RE: Lexus LS400 | Shed of the Week
RE: Lexus LS400 | Shed of the Week
Friday 15th September 2023

Lexus LS400 | Shed of the Week

There are good sheds and great sheds - then there is the LS400


If there was a voting sheet for the holy grail of shedding, the Lexus LS400 would surely feature on it in bold type. 

LS stood for Luxury Sedan but that was massively underselling it. This 4.0 V8 powered saloon was conceived by Toyota to challenge the best European luxury cars, and then built without compromise to defeat them. The target market was perfectly happy to ignore the press’s misgivings about its style (or lack of it) and on-the-limit handling (ditto) in exchange for the real-world pleasures of plush comfort, effortless performance, astonishing refinement and peerless reliability.  

The Lexus proposition of furious excellence extended way beyond the initial purchase too, thanks to Toyota’s equally uncompromising approach to customer service. Stories of white-coated technicians being helicoptered into remote owners’ properties to carry out servicing tasks sounded like urban myths but often turned out to be true. 

The 1994-on second generation LS400 was even better than its standard-setting predecessor. It retained the wondrous 1UZ-FE engine, albeit lightened and friction-reduced to lift peak power up from 250hp to 260hp and the torque from 260lb ft to 273lb ft. The four-speed auto box received a gated shift lever, a more efficient torque converter and new gearing to put the Lexus on top of the class for power-to-weight ratio, acceleration (0-62mph in 7.5 seconds) and fuel efficiency. The seats were internally redesigned with suspension-style coils, torsion springs and anti-roll bars and the wheelbase was lengthened to create an extra 66mm of rear legroom. Despite its deliberately staid appearance the car was surprisingly efficient through the air with a class-leading drag coefficient figure of 0.28. On top of all that it was 94kg lighter than the first LS. 

Once, LS400s were ten a penny, but nowadays they’re a much rarer sight in the ‘to clear’ ads, which is why Shed hasn’t been able to bring you one in nearly six years. The last one on here in October 2017 was a fully-historied 1997 96,000-miler in Doom Blue that was going for £1,495, a price described by Shed at the time as ‘a bit rich’. Ah, how times change. Shed can tell you that today, in September 2023, that same car is now up to 131,000 miles and has just breezed through another test with only a couple of minor defects.

Today’s specimen – another gen-two LS, but this time from late 1995 – has done quite a few more miles, is even more rich at £2,000, and has gold badges all over it, but even taking that lot into account this is a car that won’t be sticking around for very long. It’s at 182,000 miles at the moment, only 22,000 of which have been done in the last 18 years. The handful of advisories showing up on the MOT history over that period have all been for consumable items, the only comment on last November’s test being for a worn front tyre. So, if we gloss over the average fuel consumption figure of 23mpg and the annual car tax of £325, they can be very cheap to run. Having said that, as ex-PH honcho Paul Garlick will tell you, they can bite you in the bum if the suspension goes wrong (worn front strut bushes, cracking springs, busted front wishbone balljoints, non-bushy anti-roll bar bushes). Front wheel bearings will go too, and front brake discs warp.  

Shed had an LS once. He got rid of it because it was so quiet inside the cabin he no longer had any excuse for not hearing Mrs Shed’s random chunnerings. The motor should be virtually silent, and smooth enough to fool you into trying to start it when it’s already running. New belts and water pumps are due every 100,000 miles. If the gearbox isn’t delivering buttery changes it’s possible that the annual fluid and filter changes haven’t been kept up. Oil escaping from the timing cover could mean it’s time for new cam and/or crankshaft seals. Dampness around the alternator is usually down to leaks from the power steering system.

On the plus side, replacing the gold badges with chrome ones won’t cost much, and if you want to replace the worn front seat it will take you even less time than it took Shed to find a full set of decent seats plus door cards on eBay for £200. 

Many LSs are bought by people who appreciate good engineering and who want to keep it that way by investing fully in the service programme. Sadly, not everyone looks after them. There are only half as many LS400s registered on British roads today as there were six years ago. Even if, having bought one, you decide an LS isn’t for you, the engines routinely make £1,000 or more on tinternet for use in more sporting projects. It’s a win-win.  


