pomegranate
Senior Member
I love your passion for the ITS, but this just never made sense to me. The Type R is the tracking, racer's car where lap-times and driver dynamics matter the most. The S in Type S always meant street to me, but it's clear they started with the Type R and added some touches rather than how Acura typically does Type S's.I still think that people who criticize this car for cost are not the proper target demographic. There are so many cars that are better buys if you don't prioritize the driving dynamics.
i.e., if you're not routinely driving the car on twisty backroads or doing motorsports type things, you probably should look elsewhere. The money you're spending is on the engineering that went into making the car as fun to drive as it is, but if you're not realizing that and just using it to commute or run errands, you're better off with something else.
If I just needed to drive to work and the grocery store, there's no way I'd pick an ITS over an S4. NO EFFING WAY lol. But... I had an S4 for a bit and it's just dead inside when you try to drive it on a backroad.
If you do prioritize driving dynamics though, there's not a better sports sedan out there for DOUBLE the cost. You have to get to an M3C to even start having the conversation, and even then you're looking at such a different experience it's not impossible to still prefer the ITS (for example, I still would buy an ITS over a G80 M3, even if I could get one for $50k). But... my primary use case for this car is stress relief, not commuting. I'm the target demographic, and for me I think it's a killer bargain... but there's not many of us, which is why this car is not for everyone.
This is just a difference in vision for the car, obviously. I rather they cared less about weight and added more typical luxury features like ventilated seats, rear seat vents, memory seats, WHILE giving it the K20C + LSD. Instead it literally is just a Type R with some additional features, more akin to a technology package + different face than a separate model or identity.
Coming back to Demographics, the Type R is niche, and now it seems like the Type S is even more niche where I think they should've broadened the demographics, not made it smaller. This is where people typically argue TLX, but that doesn't make sense to me either. The TLX is bloated, it's not compact nor practical and they're not even in the same size class.
Honestly, a super perfect Integra to me, would've been more Acura-fied. Keep the aggressive looks, the liftback, the practical cargo capacity, even the body kit, and then add actual sound deadening, passenger + driver automatic seats, heated and ventilated seats, memory seats, ideally the Accord infotainment, rear seat vents, and maybe auto-folding mirrors and that'd be it. I'd say worth 60k at that point whether it was a manual and/or AT. Hopefully build quality that warrants 60k too
Sponsored