Hey gang- a sincere thanks for your patience. Apart from being busy with work the past couple of weeks, I wanted to get the 24 month service done on 461 before pushing the car a bit. Also, since it only had about 750km, I figured it prudent to treat the first few drives as an extension of the break in period.
That done, what can I tell you - the car is utterly phenomenal. I traded my McLaren 12C coupe against this LFA, so needless to say it has some big shoes to fill. The 12C is another supercar that is very misunderstood by the public and even many serious car enthusiasts. I absolutely adored mine. Alas, an opportunity to own a Canadian LFA is rare, indeed, so I willingly parted with the MP4.
Some other cars I have driven, but not owned, include Ferrari 458, 599 HGTE, 430 Challenge race car, various Gallardos, various 911s, various GT-Rs, Merc SLS, Audi R8s, you get the idea. Not every car available, but I love to try different cars whenever I get an opportunity, especially if it is at a racetrack. I spend a little bit of time at the track and own a Caterham SP/300.R prototype, too. I just mention these things so that you understand my frame of reference. I even once drove the Gumpert Apollo!
I can already say the LFA ranks with the very best I have personally driven. After 2 weeks, I am scratching my head trying to understand exactly how Toyota built this car. Of course, I have seen the LFA Works documentary, but for a car company to produce a supercar at this level, on their very first try, really defies belief. That goes for the driving dynamics, the build quality, the sound and response of the engine, everything really. It feels more like a car design that has been honed for decades, improved at every iteration, so that the current product is refined in every way. It's amazing.
Okay, the driving. The car is quick, quicker than I thought it would be, in fact. Definitely not the surging turbo acceleration of the 12C, but from 5000 RPM onwards, every bit as intense. One thing I learned about myself while owning the MP4 is that I really don’t need, or necessarily even want, 600+ horsepower in my road cars. These cars are just getting way too fast for the public roads and as a result, it is actually difficult to enjoy them in a safe an legal manner. You literally cannot hold the McLaren at full throttle for more than 2.5 seconds or else you are going obscenely fast. The nice thing about the LFA is that you can enjoy the performance a little more, and a little longer. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not far behind the MP4 in outright acceleration, but there are definitely more opportunities to explore the performance, which is good thing. In fact, I’d willingly trade 100 of the LFA’s hp for another 1000 RPM before redline. Not that 9500 isn’t enough!
The response of the V10 is a defining feature of the car, along with the sound of course, but more on that later. In any gear, at pretty much any RPM, even just a whiff of throttle instantly provokes the engine and sends you surging forward (or sideways!). I’ve never experienced a motor like this - it honestly revs more like the sport bikes I used to ride when I was younger. The result is you get the sensation of your right foot feeling directly connected to the rear contact patches; there is no delay in any of the parts that actually exist between those two endpoints. Truly amazing, and addictive.
The quality of the power delivery must be mentioned. It’s absolutely linear in its rate of increase and just gets more and more intense towards redline. Even if the sound wasn’t that good, the engine would still be a peach.
But, okay, the sound - really you could write a whole separate novel about how this car sounds. Obviously, I knew it would sound good as I have watched pretty much every LFA video I could find on the net in the past 12 months. But I can honestly say that not a single youtube video out there captures how amazing this car actually sounds from the driver’s seat. I almost cannot describe it in words. I know they obsessed over it and tuned the air mixing box and exhaust ad nauseum, but never would I have imagined the result could be so exceptional, so unlike any other car I’ve ever experienced, Ferraris and racecars included. I’ve tinkered with music and audio production in the past, so have spent hours myself obsessing over frequencies, mixing levels and EQ settings. All I can say is what they have done with this car, sound-wise, is pure art. Even at low RPM, there are little whoops and yelps, with growling undertones that keep reminding you of the V10’s presence and its eagerness to get on with it. Through the mid-range, it gets angry and mechanical ahead of you, while the exhaust sound rises in pitch and intensity, however still more of a light wail that is warning you that things are about to go bonkers. From 7000 RPM on, I’ll be honest, it’s really quite difficult to say exactly what is going on - there are more sounds, everything is louder and more intense, the wail has become a blood-curdling shriek. When you add in the fact that the car is now making serious forward progress and therefore you need to concentrate visually and also stay in touch with the seat of the pants feel from the chassis, you can imagine that your senses are maxed out, even over-loaded at some times. Amongst it all, you get flashes of V10-era Formula One sounds, especially if you pass through a tunnel. It really does remind you of those howling racers, even at half the RPM. I don’t know how Yamaha managed that.
