BikNorton wrote:
@hearthly ta. I'd like to say it was school-night-drunken-whimsy, but I'm still going "hmmm" to myself a day later.
After all, I'm lining up a grand on suspension, a grand on ECU and dsg remaps, and more recently at least a grand on airflow. And it's going to need at least 500 on brakes soon too, somehow after more than 4 years not even need pads yet but it's starting to feel a bit squidgy and the discs are very lipped all round.
So really, even if an isf cost me 2 grand, it'd be a saving.
I doubt it'd even cost more in fuel, I did 170miles mostly on cruise at motorway speed a couple of weekends back and got 34mpg average - the VAG EA888 is hilariously inefficient, much worse than I bargained for (Helens kodiaq in 180hp trim isn't any better).
The absurd, old man £217 I paid for fully comp insurance this year would no doubt change, but then all those mods I'm planning.
By all accounts the ISF is very reliable, just make sure you get one that's been looked after and hasn't had a load of crap done to it. It's definitely on my list of 'crazy cars I'd like to own' whilst also being an under the radar Q car type affair. The rear aspect in particular I think looks stunning with those stacked quad exhausts.
And yes, it's literally the type of car that will never be built again, a naturally aspirated V8 isn't a thing in new cars, so perhaps enjoy one whilst you can.
Definitely watch the video I linked above, the guys know their stuff and there was a year where Lexus changed a couple of things to make it a dynamically better car.
The biggest problem with the ISF of course is there aren't that many around, and nice ones aren't cheap!