Acura offers one model of the TL for 2004. The performance-oriented
Type-S has been dropped. Type-S intenders should not be
dismayed, however, as Honda's luxury car division has endowed
the new TL with the essential features and capabilities
of the Type-S. And in the pipeline is an optional suspension
setup intended to bring the TL's handling even closer to
the company's admitted benchmark for the class, the
BMW 5-Series sedans.
The 2004 Acura TL is outfitted with almost every luxury
amenity buyers in the class seek or expect, plus one or
two either not offered elsewhere or available for the first
time in any class. Topping this list is a stereo system
that redefines the overused term premium. Not content with
a multi-speaker, externally power-amplified, DVD/CD/cassette/AM/FM/XM
Satellite Radio system, Acura has added a
technology known as DVD-Audio 5.1. DVDs recorded with this
technology triple the channels in traditional stereo and
virtual (electronically synthesized) surround sound systems,
from two to six. The hope is to do for digital recordings
what Dolby did for analog tapes. This more discrete surround
sound is common in recording studio gear and has only recently
begun appearing in home entertainment systems. Also standard,
and another first, is a hands-free, wireless, cellular telephone
capability (that is, the buyer provides the phone) employing
Bluetooth technology. Other standard features include
power everything, from windows, to seats, to outside mirrors,
etc. Leather is standard and not only trims the seats and
door panels, but also wraps the shift knob and steering
wheel. Even lowly carpeted floor mats are standard.
The latest generation of occupant safety developments,
including seat-mounted, side-impact and full-cabin, side
curtain airbags, are included at no extra cost. Frontal
airbags are dual stage and dual threshold, meaning they
deploy at
different rates depending on the severity of the crash and
whether the front seat occupants are belted in. The side-impact
airbag sensors note the seat occupant's height and position
to minimize potential injury to out-of-place and smaller-stature
individuals. The only disappointment, especially from Honda,
is the omission of a head restraint for the center rear
passenger.
Xenon High Intensity Discharge headlights brighten the road
ahead of every '04 Acura TL. The greenhouse is that in more
than stylist terminology, using green-tinted glass to block
some of the sun's heat. A dual-zone, dual-mode, air conditioner
automatically does the rest of the job, managing interior
temperatures with air cleansed by a micron filter.
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Acura's navigation system ($2000) is the only major
option offered (at least initially) for the 2004 TL. The
system features voice recognition of 293 verbal commands,
including adjustments to the stereo and climate control
system and selection of more than 7 million points of interest
(restaurants, lodging, airports, shopping malls, etc.).
All this information is also accessible through a dash-
mounted
touch screen and assorted knobs and switches. With the navigation
system buyers get what Acura calls 3D Solar Sensing Climate
Control. Using time of day and direction of travel, this
calculates the sun's position relative to the car to adjust
side-to-side interior temperatures to maintain desired settings.
High performance tires are optional ($200) with the
6-speed manual transmission. Also available, though
not initially, is a sport suspension package called A-SPEC.
This includes firmer springs and shock absorbers, unique
18-inch wheels wearing Z-rated Yokohama tires, aero/ground
effects body pieces, special steering wheel, upgraded brake
pads for cars with the automatic transmission and bragging-rights
body badges.