10th anniversary of Hiromu Naruse's death; Japan's Master Test Driver

The Relentless Pursuit of Perfection.

For a period of time, that was the Lexus motto. It embodied the brand’s obsession with attention to detail. This was one of the cornerstones which Lexus built their cars upon. And at the very zenith of this obsession was the LFA, still Lexus’ one and only forage into supercardom. But what a forage. One that wouldn’t have been possible if not for Hiromu Naruse.

If Lexus’ ‘relentless pursuit of perfection’ was distilled into human form, Hiromu Naruse would be that very person. His attention to detail, his obsession towards finding perfection, was matched by no one. It became his lifelong commitment, the reason he woke up in the morning.

He was - up until his untimely and ultimately tragic demise in 2010 - Toyota and Lexus’ Master Test Driver, in a career that spanned 50 years. Quite how he ended up as a test driver is also rather bizarre, as he was initially hired as a temporary mechanic. But this was to stand him in good stead, because his mechanical nous would be invaluable in his ability to hone cars to perfection.

Photo credit: FydoGraphy

Throughout his stint in Toyota and Lexus, Naruse’s body of work garnered him reverence. He never focused on just one part of the car; he was at all departments. Powertrain, suspension, tyres, you name it. His roll of honour includes revered machines such as the 2000GT, AE86, A80 Supra, MR-S, Altezza down to the LFA. Yamaha-tuned V10 in the LFA? Yep, all him. Not only did his cars drive well, they had a consistent ‘flavour’ about them. And he meant it to be such.

Tales of his near-pathological obsession with perfection range from his demand to change the ride height of a car, 6 months before its premiere, to spending hours on end on the workshop floor with his engineers, finetuning suspension settings, in the searing summer heat.

A80 Toyota Supra: Naruse's first sports car developed at the Nurburgring

He was the living embodiment of the philosophy ‘Genchi Genbutsu’, which means “go and see for yourself.” He once asked his engineers,” Why are you sticking to your desks in the office? Why do you not touch the vehicles more often?” He wanted every member of his team to be as hands-on as possible. Seat time and face time with the cars were all-important to him.

Current Toyota president, Akio Toyoda (grandson of Toyota founder Kiichiro) fondly recalls his first encounter with Naruse. In 2000, Toyoda had just returned from the United States and was eager to meet the company’s Master Test Driver, whom his father Shoichiro told him so much about. He considered himself a car guy, and was excited to have a conversation with Naruse. He was about to get a rude awakening.

“I don’t want to hear you giving me advice about cars, when you clearly don’t know how to drive properly.” Bold words from Naruse to the heir-apparent of the company. But Toyoda took it in his stride. He saw an opportunity to learn driving from the Master Test Driver himself. A Master & Apprentice relationship was formed.

And off they went, honing Toyoda’s driving ability across racetracks in Japan. When that was done and dusted, they headed to the Nurburgring, a racetrack feared and revered in equal measure. Toyoda pounded the circuit lap after lap, familiarising himself with the ‘Green Hell’, chasing Naruse around it until he remembered every turn, every braking point, every apex.

Naruse’s relationship with Toyoda blossomed. In Toyoda, he found an ally, a person who understood why driver’s cars matter. The existence of Toyota Gazoo Racing (yes, that’s what the GR stands for) owes much to this relationship. And more pertinently, the existence of the Lexus LFA.

Naruse-san lobbied for the brand to go racing, for them to set up shop for R&D in the Nurburgring, for Toyoda himself to spearhead Toyota Gazoo Racing (which he did, under the pseudonym ‘Morizo’). Naruse's obsession with the Nurburgring stemmed from his conviction that any car that can cope with the punishment this circuit had to offer, will have peerless driving dynamics. Toyoda bought in to the lobbying, he went all in.

Come 2002, Toyota’s focus moved to cars like the Prius, which signalled a shift in the company’s engineering direction. This did not sit well with Naruse, although he had a major role in developing the Altezza and MR-S during this period. Naruse wanted a game-changer, something that would make the world sit up and take notice, like the A80 Supra.

That game-changer would come in the form of the Lexus LFA. For the first time in company’s history, a Master Test Driver was given carte blanche to weave his vision of the LFA to reality. Naruse’s authority in this project superseded even the Chief Engineer himself, Haruhiko Tanahashi. There was only one place Naruse wanted to develop the LFA in.

Naruse would waste no time. This was to be his zenith, the culmination of his career. He was not going to fail. He badgered the suspension suppliers, Kayaba to no end with his constant input. He hounded the tyre suppliers, Bridgestone till he got the compound he was satisfied with. This was all the more remarkable seeing he had zero tyre or suspension engineering background.

Naruse loved being a hands-on presence around his cars

Bit by bit, the LFA took shape. Utilising Toyota’s Formula 1 know-how at the time, the LFA’s chassis was manufactured in-house, with carbon-fiber featuring prominently. Whilst the LFA was notorious for its long gestation period, Naruse had hit all the benchmark targets that were set.

The crown jewel, however, was to be the engine. Drawing further from Toyota’s F1 experience, the naturally aspirated 1LR-GUE 4.8-litre V10, co-developed with Yamaha, produced 560 PS (well above the 100 PS/litre benchmark) and 480 Nm. The engineers called the exhaust note “the roar of an angel.” If you have never heard it before, go have a listen (start at 00:40, you're welcome). In 2008, LFA prototypes were sent to compete in the 24 Hours of Nurburgring, under Gazoo Racing.

