What is it?
Mid-life revisions for Lexus’s offbeat two-door, driven on British bitumen for the first time and in range-topping RC F form.
It’s difficult to find exclusivity in the mid-sized premium coupé market, simply because it has been sewn up entirely by the German trio. Their unwavering dominance has forced those traditionally able to offer a more original take on the format - think Volvo and Alfa Romeo - to give up. But Toyota’s luxury brand has kept its toe in.
It’s all the more refreshing given that European sales figures are so tiny. Lexus shifted around 1300 RCs across the region in the whole of 2018. Audi registered nearly 6000 Audi A5s, Audi S5s and Audi RS5s in March of this year alone.
Yet there’s major selling points to Lexus the RC. Bizarrely, in our ever-electrified world, it’s the only car in its class that can be had as a hybrid. The RC F, too, has one of the very few naturally aspirated V8s left on sale in the UK.
The one we’re driving here also comes with a £9750 Track pack, bringing lightweight forged wheels, a torque vectoring rear diff and carbon-ceramic brakes with red Brembo calipers. That’s not to be confused with the Track Edition, an altogether more serious - and expensive - proposition.
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That it's naturally aspirated
That it's naturally aspirated is great, that it also looks stunning to my eyes adds further to the appeal, it has far more performance than I'd ever need and appears beautifully appointed, scrap the track pack and keep it standard for a very fast awesome sounding sports coupe. I'd love one.
A quality motorcar
It is not the fastest and it never tried to be. It offers a unique, comfortable and naturally-aspirated, quick-enough grand touring experience. Good enough for me.
A car that has a 170mph top
A car that has a 170mph top speed, a 0-60mph time or 4.3 secs, and yet still be called fast-ish? Not sure about anyone else but to me, that is a very fast car