Lexus IS-F
07:00
2008-05-07 08:42:43Cet article n’est pas disponsible en français. Sometimes, I just don’t get car companies.
For example, Lexus is one of those companies well known for making technically sound upscale vehicles even though those vehicles often lack flair and excitement. And in the past, that’s apparently been OK with the higher-ups there because they view their owners as simply wanting to get from point A to point B (albeit wanting to do it in a premium vehicle).
Then along comes an engineer with a passion for driving and a penchant for performance and the next thing you know, Lexus has an M3 fighter – the IS F.
The brainchild of long-time Toyota engineer Yukihiko Yaguchi, the IS F was first shown to the world at the 2004 New York International Auto Show as the LF-C concept. That drop-top coupe defined the styling of the second generation IS sedan and was powered by a high-output V8.
The new IS sedan was unveiled at the 2005 Geneva Auto Show, with the high-output V8-engined IS F confirmed at the 2007 North American International Auto Show.
Lexus promotional material refers to it as “The Beast”. That has all those neat untamed, powerful connotations tied to it, but is it really appropriate? The car rolls along the highway like a … well … like a Lexus, with nary a hint of that unbridled fury for which beasts are known.
Maybe it’s not meant to be so much a “Godzilla” like beast but more of an X-Men like Beast – refined and educated but capable of unmatched power and quickness when fighting for a personal cause (and he’s blue, too).
Maybe the IS F is meant to convey more of a cheetah-like beast (powerful, quick and purposeful), but Lexus waited too long to make that connection and Infiniti beat it to the punch with its bionic-cheetah car (the FX crossover).
Maybe it’s more of a “Jekyll and Hyde” beast – meek and demure in everyday life but harbouring an uninhibited and violently powerful alter-ego – that can furiously shred a set of screaming tires with an agonizing howl of triumph.
It’s a “Sexy Beast”, that’s for sure, with crisp clean lines reminiscent of its less-powerful siblings and a well appointed leather interior.
The IS F’s 5.0-litre V8 (from Yamaha) makes 371 lb.-ft. of torque at 5,200 rpm and gallops with the force of 416 horses. It’s enough to spur the car to 100 km/h in a reported 4.8 seconds (equal to both the BMW M3 and the Audi RS4). A new iteration of Lexus’ dynamic stability control (VDIM) keeps the rear wheels from spinning away traction on launch or from looping the rear end on high-speed corners … that is, unless you turn it off!
The reins are eight speeds in an automatic transmission. Keep it in Drive and you can go about your daily routine in a docile fashion. Flip the leaver toward the driver and you can push and pull through the gears or use the steering wheel paddles behind your left hand to go down a gear, or the right to go up one. But, you have to remember to shift because it won’t.
A single beep tells you when you’ve successfully engaged the next gear up; a double beep tells you that a downshift has been rejected. A successful downshift is indicated with a blip of the throttle (just like the real racecar drivers do it!).
Lexus readily admits that it is showing off with this transmission – it wanted to dispel those thoughts that in order to have a truly sporty performance car, you need the characteristics and challenges that only come with a manual transmission. With this tranny, Lexus keeps the characteristics of the manual and banishes the challenges.
The suspension is a tweaked up version of the front wishbone/rear multi-link set up. Here, it keeps the car stable through just about every lateral manoeuvre, and keeps the nose up under braking and keeps it down under power. About the only time it gets tedious is over continuously broken pavement.
Wheels are, naturally, performance rubber from Michelin or Bridgestone mounted on 19-inch wheels – low-profile 225/40R19 at the front; wider, lower-profile 255/35R19s on the rear.
And if you get a bit too exuberant with the acceleration or the turning, Brembo 14.2-inch drilled and vented rotors at the front and 13.6 drilled, ventilated discs trailing bring the car to a standstill faster than you can say Porsche 911.
As for the interior … yeah, the IS F has one of those. And a trunk, too.


