This review originally appeared in the December 2012 edition of the Northern & Central California Cruisinâ News published out of Folsom, California â" mg
And then when I tell him the carmaker is Scion, well donât that just beat all!
The car in question is the new-for-2013 Scion FR-S sports car, a four-passenger, two-door rear driver with serious sleekness and classic Euro-sport design. Mine looked particularly fetching in basic black.

Looked sporty and felt sporty. The 2-liter, four-cylinder boxer engine is rated at 200 horsepower, and yes, that moves the 2,800-pound machine forward with righteous aggressiveness. Deep-detail readers know thatâs the same engine youâll find in the delightful Subaru BRZ.
Rest assured, from my experience, you can surprise many a sports car-driving fellow motorist by putting your right foot down in this FR-S and simply sailing away.
The FR-S handled with old-school nimbleness, and small movements of the steering wheel at high speed brought instant gratification. Nice job on that score.
Alas, the sport-tuned suspension is to the max, so youâre going to feel every little bump in the road. Things get pretty noisy in the cockpit at full song as well.
One other annoyance for me was the racer-style driverâs seat with accented side padding that could not be adjusted, or deflated. So unless youâre the size of the typical Formula One pilot â" say 5-7 and 145 pounds â" those pads are going to dig into your upper torso. Perhaps if you drive the car often enough, the seat molds to your body frame. Frankly, I donât know the answer to that one.
What I do know is that your neighbors will likely flip out at the sight of this FR-S, because really, it looks like a $50,000 number sitting in your driveway. Youâre under no obligation to tell anyone that the sticker price is about half that.
And you donât have to spill the beans on the gas mileage, which is very good for a spunky performer in this segment â" 25 miles per gallon in the city and 34 mpg on the highway.
Interior standard features are pretty impressive in this price segment. They include leather trimmed touches and aluminum sp ort pedals/scuff plates. Adds to the whole sports car experience, I say.
And Iâm not the only one liking this vehicle: It was named âHottest Sport Compactâ at the recent Specialty Equipment Market Association show in Las Vegas .
A few years ago, Iâm not sure Iâd have taken a bet that Scion would produce such a stout, sporty car.
Happily, I would have been wrong.
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