What is it?
The updated Lexus IS-F complete with a new sat nav system and new colour choices. Oh, and the small matter of a proper limited slip diff instead of the electric diff of the first generation IS-F super saloon. It now costs £55,995.
Technical highlights?
The torsen (torque sensing) diff, the addition of which is claimed to lop two seconds off the IS-F's lap time at the Fuji circuit thanks to improved traction and stability in high-speed corners.
What’s it like to
drive?
In a word, even better.
The electronic diff in the previous IS-F was just a part of its stability
system, braking a spinning inside wheel, but not doing much to help traction.
You’d come out of a corner and sense the car holding back slightly, before
snapping straight as the brake released and firing forwards down the next
straight, 5.0-litre V8 snarling away. It was a neat party trick in its own
right and we loved the way it drove, but it didn’t flow nearly as well as this
version.
Pull away in the new car
on full lock and you get the telltale hunt and shunt from the drivetrain, but
from there on the two cars feel almost identical until you really start working
the throttle through corners. What strikes you first is not only how much earlier
you can get on the power, but how much harder. The rear end stays faithful for
a long time and when the lateral forces do finally overcome the diff’s
tenacious hold, the IS-F slides very progressively. OK, if you give it a
bootful in second gear you’ll need to be quick with the lock, but on a cross-country strop it feels playful and well balanced, feeding the power in smoothly
and consistently.
The front end still isn’t as keyed in as the M3’s, mainly because the steering isn’t as well weighted and consistent, but I reckon rear end traction, grip and accuracy are a match for the BMWs, and the IS-F does have a truly bonkers engine, a proper roarer that goes rabid over 3700rpm.
How does it compare?
Very well against the BMW M3. The fact it’s not quite as fluent is mainly due to the steering and the over-active rebound damping, but it’s genuinely charismatic – enough to give the Mercedes C63 AMG a fair few headaches. Let’s just hope, in this post Lexus LFA world, potential buyers can see past the badge.
Anything else I need to
know?
You can now have the interior trimmed in white leather (please don’t), the bodywork painted in this rather fetching blue and standard features include a DAB radio, 10gb music hard drive and HDD sat nav – claimed to be one of the fastest-responding and most accurate systems in the world. But the best news, as anyone who’s battled a Lexus sat nav will know, is that it’s now programmable on the move.
Read about evo's much-loved Lexus IS-F long termer here
See our exclusive UK road test video of the rabid Lexus LFA
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