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Author
Discussion

V8V Quadcamboy

Original Poster:

148 posts

39 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
As an MX5 guy that is heading for an engine swap at that money

Filibuster

3,349 posts

231 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I have great respect for these, but I would never consider one to actually own and drive one.

biggbn

27,661 posts

236 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Filibuster said:
I have great respect for these, but I would never consider one to actually own and drive one.
You are missing out then...brilliant cars to live with. Quickly become indispensable

x5tuu

12,505 posts

203 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Only ever see these (in this colour way) driven by ‘scene’ chavs where I am now - they’ve never held any appeal to me although I’m more than sure they were good in their prime.

yme402

543 posts

118 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Shed nirvana.

Hairymonster

1,635 posts

121 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I got a lift with a friend who had one in the mid 90's. I just couldn't believe how quite and smooth it was - literally a magic carpet ride.

Clearly it wasn't going to trouble the board leaders on a lap of the 'ring, though its ability to isolate you from the travails of every day motoring, moving you along in an oasis of calm unflustered power was just brilliant.

Portofino

4,803 posts

207 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Beige with beige with beige. The Farah slacks of the motoring world.


Cambs_Stuart

3,311 posts

100 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
The best shed for many years. Fantastic thing.

Lexmaster

63 posts

50 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I like the gold badges getmecoat

Hairymonster

1,635 posts

121 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Portofino said:
Beige with beige with beige. The Farah slacks of the motoring world.
Certainly a whiff of keen Rotarian / Vice-captain of the golf club about them

Rumblestripe

3,567 posts

178 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
yme402 said:
Shed nirvana.
Yup, the very essence of what a shed can be.

cerb4.5lee

37,918 posts

196 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I enjoyed reading about these so much when they first came out, and the motoring press absolutely adored them at the time too. In some ways it is a bit sad to see them as a shed really I reckon.

This looks a little worse for wear inside, but that still doesn't stop me lusting after their plus points though(the engine smoothness/ride etc). Much like from me.

Numeric

1,489 posts

167 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I don't know why but this isn't in the news area when I opened PH this morning.

This is dangerous - if I hadn't found it I'd have gone into work tomorrow...

biggbn

27,661 posts

236 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
I enjoyed reading about these so much when they first came out, and the motoring press absolutely adored them at the time too. In some ways it is a bit sad to see them as a shed really I reckon.

This looks a little worse for wear inside, but that still doesn't stop me lusting after their plus points though(the engine smoothness/ride etc). Much like from me.
Just like the old saying 'all political careers end in failure', one can argue that all barges end as sheds?

CarlosSainz100

637 posts

136 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I always remember these from the arcade game Final Fight; you had to batter one to bits.

Chubbyross

4,737 posts

101 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
I wonder how many secretaries’ knees have been fondled in this car over the years.

MrGeoff

723 posts

188 months

Friday 15th September 2023
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I dismissed these as being nothing more than cars driven by old blokes, largely at the time they were new, I was right. I then drove one, it was truly sublime, what a great shed. I guess if I were single and not tethered to reality by my wife I probably would have bought one by now despite having no actual use for it.

JD2329

502 posts

184 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
Superb bits of kit. I owned a later Mk4 for a year, doing 15000 long distance miles in it.
Very comfortable, with peerless refinement - you really would get out after a long journey and not really feel as if you'd been anywhere.
However there was nothing to engage you in the driving experience - in particular it had very light steering, with zero feel, although it did actually handle quite well on faster sweepers.
And the cabin, while well built, had a touch of the premium Camry about it.
Hence after a year I moved it on, whereas I kept the E38 7 series that followed it for six years.
The mechanicals are as long lasting as they come, last time I looked, my old one was coming up to its next MOT with 200k on the clock.
A simpler vehicle than the later LS430, with no air suspension to worry about. Not ULEZ compatible unfortuantely, which would count another one out for me.
Nonetheless as a cheap shed they take some beating.



Edited by JD2329 on Friday 15th September 08:25

Cryssys

696 posts

54 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
As good a shed as it is I couldn't. Don't know why but I just couldn't.

250 BHP from a 4 litre V8 is a surprisingly low return and consistent with what I would expect from our American cousins.

shih tzu faced

2,597 posts

65 months

Friday 15th September 2023
quotequote all
There’s something strangely depressing about a shiny brown airbag steering wheel from that period. That’s about the only bad thing about it though, in most other respects this is a fantastic thing.