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  ROYAL FORD
Globe Staff
11/29/2003
2004 Acura TL
'04 Acura TL shouts power and performance

  2004 Acura TL
2004 Acura TL
2004 Acura TL
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There are certain cars -- notably two-seat sports cars -- that, when inside them, make you feel as if you were wearing the automobile.

The Acura NSX comes to mind. So does the Mazda Miata, the Dodge Viper, the Chevrolet Corvette.

This is not, however, a common sensation in a sedan.

Yet that is exactly the case with the redesigned 2004 Acura TL, a must-drive for those shopping in the near-luxury sedan market, and especially for those looking for not-so-subtle power and looks.

From the grip of its firm, perforated leather bucket seats to the elegant way the dash wraps around both driver and front seat passenger and flows to the doors and back, the car does, indeed, cocoon its occupants in the great luxury of rich leather, real aluminum, and faux wood/graphite trim. Further, its colorfully lit gauges add hints of performance, and its electronics, while a bit complicated in some areas, are state of the art.

This remake of the 1996 original features, from the outside, a wider and taller stance than in the past, rising hood-to-rear in an aggressive wedge that is sharply defined by a high door sill. Adding to the look of power is the fact that the car has been shortened by about four inches, with its wheels pushed closer to front and rear bumpers, eliminating excess overhang. This sharp body sits atop what is mostly a Honda Accord chassis.

 
2004 Acura TL
MSRP base price: $32,650
Horsepower: 270
Torque: 238 lb.-ft.
Wheelbase: 107.9 inches
Overall length: 186.2 inches
Width: 72.2 inches
Height: 56.7 inches
Curb weight: 3,575 lbs.
Seating: 5 passengers
Fuel economy: 19/29 miles per gallon
Source: Edmunds.com

And while it is, indeed, a much more aggressive-looking car than its predecessor, it is also much more aggressive under the hood. Gone is the base TL with its 225-horsepower engine. Gone, as well, is the Type S with its 260 horsepower. Standard on all TLs is a 24-valve, aluminum head/block V-6 that delivers 270 horsepower to the basso burble of its exhaust.

And for the first time, a manual transmission is available for the TL, a six-speed, as tested.

This proved a mechanical delight with its relatively short throws and crisp ranging up and down the gears. And Acura, recognizing that those who opt for the six-speed manual over the five-speed automatic are more likely to be aggressive drivers, fits the manual with standard limited slip differential and four-piston Brembo brakes with discs more than a foot in diameter.

You get traction control, ABS, and, for those quick starts and sudden stops under various load conditions, electronic brake distribution, which calculates brake pressure front and rear depending on weight disbursement. So long, nose dives. See ya, backward pitches.