I'm not a hedge fund manager, and the only thing I would ever conceive spending $400K on is a house. Anybody who buys an LFA has more money than sense, so I'm sure they can buy an Aventador and a Ferrari F12 as well, and put them on their car elevator.
Obviously getting into personal preference, but that is gaudy as hell. No thanks.
If acceleration stats mattered, then the best car would be a top fuel dragster, end of story. There's way more to it than that. And if lap times were everything, people would never buy supercars over track-day cars, some of which make the Atom V8 look like a minivan.In general, supercars are about fulfilling a fantasy. They're not about numbers but about how they make you feel. Whether it's giving you F1 driver fantasies with a Ferrari 458, or pre-war aristocratic fantasies with a Spyker C8, supercar makers sell dreams, essentially, and dreams that are drivable on the street, and are at the very least somewhat livable for the - let's face it, probably quite older - enthusiast that's likely to afford them.P.S. I love Pagani. Probably the closest thing we have to pre-war French and Italian coach-built exotica. Cars where every component, every nut and bolt is a work of art in of itself. Absolutely stunning and what supercars should be.
I guess I just don't understand what role the LFA is supposed to play. It will never be able to take down mega track cars like Gumperts and Ascaris, it's too polished and civilized for that. It's not an insane hyper car like a Pagani or a Koenigsegg. It's not an ultimate GT like a Ferrari F12 Berlinetta, and it's too expensive and its transmission is too clunky to be a grocery getter like a 911 Turbo or R8 V10. If it was $175K and Toyota's answer to the Ford GT it would be brilliant. AT $375K though I just don't get it, there are just too many better options.