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First drives

Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

By Chris Chilton

21 October 2009 00:33

I guess the Lexus LFA packs a double-clutch gearbox?

Nope. Chief engineer Haruhiko Tanahashi says that he wanted the positive feel of a single clutch and that a dual-clutch system couldn’t cope with the high-revving V10. It changes gears in 0.2sec but feels sluggish by contemporary double-clutch standards. Around town the Lexus's transmission is noisy and clunky and the auto mode isn’t that great (when's the last time we said that about a Lexus?). In fact you’ll end up leaving the 'box in sport mode and doing everything yourself to enjoy the drive much more. Irritatingly, you have to pull the two paddles together to engage neutral every time you want to shift between forward and reverse gears.

I presume the LFA's build quality is up to typical Lexus standards...

It is, although the cabin design appears to be by the bloke who did the sets for Buck Rogers, the one where Wilma Deering wore a sexy catsuit. The transmission tunnel is enormous (although the pedals are still perfectly placed) and the top rail of the dash looks like a neanderthal’s monobrow.

But the coolest bit is the TFT instrument cluster. The rev counter’s scale changes depending on whether you’ve got Sport or Normal setting selected – and the whole lot slides sideways to reveal a menu to change various functions on the car. Very neat.

Maybe the superb build quality explains why the Lexus LFA weighs a relatively portly 1480kg. Lexus claims this is class-leading, but how come Porsche can build a GT3 out of steel that tips the scale 100kg lighter?

So how many billionaire absinthe addicts does Lexus expect will be accepting enough of a £325k price to give an LFA a home?

The plan is to make around 20 cars a month over the next two years until 500 have been sold. And even at £325k a pop, Lexus will lose money on each one, such was the investment in the project. Each customer will deal with a specially appointed ‘personal liaison officer’ to guide them through the buying process and keep them happy until their car arrives and beyond. The order books are open now but the first cars won’t find homes until 2011.

Verdict

The LFA was a long time coming, is an interesting new take on the supercar concept and should be a useful halo car to elevate the profile of the high performance F sub-brand.

Clunky gearchange and mushy carbon brakes aside, it’s a supercar that you really would be happy to use every day, not something you could say for a Lamborghini Murcielago or Ferrari Enzo. The chassis is great and the soundtrack superb. But this is not a £325k car. It doesn’t look like one, doesn’t accelerate like one and, whether Lexus likes it or not, it doesn’t have the badge or motorsport/supercar pedigree that many image-conscious supercar buyers demand.

At the £150k the new Ferrari 458 or McLaren MP4-12C will cost, you could make a strong case for the new Lexus LFA, but at £325,000, it just doesn’t add up.

>> Click 'Add your comment' below and let us know what you think of the Lexus LFA

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Lexus LF-A (2009)

Statistics

How much? £325,000
On sale in the UK: Now (deliveries January 2011)
Engine: 4805cc 40v V10, 552bhp @ 8700rpm, 354b ft @ 6800rpm
Transmission: Six-speed semi-auto, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 3.7sec 0-62mph (est), 202mph
How heavy / made of? 1480kg/carbon, aluminium
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4505/1895/1220mm
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Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

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kkirkou

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kkirkou says

RE: Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

For 325.000 GBP I wouldn't buy it even if it had been handcrafted by 100 teen virgin geishas.

02 December 2009 13:28

 

stuski65

stuski65 says

RE: Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

Well, I would say it was a ripoff if I didn't have first hand experience working for an exotic car maker and owning an exotic while also being the original owner of a 1992 Toyota Celica All Trac Turbo. My all trac you might say has nothing in common with the LFA. But look at it, hood slots on each side, Torsen drivetrain. I have 80,000 accident free miles on my car, but each drive no less than 40 miles. HARD driven miles after warmed up. I brought the car to a dealer for struts, and yes even its first timing belt in 16 yrs. original NEVER BROKE , new struts, new clutch,THE WORKS.Tranny, Engine no need for anything. I did some industry analyis of the proper shop, mechanic. I was given a loaner for a total of 6 months, a NEW Toyota loaner. My car was meticulously updated. It never leaked prior nor after. I stuck a new set of bfgoodrich g-force sports on it. And off I go, for another 16 yrs. I never owned a car that needed nothing, I now have a owned a rare Homologation driven hard with zero problems. You can spend the money now, or later . Later  with a Ferrari... in repairs, or now, and need nothing for decades. I prefer an untouched car, untouched by mechanics tinkering or my time wasted going to and from dealer repair shops or having others do it for me.  But the price is kind of steep. BUT, a 2000GT was overpriced for its time as well, and now is a collectors item.

31 October 2009 01:01

 

stuski65

stuski65 says

RE: Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

Well, I would say it was a ripoff if I didn't have first hand experience working for an exotic car maker and owning an exotic while also being the original owner of a 1992 Toyota Celica All Trac Turbo. My all trac you might say has nothing in common with the LFA. But look at it, hood slots on each side, Torsen drivetrain. I have 80,000 accident free miles on my car, but each drive no less than 40 miles. HARD driven miles after warmed up. I brought the car to a dealer for struts, and yes even its first timing belt in 16 yrs. original NEVER BROKE , new struts, new clutch,THE WORKS.Tranny, Engine no need for anything. I did some industry analyis of the proper shop, mechanic. I was given a loaner for a total of 6 months, a NEW Toyota loaner. My car was meticulously updated. It never leaked prior nor after. I stuck a new set of bfgoodrich g-force sports on it. And off I go, for another 16 yrs. I never owned a car that needed nothing, I now have a owned a rare Homologation driven hard with zero problems. You can spend the money now, or later . Later  with a Ferrari... in repairs, or now, and need nothing for decades. I prefer an untouched car, untouched by mechanics tinkering or my time wasted going to and from dealer repair shops or having others do it for me.  But the price is kind of steep. BUT, a 2000GT was overpriced for its time as well, and now is a collectors item.

31 October 2009 01:01

 

KoenigseggBG

KoenigseggBG says

RE: Lexus LFA (2009): the supercar review

Why are you so sceptical about paying 300k for a Toyota? It's a pretty good car and if you have to judge it by the price, you may have to take a look at other type of cars. The look is awesome, interior is very nice for a Yota, sounds is well, montaged (which is lame) but I suspect it will be a successful car. Peace out! ;)

30 October 2009 19:54

 

seant

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seant says

RE: Lexus LF-A (2009): the supercar review

ElephantStomp. I’m sure he’s big enough to defend himself if he chooses but, if being generally civilised and supportive to other contributors, even when you don’t agree with them, and maybe having a tendency to go floridly off-topic sometimes is a fault on this site, then count me in with the ‘windbags’ and ‘sycophants’. The alternative seems to be being one of the ‘alpha-males’, as another worthwhile contributor to this site rather generously called some of the front-page boys. Though I think tap-tapping angrily on our keyboards on a motor car website in order to get some catharsis from the frustration of having to act decently to people in the real world wouldn’t impress David Attenborough much. More like a bunch of hammy professional wrestlers grunting away and playing tough. By the way, ES, only the first bit was really directed at you, though you’re welcome to ‘call me out’ anytime - but where shall we meet, behind the virtual bikesheds or down by the cyber-swings?

25 October 2009 13:15

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