2018 Toyota Camry XSE V-6 Full Review and Guts
Remove “Toyota
Camry” during a word-association game, and most automotive enthusiasts would
respond with some allegory for anonymity, appliance, or a similarly
unflattering description for automotive wallpaper.
The
latest Camry, with its all-new platform, fresh powertrains, and expressive
styling, attempts to shake off that image. The range-topping Camry XSE V-6 is
the most effective implementation of that retooling, blending the lineup’s most
powerful engine with the sportiest trim level.
HIGHS
Linear power
delivery, choosing the V-6 also nets the best-trimmed Camry interior, sportier
than Camrys gone by.
LOWS
Fuel
consumption and acceleration lag behind competitors’ turbo-four models, expensive.
More Power,
More Styling
This XSE is
part of the sporty S pillar of the Camry family, which also includes the
lower-spec SE; Toyota has an entirely different L vertical with L, LE, and XLE
Camrys that wear toned-down front and rear bumpers and ride on more
comfort-oriented suspension setups in order to attract traditional Camry
buyers.
Even those
softer-edged L models are notably more satisfying to drive than past Camrys.
But the S trims build on that solid foundation with firmer damping, bigger
wheels with wider tires, and distinctive front and rear bumpers with gaping
intakes and lots of blacked-out trim. That you can order the XSE with a
contrasting black-colored roof (a $500 option) and a blood-red interior speaks
volumes about Toyota’s lowered inhibitions.
The XSE—as
well as its L counterpart, the XLE—unlocks the option of grabbing the Camry’s
new 301-hp 3.5-liter V-6 engine. With port and direct fuel injection, the six
is 33-hp stronger than last year’s port-injected 3.5-liter V-6. Torque is up 19
lb-ft to 267, peaking at the same 4700 rpm as before. Other 2018 Camrys are
propelled by a 2.5-liter inline-four or a gas/electric hybrid powertrain.
The V-6
Camry is intriguing not only for its substantial horsepower, but also for
having six cylinders. Nearly every competitor has turned to smaller,
turbocharged four-cylinders for their uplevel engine options, including the
Camry’s nemesis, the Honda Accord. This V-6 is a stonker, though, sending the
Camry from zero to 60 mph in 5.8 seconds—2.1 seconds quicker than a
four-cylinder Camry SE we tested. And it spits an edgy snort out of the XSE’s
quad exhaust outlets, one that’s more distinguished than four-cylinder
competitors’ vacuum/blender soundtracks. Still, the 252-hp turbocharged
inline-four in Honda’s top-dog Accord 2.0T scoots that model to 60 mph 0.3
second quicker. Although the two sedans have nearly equal peak torque, the 2.0T
Accord has barely any torque steer whereas the Toyota has plenty.
Honda also
has Toyota beat in the transmission race, where the Accord 2.0T boasts a
quick-witted automatic with 10 forward speeds to the Camry’s eight. The Accord
also offers a manual transmission with both of its engine options. A stick
shift would be a much welcome alternative for the Camry, as decisions come
slowly to the eight-speed automatic. There is a slight delay between the driver
stomping the gas pedal and the receipt of a downshift, a sin aggravated by the
transmission’s stubborn preference for its higher gears. A Sport button on the
center console adds some eagerness to the engine’s responses, and an S slot for
the gear lever does the same for the transmission, but neither fully erases the
powertrain’s slight hesitation in reaction to aggressive throttle applications.
Reaction to manual gear selections from both the steering-wheel-mounted paddles
and the shift lever’s plus/minus gate are similarly unexceptional.
If the
engine and transmission could use a little extra seasoning to match the XSE’s
sporty image, the chassis is pretty much spot-on. This Camry turns with an
enthusiasm that nearly matches the benchmark Honda Accord and Mazda 6, with no
appreciable impact on overall comfort. While the Accord 2.0T rides on fancier
adaptive dampers with two driver-selectable firmness levels, the Camry XSE uses
traditional fixed-rate dampers that cover nearly the same spectrum of control
and ride quality. Body roll in the XSE is kept well in check, and this test car
circled our skidpad with 0.87 g of grip—right on the heels of the Accord 2.0T’s
0.88 g.
Opting for
the V-6 adds about 200 pounds to the Camry’s curb weight (according to Toyota),
most of that concentrated in the nose, shifting the weight distribution
slightly forward. The mass’s effects on handling are detectable only by our
instruments and by those who’ve driven a four-cylinder Camry and paid
extra-close attention to its turn-in characteristics. The 2018 SE bettered this
XSE’s skidpad grip by 0.01 g and nudged into corners with a bit more fluidity.
The weight will be more noticeable at the pump. We averaged 24 mpg during our
test, compared with 32 mpg in the four-cylinder SE and 40 mpg in the 2018 Camry
hybrid. Honda’s Accord 2.0T averaged the same 24 mpg as this XSE but ran away
from the Toyota on our 75-mph highway fuel-economy loop, scoring a stellar 35
mpg to the Camry’s 29. The four-cylinder Camry has both sedans beat on the open
road, notching an astounding 45 mpg on our highway test (1 mpg greater than the
Camry hybrid!).
The rest of
the XSE experience is similar to that in other Camrys—although with the glaring
exception of its vastly superior interior quality. Stepping down even one level
to the SE—or, if coming from an XLE, an LE—is a descent into interiors filled
with more hard plastics and uneven panel gaps than you’ll find in top-rung
Camrys. It may be that Toyota is using this as a way to entice buyers up the
price ladder, given that active-safety features such as lane-keeping assist,
adaptive cruise control, and automated emergency braking are now standard
across the lineup. At least the infotainment system shared with lesser Camrys
is just as easy to use here, thanks in part to the attractive chrome-tipped
hard-button shortcuts to key menus that flank the screen, as well as the volume
and tuning knobs located close to the steering wheel.
So where
does this leave the Camry’s renaissance? Blending the sedan’s most dramatic
styling changes with its strongest engine and its nicest innards punts the
Camry XSE V-6 near the head of a class led by the Accord 2.0T. The privilege is
expensive, though. The four-cylinder XSE starts at $29,895 and includes LED
headlights and taillights, quad exhaust outlets, inductive phone charging, a
panoramic sunroof, a 10-inch color head-up display, dual-zone automatic climate
control, and leather seat covers, features that are either optional or
unavailable on the SE. The V-6 is another $5950, and our test car added the
$940 enhanced navigation system, $1050 360-degree parking camera and sensors,
and a few dealer-installed options, bringing the total to $38,059. So make a
mental note for future word-association games: Now “Camry” can be
interchangeable with dynamic, stylish, and (at least occasionally) pricey.
CarandDriver
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