Finally, in October 2009, the LFA was introduced to the world at the Tokyo Motor Show. Hiromu Naruse had completed his halo car. Lexus now had a world-beating supercar. Funny thing was, just as the LFA development team thought they could wind down and start packing, Naruse told them there was more work. Somewhere in the Nurburgring, there was a collective sigh.

Naruse thought the LFA could still be improved further, and pressed on. He wanted to bring the LFA even closer to perfection. Data gleaned from the LFA race prototypes would be used to fine-tune and create a more extreme, competition-spec LFA, called the Nurburgring Package. Only 64 out of the 500 LFAs ever produced came in this flavour.

Naruse was pleased, the Nurburgring Package had met his targets. His development team could finally breathe a sigh of relief. Naruse could look forward to perhaps retiring. After all, he had achieved his dream, and he was already 66. This was a car he intimately loved, and knew, inside out.

And that was what made it all the more puzzling that he was involved in that head-on collision on that fateful day in 23 June 2010, as he was heading back to Toyota’s engineering facility nearby. He had probably driven the LFA, on that stretch of road so many times prior. Naruse died at the scene of the accident. Toyota lost not only a Master Test Driver, but a leading light, a force of nature, an indomitable spirit.

As if in tribute, the LFA Nurburgring Package went on to set a then production car lap record of 7:14.46 in the hands of Super GT champion Akira Iida, ten months after Naruse’s tragic passing. Ultimately, the LFA, - his LFA - achieved everything he dreamed of, sadly without Naruse witnessing it himself.

Until today, you can feel the spirit of Hiromu Naruse living in many other Toyota and Lexus cars. Without Naruse’s influence, cars like the GT86 and A90 Supra would not have seen light of day. The new New Global Architecture platform has also spawned some great driver’s cars like the Camry (yes, it drives exceedingly well) and ES. All envisioned by Naruse’s protégé, Morizo.

Till the very end, Naruse-san died doing what he loved. He radiated that self-belief, that burning desire, that seemingly-unending obsession to see his life’s work, - building cars that could rub shoulders with the very best the automotive world had to offer - come to fruition. With his last dance, the Lexus LFA Nurburgring Package, he certainly did that, and so much more. Salute to you, Naruse-san. 10 years on, your absence is still greatly felt, and sorely missed.

 

    Channel:
Follow our socials:
Jason

Road Test Editor

Jason's foremost passion is all things automotive, where he spent his formative working years as a Product Planner and Traine...

Get a deal on your trade in within 24 hours!

users traded-in for dream car
Add your car

Upgrade

Proton X50

Related Used Car

Quality Cars Guaranteed

Fixed Price No Hidden Fees

5-Day Money-back Guarantee

1-Year Warranty

View More

Related Short Videos

Latest News

Review: Chery Omoda 5 in Malaysia - Bang-for-buck hero does its best to exorcise ghosts of Chery's past

Something about rising tides and lifting boats paints the picture of the Chinese car industry, and among the pleathora of startup small boats rolling into the vast sea you have your vessels; built on the back of years of trial and error, no doubt buoyed with a full coffer. Of course, for a fair few companies, the motivation to chart new waters is to correct missteps of years prior. 奇瑞, or Chery to you and I, will know very well what the latter means. Yesteryear's QQ and A160 were a crack at the

Burning Proton X70 incident: Car now in Proton's possession, cause and findings to be updated after investigations

Proton has issued a statement in regards to a recent viral video, in which a Proton X70 caught fire. The particular vehicle is in the company's possession already. Further findings will be announced upon completion of investigation. Here is the statement in full, released on 13-October 2023: "Proton would like to issue a statement with regards to a video currently circulating depicting a thermal incident on a new Proton X70. We are aware of the incident and would like to thank concerned parties

Gentari wants to expand hydrogen supply biz, welcomes Budget 2024's recognition for EV and home solar services

Following today’s tabling of Budget 2024, Petronas’ green energy arm Gentari welcomes the recognition by Prime Minister Anwar when Gentari’s contribution to Malaysia was highlighted. Gentari CEO Sushil Purohit said, “Gentari is proud to be recognised in Budget 2024, a testament to our growing role in Malaysia’s clean energy ecosystem since our launch last year. We observe with great optimism the clean energy transition initiatives and incentives etched within Malaysia’s Budget 2024 and it is par

BMW Group Malaysia claims No.1 premium EV brand title for 2023, welcomes spending on charging facilities and TVET upskilling

BMW Group Malaysia has sold over 1,700 units of fully electric BMW i and MINI EV models in the first eight months of 2023, a sum which the company says positions it as the No.1 Premium EV provider in the country. In response to today’s tabling of Budget 2024, Managing Director Hans de Visser welcomes the extension of income tax relief for expenses on EV charging facilities. “Looking to the future, the need to accelerate the adoption of EVs as a greener and more efficient solution to transportati

Toyota's Kinto is getting bored, finds a way to make the AH30 Alphard and Vellfire sliding doors close faster

You know how some cars can be truly fantastic except for one minor detail that you just can’t overlook and it ends up ruining the entire driving experience. It could be a terrible head unit or a bad seating position. Well, some of the engineers at Toyota’s Kinto subscription service thought that could be the abysmally slow speed of the sliding doors on the previous AH30 generation of the Toyota Alphard and Vellfire. Either that or they must be getting really bored over there. Or someone has secr

Recommended Cars

PopularLatestUpdates
Hot
Mitsubishi

Mitsubishi Xpander

RM 99,980

View Model
Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz AMG GT 63

RM 2,088,888

View Model
Honda

Honda Civic Type R

RM 330,002 - 399,900

View Model
Upcoming
Volvo

Volvo EX30

TBC

View Model
Rolls Royce

Rolls Royce Spectre

RM 2,000,000

View Model