To understand
what makes a Japanese supercar tick, try blagging your way to get behind
the wheel of the Lexus LFA and let it make you feel like a hero who can
vanquish Vettel! Adil Jal Darukhanawala got to play out his fantasy
while making the V10 sing in all its unfettered V10 glory!
Contrary to perception and short lived public memory, the Japanese
have made a significant number of sports cars which have been
pleasureable, fast and quick, technologically advanced, stylish as well
might I add and this form has gone on since the mid-1960s when none
other than Toyota made its 2000GT. Of course from there on many others followed especially Honda with
its mid-engined NSX while Yamaha did an exceptionally hard core
two-seater using the basis of an F1 car with a mildly detuned version of
its 3.5-litre V10 F1 engine. As would have been apparent from this
small list, the truly outstanding sports cars from the land of the
rising sun to carry the tag of a supercar was however thin on the
ground.
As such when the news came in slightly more than three years ago of
none other than Lexus, Toyota’s luxury brand to make a V10-engined
supercar made one reel in disbelief. More so when it was announced that
the orders to inculcate a bit of fun to drive and power packed
performance came right from the top - from Akhio Toyoda himself. It
might have been the bombshell of the decade but unbeknown to many, the
project to give the world a Lexus supercar had been on for over six
years and a small team under chief engineer Haruhiko Tanahashi had been
beavering away on a front mid-engined rear drive supercar packing in
many features and technologies culled from Toyota’s massive F1 effort
and also a few of their own which the project team were anxious to try
out.
The end result is the Lexus LFA, a car with a terrific power to
weight ratio, clever aerodynamics with an underwhelming shape to it
(probably the only thing which could have been done better I think) but
enough on the muscle and the means to use it all which makes this one of
the most unassuming of supercars but by that very essence it also puts
forth a unique new hard edged performance tool which is precise, sharp,
very powerful and most important of all fun to drive. When Toyota put
together a full day session just before the Tokyo Motor Show in late
November last year, for a group of Indian motoring hacks to experience
the LFA in its full no-holds-barred glory, I was glad it had also
provided us with the ideal venue to explore what it was capable of - the
full length Grand Prix track of the Fuji Speedway just under the shadow
of the fabled Mount Fuji.
While the LFA has already adorned the covers of ZigWheels before
(refer the 2010 ...... issue), this is the first time we have got to get
behind the wheel and put it through its paces. However, jogging the
memory banks for the basic configuration would be in order first and
here goes. The basis of the car is an all carbon fibre monocoque
manufactured by Lexus at its very own Motomachi plant near Toyota city.
It is a modicum of super light weight and absolute torsional rigidity of
the very highest order at the same time. Add a specially designed
naturally-aspirated 4.8-litre V10 engine to the package and let it rest
low in the tub way ahead of the scuttle but behind the front wheels
(front mid-mounted, get it?).
That this engine came from race car thought is evident in its dry
sump layout and this not only helps in being mounted low to the ground
but also the clever weight distribution - the radiators are at the rear!
- helps with the car’s manners. There is a counter gear at the power
take off end of the engine which helps run the prop shaft taking the
drive to the transaxle which incorporates a 6-speed automated manual
gearbox. 552bhp and 480Nm of torque might not sound much in the days of
over 600 horses and a torque nearing locomotive-like four-figures in
other cars but then this is the beauty of this machine - doing more from
less.
Tipping the scales at a shade under 1,480kg this Lexus though
delivers supercar performance as its numbers can testify: 202mph /
323.20km/h at the top end while also blazing away to 100km/h from
standstill in a scant 3.7 seconds. The performance is there but the
normal fastback looks do deceive which is a good thing because this is a
car which can hunt with the hounds and run with the hares, like no
other from Japan!
