Home » Why ‘Top Gear’ Was Wrong About The Lexus SC 430

Why ‘Top Gear’ Was Wrong About The Lexus SC 430

Lexus Sc 430 Ts Copy
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Some things only grow apparent with time. From niche albums that have since been recognized as vastly influential to the true weight of giant world-shifting events, it’s often difficult to take a step back and look at the bigger picture when you’re still living in it. Through this dimension, the Lexus SC 430 has proven itself an enduring drop-top flagship, albeit one with a complicated cultural history.

In 2012, two hosts of the biggest automotive program in the world declared the SC 430 to be the worst car in the history of the world. The judgement of “Top Gear” laid into the styling, the ride quality, the sheer cost of the thing, and the vulgarity of the wood veneers. By the standard of 2012, maybe Clarkson and May’s opinion seemed valid, what with the SC only having ended production two years prior. However, it’s been almost 13 years since the BBC released that DVD special, and a funny thing’s happened since then: The inverted bell curve has come back around.

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[Full disclosure: Lexus Canada invited me to Cambridge, Ontario as part of an event celebrating 35 years of the brand in Canada with a plant tour, and models new and old to drive. Accommodations and catering were provided by the manufacturer, and I drove myself down and paid for my own gas. -TH]

Lexus SC 430
Photo: Thomas Hundal

Maybe it’s just me, but I’ve always felt something nouveau riche about the look of the SC 430. From details like the odd banana-shaped spoiler and ornate Y2K-futurist mirrors to the general flowing, ovoid forms, every deliberate element combined to create a very new money, new millennium look. It still contrasts sharply against the starched beltlines and elegant simplicity more commonly found on other grand tourers of the aughts, but ditching the dinner plate alloys helps heaps. Plus, now there’s something nostalgic about early 21st-century conspicuous consumption, and I’d be amiss to mention the impact Mean Girls had on the legacy of this convertible for younger generations.

Lexus SC 430
Photo: Thomas Hundal

In the wake of car styling seemingly growing more overwrought with each passing year, the appearance of the SC 430 is now little more than a slight oddity, but it does serve a functional purpose. It looks like that to keep the breeze from nicking your hairpiece. Even with the windows down and no wind deflector blocking off the symbolic rear seats, the SC 430 is a cocoon of calm at sensible boulevardier speeds. Even at 50 MPH, you won’t be holding onto your hat like your life depends on it, and that overarching sense of feeling your blood pressure drop extends to the rest of the driving experience.

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Lexus SC 430
Photo: Thomas Hundal

As the name suggests, the SC 430 features a 4.3-liter naturally aspirated 3UZ-FE V8 under the hood. This all-aluminum quad-cam unit may only pump out 288 horsepower, but you know what? That’s sufficient, especially given the understressed feeling of the powertrain. Sure, it can still snap its Crocs into sport mode and skip toward the horizon if you really put your foot down, but the highlight here is single-malt refinement. An idle quiet enough to not stir a sleeping kitten, a six-speed automatic transmission that operates with the confident fluidity of a veteran waiter effortlessly balancing seven Dr. Peppers on a single tray, and steering with enough weight to give you a sense of what the front tires are doing but never so much as to feel like changing direction takes work.

Lexus SC 430
Photo: Thomas Hundal

Ah, but what about that ride quality the two men from the television complained about? Well, this SC 430 is a facelifted model from after Lexus softened off the edges a touch, but I can say that the predominant factor here is an abundance of cowl shake. It’s no secret that cars with removable roofs suffer in rigidity to give you a dose of vitamin D, but even relatively minor road imperfections raise this thorn in the SC 430’s crown. Admittedly, the Michelin Pilot Sport All Season tires on this one probably aren’t helping as much as a true comfort-focused touring tire would, but even then, you’re faced with a decision: Leave or live with it.

interior
Photo: Thomas Hundal

I reckon it’s worth at least considering the latter, because once your mind gets accustomed to the slight shimmy of the structure, you can lean back in a leather throne and take in just how well-made the interior feels. I’m not just talking about the softness of the materials or the micron-measured tolerances between trim panels, or the fact that every button you press feels substantial. I also want to give a shoutout to how some of the biggest items that date the cockpit can simply be hidden. The radio controls are hidden beneath a panel of veneer, and the navigation screen can do the same if you so choose. Those are the sorts of touches that make you wonder how the screen-heavy cars of today will age, a potential issue largely addressed near the turn of the millennium.

Is the cabin perfect? No. The rear seats are more conceptual than they are practical, you forget just how badly decades-old navigation screens wash out in the sunlight, this particular shade and sheen of wood has a whiff of McMansion to it, and trunk space with the folding hardtop retracted is downright laughable, but crank up the surprisingly good Mark Levinson sound system and those quibbles fade into the background beneath bass notes and groovelines.

front
Photo: Thomas Hundal

Of course, then there’s perhaps the biggest reason to buy a second-hand Lexus. The SC 430 isn’t quite as composed as a period Mercedes-Benz SL or as eager as a BMW 645ci, but unlike the German competition of the 2000s, the Lexus will still be going with more-or-less just regular maintenance. There’s no hydraulic suspension to leak, no chronic reports of valve-stem seal issues … it’s just a nice drop-top cruiser that works as expected. Think about it: When was the last time you saw a broken SC 430 for sale?

