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Lexus NX 300h 2015 review

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Trouble brewing...storm clouds gather on the horizon, giving the travellers a gee-up.
Photo of Derek Ogden
Derek Ogden

Contributing Journalist

5 min read

The Lexus NX 300h hybrid is more of a city gent than a country squire. Derek and Lynn Ogden continue on their outback odyssey to find out if the petrol-electric hybrid could hold its own far beyond the city limits.

The road south towards Winton rolled out in front of us like a hall runner with a road-kill pattern, on either side the flat land going all the way to the horizon. It reminded me of the plains of Nebraska I had crossed years ago by Greyhound bus while on a Jack Kerouac-type trip around the United States as a student.

A glance in the rear-view mirror turned into a stare for my wife, the driver, for there on our tail was the biggest, blackest cloud formation announcing the arrival of a monumental storm. Under the pump, we made Winton ahead of the monster, which exploded in a turbulent mix of wind, dust and noise.

We holed up in the North Gregory Hotel, a retro brick pile which hosted Lyndon Johnson after his plane came a cropper outside town during World War II. LBJ, among other things, later was to become US President after the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

More impressive, I thought, was the tale of a local rugby hero who would practise tackling by leaping on a kangaroo from a moving car. Legend!

Next day, my wildlife preservationist wife drove us to a billabong on the edge of town for some birdwatching. We were greeted by a sign warning against swimming in, or drinking the billabong water. Obviously, the local fauna had read the sign too. There was not much of it there.

Longreach was the next stop. Tourist blurb said that when dinosaurs walked the Earth, there was one lurking behind almost every tree in the tropical rainforest that once covered this area. Their bones are now coming to the surface and being retrieved.

We took an 11 kilometre detour on a dirt road to visit the laboratory (tin shed) where the massive dinosaur bones are cleaned up and stored. One myth busted: no caveman could lift one of these bones, never mind hit anybody over the head with one.

Although Longreach is the site of the Qantas Museum, the Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Service was actually born in Winton. With the Stockman's Hall of Fame, for me this is to become the object of a further visit.

Barcaldine beckoned and produced one of the most impressive links with the past, the Tree of Knowledge, said to be the spot the Australian labour movement was formed during a sheep shearers' strike in the 1890s.

Although the tree was thought to have been poisoned, its skeleton has been preserved and is housed under an architecturally impressive timber roof outside the railway station.

Covering close to 5000 kilometres, the Lexus had not put a foot wrong

The gem fields were up ahead and we could not go past the turn-off at Anakie, for there, among mullock heaps, straddling the Tropic of Capricorn, are Sapphire and Rubyvale, a cluster of small stores with large display cases carrying spectacular examples of local gems, some with just as spectacular prices. It's Tiffany's with one-tonners.

Wallets intact, we pushed on to Emerald, like many of the Queensland outback towns, bigger and tidier than we expected. What's more, my phone woke up and we were finally able to make contact with the folk back home on the Gold Coast.

We turned south and headed for Springsure via the Gregory Highway, and on to Rolleston on the Dawson Highway for an overnighter before moving on to Moura and Banana where we rounded the bend (sorry!) and headed south to Theodore and Taroom.

Cresting a rise in the road just north of Wandoan we were confronted by 600 head of cattle grazing the long paddock, with two riders, a team of dogs and a ute in attendance. With ABS brakes in full cry, we pulled off the road to let the herd through. Mining and lack of rain had put the cattle on the road, the owner said sadly. Things were not what they used to be.

We finally made Miles where we turned for home, the Warrego Highway taking us through Chinchilla, Dalby and the forever fertile Darling Downs, for now free of those invidious coal seam gas rigs that seem to be sprouting all over priceless farming land.

The Gold Coast beckoned over the Toowoomba Range and through the Lockyer Valley, with Murphy's Creek still a sad reminder of the devastating floods that swept through the area some years past.

Covering close to 5000 kilometres, the Lexus had not put a foot wrong, transporting us in comfort rarely found in such a vehicle, even in conditions alien to the city slicker. And, in a way, I will miss the female voice of the car info system gently warning of our approaching a rail crossing, school zone, or redlight camera.

As far as fuel was concerned, the computer had refused to move far from the eight litres per 100 kilometres mark. Lexus claims 5.7 litres per 100 kilometres on the combined urban / highway cycle.

Considering what we had put the vehicle through – a rear packed with holiday gear and the air-con in almost constant full cry – the petrol engine was called on to contribute a fair amount, thus supping deeply from the wallet, especially at $1.63 a litre at one fill-up.

On our journey, the radiator grille had collected a display of dead insects which would not have been out of place at the Queensland Museum. Oh, the plug was still in place, the tyre fully inflated and the wheel was still going round. Thanks, Grant. Thanks, Lexus.

Also see: 2015 Lexus NX300h review | road trip test 1

Lexus NX300H 2015: Luxury Hybrid (Fwd)

Engine Type Inline 4, 2.5L
Fuel Type Unleaded Petrol/Electric
Fuel Efficiency 5.6L/100km (combined)
Seating 5
Price From $23,210 - $28,710
Safety Rating

Pricing Guides

$30,738
Based on 15 cars listed for sale in the last 6 months.
LOWEST PRICE
$21,990
HIGHEST PRICE
$35,999
Photo of Derek Ogden
Derek Ogden

Contributing Journalist

Derek Ogden is an automotive expert with decades of experience under his belt, and works as a journalist for Marque Motoring.
About Author
Disclaimer: The pricing information shown in the editorial content (Review Prices) is to be used as a guide only and is based on information provided to Carsguide Autotrader Media Solutions Pty Ltd (Carsguide) both by third party sources and the car manufacturer at the time of publication. The Review Prices were correct at the time of publication. Carsguide does not warrant or represent that the information is accurate, reliable, complete, current or suitable for any particular purpose. You should not use or rely upon this information without conducting an independent assessment and valuation of the vehicle.
Pricing Guide
$21,990
Lowest price, based on CarsGuide listings over the last 6 months.
For more information on
2015 Lexus NX
See Pricing & Specs

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