Just like the NSX before it, open the door and you are treated to a
gorgeously decked out but highly functional cabin where the textures,
the feel, the position, the seats, the pedal box, the steering wheel and
the way forward all make you feel mighty comfortable. There is an
innate balance in the cabin between form and function and any compromise
or excess of one over the other might have been jarring. The Lexus
stylists and packaging engineers got this spot on. Having said that the
tall transmission tunnel plays the role of the seat separator very
efficiently and that TFT instrument panel is a PlayStation delight, the
graphics sliding sideways to enable the pilot to make sense of all that
is happening around him, very rapidly when tearing through the Fuji
Speedway! The manner in which the rev counter display changes from snow
white at tick over to hot red when flat out and spinning close to its
9000rpm red line is pure PlayStation genre but then the analogue
tachometer was incapable of delivering the inputs as quick as the
engine’s ability to rev and thus the geeks were called in to help with a
digital interface and this is what they delivered - analogue-style
graphics!
As did the engine men and the chassis engineers. For one the engine
is a gem, truly one of the most outstanding V10s there ever has been
with an aural reportoire which is surely, to borrow a phrase from
Tanahashi’s team - the joy of angels singing! Yes, really! Thumb the
start button (on the steering wheel) and the motor yowls into life with a
delightful note played through the triple exhausts at the rear and one
gets a feel of the silky smooth motor with one of the best soundtracks
in this sanitised age. This is a motor which thrives on revs and with a
torque peak of 6800rpm getting there quickly enables one to get the best
out of the LFA.
The sad part, if I have to nit pick is the fact that in an age of
dual clutch transmissions on most supercars, the LFA’s automated single
clutch unit seems a clunker! There are four shift patterns - Auto,
Sport, Normal and Wet and while Auto and Normal felt good to begin with,
Sport is the one where the engine-tranny match-up works best and if
thats not enough to complicate things, Tanahashi’s crew has worked in a
menu of seven shift speeds which have everything in it from crazy
charged hot heads to laggardly pensioners having doled out the big bucks
for such a car. The shifts can take anything from a ponderous
1.0-second slow to a pelvic-bursting 0.2 sec quick change!
What is impressive though is the pleasure part and this is where the
LFA bests so many of the world’s best tarmac scorchers. It is the almost
telepathic connect between driver and road surface which makes for a
wonderful drive experience and the chassis along with its underpinnings
eggs you on to push deeper into the corner, gives you the right hints
just as the rear tries to slide out of line and then there is that
delightful steering and that right throttle to both back it in line or
let it drift a bit and powerslide your way through and out of the
corner! The steering is mind numbing for its accuracy, race-car like
minimum turns lock-to-lock (two) and its weightage given that it is an
all electric-assist system! Threading the needle through the Fuji
Speedway’s rapid series of left and right flicks with changing
topography thrown in saw this fantastic trait in the LFA’s reportoire
emerge to the fore repeatedly.
Tanahashi’s team has employed race-car inspired double wishbone front
suspension up front while a multi-link set-up works the rear with
remote-reservoir monotube dampers doing duty at each wheel. Add to this
the car’s 48:52 weight distribution front to rear and while at times
when you thought you had overcooked it going into a corner and loading
up the the outside, the normal thing would have been to back off the
loud pedal but in the Lexus wills you to go progressively deeper on the
throttle. From there on with the steering and that delectable weight
balance the car could be induced to either do a rip roaring tail out
slide or track the corner as if on rails! The brakes are another detail
as well with massive carbon ceramic units, 390mm dia six-piston
calipered up front and 360mm dia four-pots on the rear on all four
corners and when the scenary started brushing past at warp speeds while
yet giving a most cozy feel while at the wheel, the brakes were the just
as big confidence inducers as was the near impeccable sure footedness
of the vehicle.
So much for the race track but yes the three laps were much too less
for anyone to get to grips with a machine so supreme in its wide span of
capability. Top whack was a no-brainer (I saw 270km/h on the long
start-finish straight on each of the three laps I drove) and expected
but what was truly shattering was the marvelously damped ride which for a
machine with the performance on tap is nothing short of remarkable.
Time then to bring in Tanahashi san for the clincher. “Many
enthusiasts and others do put an overwhelming focus and priority on
speed for a sports car such as the LFA,” he remarked. “However me and my
team approached this from a completely different direction, focusing on
driving pleasure as the first priority followed by outright lap times
as the next. When a driver is enjoying the highest level of pleasure, so
that car is driving fastest.”
Nuff said for I didn’t think I was driving that quick but I was truly
in the delirious zone in this Lexus. Never thought I’d ever say this of
the brand while making music unlike!
No comments:
Post a Comment