The gearbox is perhaps the most enigmatic part of the car and the experience. It really is more of an automated manual, than anything resembling a DCT. In fact it feels quite a bit like the Hewland racing box in my prototype. It took me a couple of drives to feel it out and understand its nuances, much the same as you would when getting to know a 3 pedal manual transmission. That learning curve now climbed, I love it and I am glad they didn’t go with a DCT. The Graziano DCT in the McLaren, for example, is amazing; smooth, instant shifts, very little torque interruption. The 458’s Getrag box is better still, although both boxes have had their reliability issues. But, at the end of the day, they do feel like automatic transmissions and are therefore slightly less involving. My 12C was an early car and had retained the Pre-Cog function, which helped keep things interesting. And I will also admit that, using my 12C at times as a daily driver, the DCT was hugely beneficial. But the LFA’s character and intent is much more suited to the box it has. It contributes quite a bit to how racecar-like the LFA feels to drive.
With regards to handling dynamics, you’ll have to take the following with a grain of salt, as I have not yet taken the LFA to a racetrack. Generally, I don’t believe you can truly discover a car’s handling tendencies until you approach, and even exceed, the limits of grip while on a circuit. Sure, you can toy around with little moments of oversteer here and there, on public roads. But you won’t really know what you have underneath you until you enter a 4th gear corner on a racetrack too fast or outbrake yourself from 150MPH, for example. That said, the LFA feels front-end biased to me, as if set up with a touch of oversteer out of the box. Which is unlike most cars, which have some safe understeer by design. I prefer it, but you do have to stay awake, especially when the tires are cold, as the response of the V10 does not suffer an eager ankle in combination with lazy wrists. On a cold morning earlier this week, I vowed not to drive this car without having my first coffee of the day. Under, let’s say brisk, driving on the road, the car has wonderful stability and the front is very planted on turn-in. I have yet to get the fronts to scrub into even a hint of understeer; the car just wants to keep turning. Getting back to the gas, you’ll feel an immediate weight transfer to the outside rear, and if you are greedy, you’ll provoke some yaw for sure. In the faster bends, on the highway for example, the car is sublime. Maybe the downforce is just starting to come into play, but really I think it has to do with the suspension geometry and roll bar setup. It is just really stable and responds very well to feeding in more throttle, even if the road surface is bumpy.
Braking-wise, from moderate to high-ish speeds, the car feels good. A nice degree of forward pitch, the fronts load up nicely and the back end doesn’t get too light. The car tracks straight and crucially, coming off the brakes is very progressive and doesn’t adversely affect turn-in. Again, this is at road speeds, so I won’t claim to know the braking tendencies intimately.
My overall impression, so far, is that the LFA is a hugely rewarding car to drive. It feels like a real event, every time you get in and press the button to fire up the V10. This is partly because the memories of your last drive in it are still swirling around in your cranium. It is possible to relax a bit in the car, drop into 6th gear and just cover miles, but so far I haven’t done that for more than about 10 minutes!
german plates, recording equipment near the exhaust and it turns in towards the lamborghini factory
i wonder why?
I don't think it is recording equipment. Looks to me like they are trying to keep the spoiler down. Probably to run some metrics on how it performs without the spoiler deployed and the downforce.
The previous owner sounds like the lady from PA that we talked about here. Anyone know what she got instead?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.