| Lexus IS-F Consumer Reviews |
BMW M3 Consumer Reviews |
Lexus IS-F / BMW M3 Photo Gallery |
Lexus IS-F and BMW M3 Specs |

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Dinan BMW M3
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Lexus IS-F
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| Lexus IS-F Consumer Reviews |
BMW M3 Consumer Reviews |
Lexus IS-F / BMW M3 Photo Gallery |
Lexus IS-F and BMW M3 Specs |

|
Dinan BMW M3
|
Lexus IS-F
|
Pros:
|
Pros:
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Cons:
|
Cons:
|
Horsepower. Raw, tire-melting horsepower. Every man worth his chest hair can’t deny it’s one of the first criteria for buying a car powered by a V8. Typically, the more the horsepower and the lower the MSRP, the more attractive it looks. It was the formula that made the muscle car era a piece of American history. But nowadays, American automakers aren’t the only ones making rear-wheel-drive radial roasters; Japan and Germany have also gotten in on the unmitigated horsepower wars, albeit with a little more luxury and refinement.
We recently had a Bridgestone bar-b-que with three fire-breathing, rear/all-wheel-drive V8s representing each of the three respective automaking countries. Japan arrived respectfully in the Lexus IS-F, Germany showed up to the cookout well dressed in the Audi S5, and the United States arrived rockin’ a mullet and Miller Lite in the Dodge Challenger SRT8. Three different V8s, three different countries, and three very different cars.
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