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Test Drive: 2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible
2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible in Liquid Platinum silver

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

Class: Premium Sporty/Performance Car

Miles driven: 68

Fuel used: 4.4 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and ComfortC+
Power and PerformanceA-
Fit and FinishA
Fuel EconomyC
ValueC+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big GuyB+
Tall GuyB-
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs471-hp 5.0-liter
Engine TypeV8
Transmission 10-speed automatic
Drive WheelsRWD

Real-world fuel economy: 15.5 mpg

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 15/25/18 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $101,000 (not including $1025 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: 21-inch forged wheels ($2650), head-up display ($1100), limited-slip differential ($460), Touring Package ($5290)

Price as tested: $111,325

More LC price and availability information

 

Quick Hits

The great: Dramatic, exotic-car styling; beautifully trimmed cabin; robust acceleration

The good: Quick-operating convertible top; throaty exhaust note

The not so good: Steep pricing; rear visibility; some finicky controls

 

John Biel

Maybe you’re wondering what’s new with the Lexus LC 500 these days. Well, how about a convertible?

Lexus gives its V8-powered high-style grand touring coupe an open-air companion for 2021. Priced at $102,025 (with delivery) to start—an $8050 premium over the LC 500 coupe—it essentially replicates the closed car’s luxury and driving experience with a breezier ambience.

Lexus’s flagship grand-touring coupe gets a drop-top variant for 2021. Given the LC’s voluptuous looks and invigorating performance, a wind-in-the-hair version is a natural addition to the line.

If you like the looks of the LC coupe—and we at Consumer Guide generally do—then you’ll probably go for the convertible as well. Both have the same muscular front fenders, flaring haunches, and dramatic “T-bone” taillight bezels. In place of the severely sloped fixed roof that compromises over-the-shoulder driver vision is a fabric top that has a more-close-coupled notchback profile when raised—and even less of a view. (Looking out the rear window is a little like being the neighborhood busybody peeping through venetian blinds to keep tabs on everybody’s business.) At least that top, which stows under a power-operated deck panel, does its thing in a hurry—it can be raised in 16 seconds at speeds of up to 31 mph.

Quick Spin: 2019 Lexus LC 500

The LC 500 Convertible’s impeccably trimmed interior is carried over unaltered from its coupe sibling, save for power-top controls that are hidden underneath a hinged wrist rest for the infotainment system’s touchpad.

The convertible clocks in at approximately 200 pounds heavier than the coupe, and with a slight change in weight distribution. In an effort to make the convertible’s driving behavior as close to the coupe’s dynamics as possible, Lexus engineers added structural bracing to preserve chassis rigidity lost with the removal of the steel top. The result is commendably effective, with just minimal flutter felt through the body over medium to large bumps.

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The LC 500 Convertible comes standard with both a transparent wind deflector (visible here just aft of the rear seat backs) and an adjustable wind screen to keep buffeting to a minimum. Yes, there are rear seats, but they’re barely inhabitable, even by small children… there is no legroom at all with the front seats adjusted all the way back.

Any LC rides on a fully independent “Adaptive Variable Suspension” with double-joint multi-link control arms and alloy wheels of at least 20 inches in diameter (CG’s test car had optional 21s) wrapped in staggered-width run-flat performance tires. Ride is always firm, yet not punishing, particularly in the “Comfort” drive mode, but no one will be beaten up over long distances by the “Sport” and “Sport S+” modes with damping that’s even more buttoned down. If the steering lacks actual sports-car reflexes it’s still quite responsive, and there’s fine control of cornering lean. A Torsen limited-slip differential can be ordered to assist traction in the rear-drive-only LC. Meaty 4-wheel disc brakes provide effective and predictable stopping power.

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As is typical with convertibles, the top’s hardware cuts into cargo space–there’s just 3.4 cubic feet of trunk volume, and the rear seat backs don’t fold.

