It wasn't my intention to leave all of you have hanging, but I got busy. Sorry.
I wasn't really worried. It was just some good-natured ribbing.

Congrats, I hope it proves to be a good vehicle for the family.
It wasn't my intention to leave all of you have hanging, but I got busy. Sorry.
Looks good! That would be MAX in GHL? Is AWD in those mechanical, or does an electric engine push the rear axle? I know the electric engine pushes the rear axle in the GHL hybrid with non-turbo.It wasn't my intention to leave all of you have hanging, but I got busy. Sorry.
We picked up a TX500h Luxury in Incognito. The 500h gives you an extra 91 hp and 92 lb-ft of torque over the non-hybrid TX350 without any fuel economy penalty. All of the extra power comes from the new single-motor, parallel hybrid system. With the TX500h, you also get rear steering, adaptive dampeners and 6 piston front calipers with 15.7" rotors.
With the 2nd row Captain Chairs configured for maximum 2nd row legroom, I am still able to comfortably fit into the 3rd row. I'm 5'11" without an athletic build. I cannot say the same about the MDX/GLS, but the only other competition would've been a minivan or full-size domestic SUV's for $20K more.
I had a ~400 mile drive home from the dealer. The handling is respectable and improved over the Grand Highlander and the TX350, but it won't impress @edyvw or any car enthusiast. I averaged a hand-calculated 24 mpg at "rural I-5 speeds" while varying RPM and having some fun. Overall, the wife is happy and I hope she stays happy with this car for a long time, as it wasn't cheap.
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Was behind one yesterday, looked very niceIt wasn't my intention to leave all of you have hanging, but I got busy. Sorry.
We picked up a TX500h Luxury in Incognito. The 500h gives you an extra 91 hp and 92 lb-ft of torque over the non-hybrid TX350 without any fuel economy penalty. All of the extra power comes from the new single-motor, parallel hybrid system. With the TX500h, you also get rear steering, adaptive dampeners and 6 piston front calipers with 15.7" rotors.
With the 2nd row Captain Chairs configured for maximum 2nd row legroom, I am still able to comfortably fit into the 3rd row. I'm 5'11" without an athletic build. I cannot say the same about the MDX/GLS, but the only other competition would've been a minivan or full-size domestic SUV's for $20K more.
I had a ~400 mile drive home from the dealer. The handling is respectable and improved over the Grand Highlander and the TX350, but it won't impress @edyvw or any car enthusiast. I averaged a hand-calculated 24 mpg at "rural I-5 speeds" while varying RPM and having some fun. Overall, the wife is happy and I hope she stays happy with this car for a long time, as it wasn't cheap.
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Thanks -- and yes.Looks good! That would be MAX in GHL?
It is electric, but the rear axle setup is bit "better" than the one in the 2.5L hybrid.Is AWD in those mechanical, or does an electric engine push the rear axle? I know the electric engine pushes the rear axle in the GHL hybrid with non-turbo.
If anyone has a mid life crisis and has 7 kids, the 9 passenger Tahoe is for you! (Never knew such a configuration existed, apparently only with the LS)