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Wisty

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Posts posted by Wisty

  1. 9 hours ago, steveledzep said:

    I live in south west Wales and I travelled to Mansfield for my first IS saloon and went to Southport for my current convertible.

     

    I agree with Keith, your link is to a car I don't recognise as a SE-L.  I couldn't see evidence of the memory seat switches either.  Keith's link looks the business !

    Second this.  I'm near Warrington and traveled to Lincoln to see (and buy) the IS I have now.  It's worth the journey if you want to make sure all of your boxes are ticked.

  2. I recently had a '16 plate Merc C220D for 3 weeks as a courtesy car, following someone driving into the back of my IS on the M56.  I can comfortably say that if that is an indicator of Mercedes build quality, I will never EVER go near one to own.  It only had 7000 miles on it and squeaked, creaked and rattled and had a very crashy ride - this was on 17"s with plenty of sidewall - which looked tiny on the car as it's ridiculously large for a 'small' saloon.  Not only that but the diesel engine was dreadfully noisy with no refinement whatsoever.  And don't even get me started on the naff shiny plastics on the dashboard, or the enormous intrusive info-tainment screen that is just seemingly stuck on the top of the dash, that has no touch control features.

    Coming back to a replacement IS, it's so much better screwed together, and a far more pleasant place to be.

    • Like 1
  3. I had this on mine and they replaced a non-folding wing mirror and resonating door speaker with no absolutely no questions.  Car was cleaned and vacuumed to the usual high(ish!) standard and they gave me a desk for the morning to work from whilst they did the part swaps.  They also gave me food, tea and water.

    The warranty seems to cover everything that's not a wear and tear item, including electrics.  Decent value for peace of mind in my opinion.

    • Like 1
  4. It also means you don't end up with that ugly sticky ring mark on the windscreen too.  Always a plus!

    I've found it's not too bad for diverting around traffic (only works if she's giving you directions: they don't just come up if you're on your way home from work.  My phone tells me that before I leave though.  How did we live before Google?!) - although sometimes it warns me of slow traffic or congestion when I'm already caught up in it.  

    If I could hack it so it showed Google maps from my phone though...

  5. 6 hours ago, noby76 said:

    you know what i was actually thinking about this 2 days ago when i saw a bloke pop open his C250 bluetec estate boot whilst i was filling up at the petrol sation and thought 'hang on a minute this boot is not that spacious as the outside makes you believe' i checked a few websites comparing cars and this was what i found

    2015 Audi A4 Avant = 505 litres

    2013 325d Touring = 495 litres

    2015 C250d Merc Estate = 490 litres

    2015 IS200t Saloon = 480 litres

    i was surprised to know the largest boot space being the Audi could only accommodate an extra 20 litres of space whe compared to the Saloon Lexus IS which is not day and night in terms of space. i also compared some modern SUV 4X4's to the boot space of my GS and came to the same conclusion and actually wondered why most bother with estate or an SUV compared to a descent sized family Saloon. I am aware most of the back seats in estates can fold down but where will you put your kids? the estates also cost a fraction more than Saloon for not much of practicality. 

    The luggage space increases enormously when you fold the seats down and that's where an estate really comes to be useful.  Having had a couple of Alfa 156 estates (sorry Alfa; 'Sportwagon's) in my time, I can confirm that all of that extra space, even in something as bijou as a 156, is exceptionally useful.  My IS250 is the first car I've ever owned where I've had to consider what sort of rack I'm going to use to transport my £4k mountain bike.  I'm still undecided.  

    I even managed to get my bike in the back of a Ford Puma...

  6. The road between Lampeter and Aberaeron was always a fun run of mine, as long as you don't manage to find a tractor or Co-Op truck meandering its merry way!

    New Quay itself is very picturesque (though I second the parking challenges), with some lovely beaches and you can often see dolphins from the harbour wall - pro tip: early in the morning on a filling tide is probably the best time.  You might see seals too :)

    I highly recommend the few miles up the road to Aberaeron for food in the Harbourmaster Hotel.

  7. 10 minutes ago, toffee_pie said:

    I will never get a diesel car, ever. Lexus had the sense to stop making them at least. 

    In my motoring life (since 2005), I've owned one diesel engined car.  It was an Alfa Romeo 156 sportwagon 1.9 JTD which I had for 25 months.  

    It was nice to sit in, but every time I started it, I cringed at the clatter coming from such a good looking Italian car.  

    I will never buy another diesel.

  8. I have a IS250, and my (soon to be) sister in law has an IS220D, which she absolutely swears by.  She uses it mostly for regular long journeys where the engine has plenty of time to get warm and avoid the associated DPF/EGR issues associated with all modern TDIs.

    My IS250 is a much nicer thing to travel in though - the auto box is flawless and it goes very well.

    My advice would be to try both, and think long and hard about what you're likely to do mileage wise.

    Good luck!

  9. I've had Uniroyal Rainsport 3s and Goodyear Asymmetric 2s (not on my Lexus sadly) and found that the rainsports are incredibly good in the wet.  I lived in Wales at the time, so they saw a lot of standing water!

    As for the Goodyears, I was surprising pleased with the longevity of them (10k last year and still at least 20k left on them), and it's what I've had on my last 2 cars (through some fairly mild and also very cold winters).  I'll be looking to potentially go for them when it comes time to re-shoe the Lexus.

    If I were you, I'd pick the cheaper of the two, or the one that has the best looking tread pattern (as we all know that looking awesome is most important) and you'll most likely not be disappointed.  

  10. 2 hours ago, dougie175 said:

    As much as I'd like to do this to mine, those instructions look terrifying!

    Nice to see yours are working though.  Was the wiring of the Nextbase into the mirror 12v supply difficult?  I'm keen to do something similar, and your set up looks impressively unobtrusive.  Bear in mind, I'm as much use a chocolate fireguard when it comes to wiring and soldering...

  11. 11 hours ago, JamesG said:

    I left mine Power on for a while, didn't really notice any difference to the fuel figures.  What I did notice when I switched it off after a few months, it does use more engine braking and tries to gear down to the correct gear, ie on my way to work I have long flowing windy downhill section which I like cruising down with no accelerator input at about 40-50 mph.  When entering the hill I have too brake from 60ish, with the power on, the car gears down to third and i have a jerky ride down the hill until it dicides to change up.  With the Sport off, it stays in 6th and a nice smooth cruise down the hill.

    This has been pretty much my experience too.  It's not anywhere near as refined and smooth with PWR engaged - stop start traffic can be a bit grating.  That said, selecting it just before you boot it onto a busy roundabout is brilliant :yes:

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