lfa Henry Phillips, Eric Yang

The Greatest Car Japan Has Ever Made

The Lexus LFA was too expensive to make, too expensive to buy, and too rare to be awe inspiring.

By many metrics, the Lexus LFA was a colossal failure. Its implied goal as a halo car was to build enthusiasm for the Lexus brand (and to some extent Toyota), and to create an icon that represents what the Japanese company is all about. The problem was that its minuscule 500-vehicle production means that hardly anybody has seen an LFA in the flesh, let alone had a chance to experience what itโ€™s all about. (For comparison, Audi has made 29,000 R8โ€™s and Lamborghini is making 4,000 Aventadors) One can assume that the vast majority of LFAโ€™s are sitting comfortably in a humidity-controlled garage โ€” where theyโ€™ll remain for some time.

Add the fact that Lexus charged a colossal $375,000 ($200,000 more than the R8) and still lost money on every single LFA and you start to wonder why this car, made between 2010 and 2012 (and still being used in Lexusโ€™s marketing), wasnโ€™t just shoved into a corner and forgotten about.

All this lingering doubt was on my mind as I sat in a cab bound for Toyota City, about 3 hours southwest of Tokyo. I had never seen an LFA outside of an auto show and Iโ€™d certainly never sat in or driven one, but I absolutely adored the process and engineering folklore behind it. (โ€œYou know, they had to scrap the design when they decided to use carbon fiberโ€ฆโ€ โ€œI hear the exhaust note was tuned like a guitarโ€ฆโ€). I was afraid this would be one of those โ€œdonโ€™t meet your heroesโ€ situations where it would fail to live up to my own hype.

After a brief walkthrough from lead LFA engineer Haruhiko Tanahashi of the inescapably orange โ€œRacing Yellowโ€ Nurburgring Edition LFA that Toyota had brought, I realized that in terms of heart, soul, engineering and raw excitement, the Lexus LFA is the best car Japan has ever produced. No exceptions.

The LFA deserves to live on in the supercar hall of fame for so many reasons: its exacting attention to detail, perfectly controlled aerodynamics, machined parts on the rear wing that couldโ€™ve been done by Boeing, the most beautiful pedal box ever fitted to a road car โ€” not to mention the incredible 4.8-liter V10 that can rev to 9,000 RPM and exhibits enough engineering minutia to warrant a post of its own.

Then thereโ€™s the really nerdy stuff. Lexus worked with Yamahaโ€™s musical instrument division to route two distinct octaves of engine noise into the cabin, and then tuned it by placing tiny baffles in the ducting. The tachometer had to be made digital because an analog unit couldnโ€™t keep up with the engine. And itโ€™s got a custom-designed 12-speaker Mark Levinson sound system for when you get bored of the engine note (you wonโ€™t).

Yet, the LFAโ€™s biggest accomplishment is that despite all of this engineering nerdery, it still manages to be evocative and soulful in a way that similarly superlative-packed cars (think Bugatti Veyron) canโ€™t. Maybe itโ€™s the classic sports-car proportions, maybe itโ€™s the fact that there arenโ€™t any extraneous gadgets and gizmos, or maybe itโ€™s just some ineffable translation of the passion that was put into the LFA by its team of engineers, designers and craftsmen.

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The Nurburgring Edition LFA completed a lap of the famed German circuit in seven minutes and 14 seconds (hence this vehicleโ€™s license plate), the fifth fastest time for a production vehicle in 2011.
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Development (under a Skunkworks division) started in 2000, but it wasnโ€™t until 2005 that Toyota had the physical tools to build the carbon-tub chassis and body panels in-house.
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The edition of 55 โ€œNurburgring Editionโ€ LFAโ€™s offered 10 extra horsepower (up to 563), faster shifting, adjustable suspension, track wheels and tires, and a revised aero package.
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Lead engineer Haruhiko Tanahashiโ€™s favorite part of the LFA: the forged aluminum pedal box, a point he brought up to Lexusโ€™s press photographers (who neglected to include it).
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