Kamis, 11 Februari 2010

2010 acura tsx V-6 - fun-to-drive vehicle at an affordable price.

2010 acura tsx, 2010 acura tsx v6, 2010AcuraTsx, 2010AcuraTsxV6
2010 acura tsx, 2010 acura tsx v6, 2010AcuraTsx, 2010AcuraTsxV6
2010 acura tsx, 2010 acura tsx v6, 2010AcuraTsx, 2010AcuraTsxV6
2010 acura tsx, 2010 acura tsx v6, 2010AcuraTsx, 2010AcuraTsxV6
2010 acura tsx, 2010 acura tsx v6, 2010AcuraTsx, 2010AcuraTsxV6

2010 acura tsx V-6


That V-6 is the same 3.5-liter, 24-valve, SOHC V-6 found in the front-wheel-drive TL. It's still rated at 280 hp and 254 lb-ft of torque, which represents a 79 hp and 84 lb-ft jump over the 2.4-liter I-4. Helping channel that power are new 20-inch wheels and larger disc brakes, which are exclusive to the TSX V-6.

The V6 in the TSX is the same 3.5-liter unit found in the base TL, meaning 280 horsepower and 254 pound-feet of torque are being channeled to the front wheels. Unsurprisingly, the 50 percent bump in torque is immediately noticeable. Unfortunately, the mantra that torque is good and more torque is better is largely targeted at rear-wheel-drive cars, or at least front drivers that know what to do with it. Sadly, the TSX doesn't seem to fit into that category. At the launch event for the TSX V6, Acura representatives identified the BMW 335i, Lexus IS350 and Audi A4 3.2 as the chief competitors for this new model. Leaving the rear-wheel-drive Bimmer and Lexus out of the mix, we've got to focus on the the A4 – although it's no longer available in the U.S. with a V6. It did, however, come equipped with standard quattro all-wheel drive last year. Which begs the question: Honda has a fantastic torque vectoring all-wheel drive system in every other model in its lineup, so why isn't it available on the TSX? This omission is truly unfortunate.

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