2021 Acura TLX A-Spec Long-Term Update | How's it handle?

Zac Palmer
·6 min read


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A couple of months have passed since we took delivery of our new 2021 Acura TLX A-Spec long-term tester, and the miles are starting to pile on โ€” the odometer just clicked past 6,000.

I was particularly eager to get behind the wheel of our TLX, as my first go-round in Acuraโ€™s new sports sedan left me feeling good about where Acura was headed with this car. That said, I only spent about an hour in the saddle during my first drive experience, and that time was on unfamiliar roads. The stint I just completed was a full month, and in that time I treated the TLX as if I owned it. So much so, that I completed the same mini road trip with it that I took in my 2001 Acura Integra GS-R last fall.

The destination was southern Indiana, an unexpected but heavenly place to test the handling of a car. Just go south or east from Bloomington, Ind., on the squiggly lines you see on Google Maps. I promise you wonโ€™t be disappointed. Photo evidence of both trips below, including my friendโ€™s Alfa Romeo Giulia(s).

The TLX was an absolute peach on the hundreds of miles of winding pavement. Despite its BMW 5 Series size, the TLX handles like a compact car. Its chassis is rigid and unbending through every kind of corner. This isnโ€™t the Type S (nor is it an Advance trim with the adaptive dampers), but itโ€™s all the chassis you could want on a backroad. Thereโ€™s enough give from the dampers to smooth out the bad spots, but itโ€™s dialed in to provide unwavering stability in big weight transfers, too. Acura struck a happy balance.

Credit for this carโ€™s poise under stress on less-than-ideal roads should also be given to the new independent double wishbone front suspension design. You can sense it sorting out dips and changes in the road as youโ€™re battling through a rough corner. The big 255-section-width tires stay confidently glued to the pavement, communicating grip levels through the wheel and chassis as you go. The super-quick steering ratio from the new electric rack does a decent job of simulating road feel, but the best part about it is the rackโ€™s sheer speed. Acura takes full advantage of this sedanโ€™s rigid chassis with that quick, precise turn-in. Itโ€™s not quite as fast as the Alfa Romeo Giuliaโ€™s energetic steering, but the end result is a car that changes direction the moment your brain decides it wants to.

What really ties this carโ€™s handling together is Acuraโ€™s torque-vectoring SH-AWD system. The latest generation of this top-notch equipment is now capable of sending as much as 70% of available torque to the rear axle and varying 100% of that to either the left or right rear wheels. Enter a corner; smash the go-pedal, and just let SH-AWD figure it out. As long as youโ€™re tracing the line accurately with the steering wheel, the torque distribution will be sorted out and keep you dead set on the path forward before giving you a slight wiggle of the rear as you come out of the corner. Very few front-drive-based all-wheel-drive cars will be as engaging and fun to play with as this one. No matter what you do, this TLX will never feel like a front-wheel-drive car.

As happy as I was with the handling, I was nearly equally as frustrated with the transmission. Acuraโ€™s 10-speed automatic in the TLX just doesnโ€™t perform when you ask it to, and the problems seem mostly software-based. Even with the car in Sport mode and the โ€œSโ€ transmission button pressed on the โ€œPRNDL,โ€ itโ€™s helpless on a twisty road. Time and time again, the car would shift up into higher gears when I didn't want it to. That left me and the 2.0-liter turbo-four out to dry around 2,000 rpm mid-corner or on corner exit, right when you want the rpms to take advantage of the torque-vectoring AWD system.

Acura told me at the launch that the shifting algorithm is largely based on steering angle to see if it should be holding gears or not. Itโ€™s now abundantly clear that relying on that algorithm to work is inconsistent at best. The solution? Throw it into manual mode. Acuraโ€™s paddle shifters are just fine to use, and while the transmission is a step behind something like the ZF eight-speed in a BMW 3 Series for speed, itโ€™s not slow or lackadaisical. Its downshifting logic is rather smart, too, because if you pull the paddle before itโ€™s safe to (read: youโ€™ll over-rev the engine), itโ€™ll wait until youโ€™ve braked to a slow enough speed, then automatically trigger the downshift without a second paddle pull.


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All of the open pavement and deserted back roads made me yearn for a more characterful engine, too. While the 2.0-liter turbo makes good power at 272 horsepower and 280 pound-feet of torque, it simply fails at being a fun companion to wring out when the road invites. Throttle response is dull, and even when you are hot-footing it, the car will never feel quick coming out of a corner at 30-plus mph. Its hefty 3,990-pound weight makes sure of that. The engineโ€™s one saving grace is its sound, and partly (maybe mostly), the piped-in audio. Acura tunes in a proper growl to the cabin that intensifies in anger when youโ€™re in Sport mode. Itโ€™s good at making you believe the engine is more voracious than its acceleration might portray โ€” basically, it doesnโ€™t sound like a vacuum cleaner. That said, if I were to (rather unfairly) compare it to the noise my Integra makes at 8,100 rpm, Iโ€™d be yelling take me back!

All elements added up, the TLX is an above-average sport sedan. Itโ€™s brilliant when the road goes back-and-forth without a break in the snaking, but the transmission is quick to frustrate, and the engine just merely allows it to get by with enough power to effectively feed its SH-AWD system. Nothing more.

Above all else, it makes me ecstatic for the eventual Type S that (in reading Acuraโ€™s currently available press material) has the potential to fix every loose snag or qualm I have with the A-Specโ€™s driving performance.

You will be able to find all other posts on our Long-Term 2021 Acura TLX page.

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