feature that makes sense and a feature that anybody can use after one lesson. Going uphill? Hill-Start Assist Control helps keep the GX 470 stationary while starting on a steep incline.

On the road, Vehicle Skid Control improves control and lateral traction while cornering on dry or slippery road surfaces. Skid control helps the driver keep the GX on the intended path by reducing power or applying brake to individual wheels. Skid control can prevent a spin or reduce the chance of sliding off the road.

We found the brakes of the GX 470 to be superb. They are large, and all four discs are ventilated for long life and fade-free performance (most trucks use ventilated discs only on the front wheels). The GX 470 comes standard with the latest in brake technology: Anti-lock brakes (ABS) help the driver maintain control of the steering in a panic stop. Electronic Brake force Distribution (EBD) distributes the proper brake force between front and rear wheels to achieve shorter stopping distances. Brake assist can help the driver use the full potential of the brakes in panic stops.

As heavy as it is, the GX 470 is no slouch in the performance department, capable of full-throttle sprints to 60 mph from rest in about 8.5 seconds, with a nice V-8 intake roar to go with it. If you're towing anything up to its limit of 5000 pounds, this truck will handle it with ease. The bad news is that, even if you try hard, you probably won't see 20 miles per gallon for the life of the vehicle.

While it is heavier than a unibody SUV would be, we're happy to have the body-on-frame design of the GX 470 for the quietness it affords. The new power steering system, which actually has different-ratio gears on the outer ends of the steering rack than on the interior, makes steering quick and light in parking situations, but quick and heavy on the highway, so the truck never feels over-assisted and never feels darty. The GX 470 handles impressively well for a body-on-frame truck with a live rear axle. It uses an adaptive variable suspension that continuously changes the shock absorber damping at each wheel individually in response to road surface conditions, speed, and driver steering and braking inputs. Four driver-selectable settings are available to tailor the system to driver preferences, mood, or driving situations. You might want the softest setting for a bumpy boulevard or a firmer setting for driving quickly down a winding rural road. The system automatically increases shock absorber stiffness in transitional maneuvers. It also reduces dive under hard braking and squat under hard acceleration. The rear air suspension can raise rear ride height in rugged terrain or lower the rear end when loading cargo.



Lexus GX470 Lineup

The Lexus GX 470 ($44,925) is positioned in the luxury-utility vehicle market segment, with a single model strategy augmented by major options and option packages. That's marketing jargon meaning this baby comes loaded with expensive equipment and features, yet you can add even more stuff.

More than 20 premium items come standard, from the glass moonroof to the illuminated running boards. A five-speed automatic transmission (rather than a four-speed automatic) comes standard. Also standard: anti-lock brakes, traction control, power seats, power mirrors, power windows, a wood and leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob, heated seats, rain-sensing wipers, automatic dual climate control, Homelink, a 115V AC power outlet in the cargo area, AM/FM/cassette/6-disc CD changer with 11 speakers, rear seat audio system (RSAS) with remote control and headphones, a roof rack. Standard equipment includes a Torsen limited-slip differential, Vehicle Skid Control (VSC), Adaptive Variable Suspension (AVS), adjustable height control, and 17-inch alloy wheels.

Options include a third-row seat with rear air conditioning ($2,030); Navigation system bundled with a Mark Levinson premium audio system ($2,700); Lexus Link ($1,215), which is similar to GM's OnStar system and includes one year of service; a rear-seat entertainment system with two headphones ($1,560). A tow hitch receiver ($430) is optional.

Standard passive-safety equipment includes dual multi-stage front airbags and side airbags and side curtain airbags for the front and second-row seats. Three-point seatbelts are provided for each seating position, and the front belts are equipped with pretensioners and force limiters to help minimize injuries from the belts themselves in an impact.



  Find Other Used Car Reviews by Make:  
Car Classifieds Car Dealers Car Prices Car Reviews
Copyright 2008 Used Cars Channel.com All Rights Reserved