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Lexus SC 430
Photo: Thomas Hundal

It’s fair to say that nearly 13 years ago, the SC 430 probably wasn’t most people’s first pick for a grand touring convertible. However, it’s stood the test of time, so you can now pick one up for seriously sensible money and have a well-appointed summer cruiser with a stellar sound system without having to worry about reliability. Worst car in the history of the world? Under this context, hardly. Instead, it’s where the smart money’s at.

Do you live near Toronto and have an interesting car you want me to drive? Drop me a line at thomas@theautopian.com!

Top graphic image: Thomas Hundal

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Ben
Ben
10 hours ago

The radio controls are hidden beneath a panel of veneer, and the navigation screen can do the same if you so choose.

Given how ugly those veneers are, I’m not sure I’d call this a positive. 😛

SPB
SPB
11 hours ago

“I’d be amiss to mention the impact Mean Girls had on the legacy of this convertible for younger generations.”

That’s 80% of the reason I want one. Get in loser, we’re going shopping!

Logan King
Logan King
11 hours ago

Nah, these are still junk. They’re fuck ugly still (like the design document dictated they look as much like a Camry Solara as possible), I’m extremely skeptical there was any functionality reason for it (the R230 and R170 didn’t have any issues with wind buffeting and they don’t look like that, nor does my X150 convertible), the interiors look like they were designed for a Sebring owner who are cashing in their inheritance, and they drive awful. Weird suspension tuning that seems completely at odds with how floppy the chassis is and what the car is “supposed” to be.

Basically obsolete before they even came out because the R230 beat them to market, a huge step back from the previous SC, and a particularly rare miss from Lexus.

Last edited 11 hours ago by Logan King
Sam I am
Sam I am
12 hours ago

Haters be funny. I didn’t pay much attention when these were new, largely because the wheels were among the very ugliest objects ever. Yet somehow these got on my radar and after a year of sniffing around I recently landed a 2008 low-mile creampuff. It immediately became one of my favorite cars I’ve ever owned. And I’ve owned 30+ cars over 45+ years (damn, I’m old). So the keyboard warriors can go on hating and I’ll be rolling around on a warm summer evening in a sweet drop-top.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
12 hours ago

In 2012, two hosts of the biggest automotive program in the world declared the SC 430 to be the worst car in the history of the world. The judgement of “Top Gear” laid into the styling, the ride quality, the sheer cost of the thing, and the vulgarity of the wood veneers. “

As a person who has driven crap cars like the North American Chevette, an early 1980s Mercury Grand Marquis and a Pontiac 6000 with the Iron Duke, I knew this wasn’t true right off the bat.

But saying outlandish things that was part of the TG humour.

Do you live near Toronto and have an interesting car you want me to drive?”

I live near Toronto, but I don’t have an interesting car I want you to drive. Though I might have you drive one of my cars right before I get rid of them as by that time, they are usually rusted and beat to shit… and thus, driving them is ‘interesting’ for all the wrong reasons.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
13 hours ago

Disagree. They were right.
Compared to a CLK350, which has nearly as much power from the V6, a 7 speed automatic, better proportions due to the soft top, far more rear seat space and more tasteful wood – starting at just a bit less than the price of the Lexus.
Or the later E350, which has all the same but more power from the V6 than the Lexus – starting at about the same price – plus the built in draught screens and such….
Its a no-brainer why you rarely see the Lexus.

Anoos
Anoos
13 hours ago

This vehicle was designed for the ED sufferer who celebrated his impotence and used it as an excuse to check out of all things stylish.

Speedie-One
Speedie-One
14 hours ago

While it is not the worst car ever made (Top Gear under Clarkson was about pissing people off don’t forget), it was a fairly ugly design when new, and personally I do not think it has aged well. It was a big departure from the sexy SC300/400 model it replaced (which also do not sell for big money BTW). Lexus decided the market for luxury coupes were country club members who were more concerned about fitting golf clubs in the boot than performance or handling.

Aaronaut
Aaronaut
15 hours ago

Odd that we also got a Donut(/Speeed) video on this very topic recently.

Endless Summer Az
Endless Summer Az
15 hours ago

Not a fan of the design, but the change in rims makes a huge difference for the better.

I remember this car because it had one of the finest descriptions I’d seen in a car magazine. Wheels Magazine reckoned the design of these was a mix of Wurlitzer and Thunderbirds. I tend to think it’s accurate.

Ronan McGrath
Ronan McGrath
16 hours ago

I still have my R230 SL500 which I bought new in 2003 and to me it still looks good. I looked at the Lexus on release and it was ugly.

It’s still ugly . Park two side by side and you see Mickey Mouse feet.

The short nose and long tail reminds me of the awful Chrysler cab forward designs.

Anoos
Anoos
13 hours ago
Reply to  Ronan McGrath

You chose correctly.

Aracan
Aracan
20 hours ago

I never understood the hate these got. That may have to do with the fact that I can remember watching “Terminator 3” with Kristanna Loken in one of them when it came out.

Eric Gonzalez
Eric Gonzalez
21 hours ago

These were certainly not the worst cars in the world, but never did anything for me. Still nothing to this day. It’s like those actors you see in many movies but you can’t never remember their names. That’s what this Lexus is. I would choose essentially any other car over this one, it’s like a glorified Avalon coupe.

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