With its extra bulk, the convertible likely won’t match the coupe’s 4.4-second (per Lexus) 0-60-mph time, but the smooth 5.0-liter V8 of 471 horsepower and 398 lb-ft of torque is swift away from a stop and able to eat up highway miles without a sweat. Twist into Sport S+ via the dial projecting out the right side of the instrument cluster and throttle response gets more aggressive while shifts from the 10-speed automatic transmission are delayed to let power build—and announce itself through a sportier full-throated exhaust blare. The trans is capable of quick kickdown in highway passing and merging.

EPA fuel-economy estimates for the LC convertible—15 mpg city, 25 mpg highway, 18 mpg combined—are a little shy of the coupe’s ratings, which are 1 mpg higher in city and combined use. In an uncommonly brief stint with the car, we averaged 15.5 mpg from 68 test miles, 40 percent of which came in city-type operation.

The ’21 LC family (which also includes the hybrid 500h coupe) gains Android Auto smartphone compatibility to go with the existing Apple CarPlay functionality and Amazon Alexa integration. Other standard technology features of note are Lexus Enform telematics (including a smartphone app for remote-control capability), Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth connectivity, Lexus Safety System + suite (forward-collision and pedestrian detection, radar cruise control, automatic high-beam headlamps, lane-departure warning, and lane-keeping assist with steering assist), blind-spot monitoring, and front and rear parking sensors. The convertible comes with active roll bars that are poised to deploy should sensors detect a rollover.

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The LC 500’s naturally aspirated 5.0-liter V8 puts out 471 horsepower and emits a basso rumble that’s as much “big-block muscle car” as it is “sophisticated exotic.” Forged-alloy 21-inch wheels add $2650 to the bottom line.

There’s plenty of luxury and convenience built in to the LC 500 convertible, and more can be added through options. Standard equipment includes keyless entry and starting, heated and ventilated 10-way-adjustable leather front seats, leather-wrapped power tilt/telescoping steering wheel with magnesium paddle shifters, aluminum pedal trim and door scuff plates, automatic dual-zone climate system, interior-air filter, 12-speaker audio system, HD and satellite radio, navigation, heated electrochromic memory mirrors, and puddle lamps. CG’s $111,325 test car added things like a head-up display and the Touring Package with a heated steering wheel, semi-aniline leather front seats, embossed headrests, “Climate Concierge” with upper-body heating (handy for top-down driving when there’s a nip in the air), and Mark Levinson 13-speaker surround-sound audio system.

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The LC 500 Convertible’s dramatic front and rear styling is unchanged from its coupe sibling. These cars look even more dramatic in person than they do in photos.

Front seats are comfortable with fine support. Legroom is generous, but top-up headroom is limited. Technically it is a 4-passenger car. There are seatbelts in back—just no legroom. Soft, padded surfaces cover the doors and console sides. Virtual gauges are configurable—the large speedometer display switches to a tachometer in the Sport modes—and include a g-force meter. Infotainment functions appear on a 10.3-inch screen, but they are operated via remote controls on the console, a pad for pinch, swipe, or “written” capability. In our experience, the pad can be too sensitive for accuracy while moving, and it diverts driver attention from where it ought to be. The bank of climate controls uses repetitive-press switches for all functions. The power-top switch is hidden under a door in the console.

The glove box and door pockets are small. A small net pouch rests on the passenger side of the floor tunnel. Two covered cup holders fit where they can in the console; one is hidden under the adjustable armrest that is also the lid of the modest console box. Lexus picked a fabric top over a retractable hard top to save weight and preserve trunk space, but it’s still mighty stingy: just 3.4 cubic feet, compared to 5.4 cubic feet in the LC 500 coupe. All LCs load from above through a hatchlike lid, and fixed rear seat backs don’t permit any direct expansion of cargo capacity.

What’s new with the Lexus LC 500? Now you know.

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Top up or down, the LC 500 Convertible cuts a striking profile.

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2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible Gallery

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible

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