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Only reason real to buy an LC over LX is if you want to majorly mod it for off road. Really it comes down to do you need >34” tires.
Can anyone speak to on-road and off-road drive quality compare/contrast?Hi all, new to this forum and have already learned so much, so thank you. I’ve never owned either of these before and have only ever owned a 2013 LR4. I’m looking at a 2010 LC with 150K miles for $25K or a 2011 LX570 with 115K miles for $27K. The Lexus seems to have less wear and tear and both have a clean Carfax. I’m a huge tech guy and really want to install an aftermarket head unit that supports Apple CarPlay but from the looks of it neither of these will support anything from the likes of Crutchfield, etc.
I’m thinking it’s more of a personal preference but I’m curious which one would you go for and why?
Thank you!!
With an LX, toss on 35" tires with moderate offsets. Then just clearance the wheel well plastics. Perhaps a body mount chop with more aggressive 35s, but that's the same for the LC. And sensor or calibration lift AHC. That's it.
Can anyone speak to on-road and off-road drive quality compare/contrast?
I'm sure tire type, pressure, wheel diamter etc. all play into it. But also curious LX having comfort/Normal/Sport settings and LC not.
I've driven a friends 2015 LC a little, but not any LX of any year. So that's my only point of comparison.
Thanks for the detailed reply.The LX is definitely the more driver oriented car (as much as a 6000lb tank can be). And the more comfortable car. The benefit of dynamic suspension is its duality of purpose. Multi-purpose that is. One doesn't have to pick what it's optimized for. It self adjusts to be suited for the use at hand. On-road or off-road. Empty or laden. Speed or comfort. With driver selectable input to further bias it for comfort, normal, or sport.
It's the LC that is the marshmallow stock. A static suspension setup for a perfectly comfortable ride, focused on articulation and suppleness on and off-road. Along with soft suspension comes a heavy dose of brake dive and acceleration squat. KDSS does a good job with roll resistance while allowing for great articulation off-road. Put a heavy payload in it and one will wish for a better suited suspension. Get an aftermarket suspension with higher rates for more load, and they miss the comfort of the stock ride when empty.
LC guys forget that KDSS is a simplified, mechanical variant of Kinetic Dynamic Suspension. Much of the same cross linked suspension technology is applied to AHC, but in a much more technology heavy active form. That can vary damping, spring rates, ride height, and more. Those capabilities did not go to waste just for a smooth ride. It has functions to enable better handling, including specific functions to minimize squat and dive. As a sports car junkie, I find it's handling performance on secondary roads convincing with fine damping, little roll, and solid posture control.
Here's some of what the system does to help make it a better drivers car all around:
View attachment 2299214
Let me summarize - those who own an LX, think an LX is better. Those who own an LC, think an LC is better. Go drive both, pick which you prefer.
Thanks for the detailed reply.
Does the sport setting and other two settings make much difference in feel?
And is there much difference in 08-11 vs 13-15 vs 16-20 versions in the AHC and settings?
I should really go test drive some to compare.
I'm all for everyone sharing their opinions. There's no need to get caught up in objective features as fitted to the two flavors of 200-series. Both can further be modified to suit whatever your tastes might be.
Yes, a pretty large difference in feel. They are aptly named in their intent and results.
Sport ratchets up compression damping substantially, increasing suspension stiffness, turn-in, and roll resistance. As I said, I'm a self professed sport car junkie with a very modified sports car, and I like to push cars on the track and street. A big factor in my choice for the LX. AHC sport setting can sometimes be overly stiff legged on broken secondary roads where it makes the ride unnecessarily brittle, actually giving up pace as the suspension doesn't deflect and absorb the irregularities as much as it does in normal mode.
Normal mode is well tailored for everything as it's already self adjusting for load, condition, and driver input.
And comfort, blissful for long stretches of highway. Even with Load Range E AT tires as I have fitted to mine.
LC may have old school suspension...... but a quick look on this forum today are a few threads complaining about bad ride of LX, even on-road!
You just don’t see any thread about bad LC ride on any road.
As for handling and braking etc, there is no objective data to say one is better than the other.
But one of the two requires significant more maintenance and cost throughout life of vehicle. And one member LX is still in the shop for a few weeks for gremlins in the AHC system.
Yeah LC suspension is so bad.
And one member LX is still in the shop for a few weeks for gremlins in the AHC system.