Showing posts with label Lamborghini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lamborghini. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 Roadster


“Everyone serves the good wine first, and then the inferior wine after the guests have become drunk. But you have kept the good wine until now.” John 2:10.

Lamborghini’s Aventador Roadster, arguably the best varietal ever bottled by the Sant’Agata Bolognese winery, is the perfect way to celebrate 2012 global sales up by 30 percent, a healthy backlog of Aventador orders, and the company’s 50th birthday. While the rest of the car world frets electrics and hybrids, Lamborghini is toasting its middle age with a $448,295 dolce spumante.

This is hardly the first time a manufacturer has popped the cork on a coupe to woo sun worshippers, but there’s more to this Roadster (which is actually a targa) than solar-heated seats. To minimize the loss of structural integrity, its carbon-fiber tub is reinforced with thicker rocker sections and additional composite material laid over the driveline tunnel and firewall.

With the two gloss-black roof panels removed, torsional stiffness is 37-percent lower than the coupe’s but, short of a lab measurement or bad-road, sibling comparison test, you’ll never notice the slightly softer foundation. Resealing the cockpit by plugging the top panels’ locating pins into four windshield sockets and securing two rear latches restores 6 percent of the lost stiffness.

Each top panel weighs only 13.2 pounds thanks to the Lamborghini’s first application of its forged-composite process, which squeezes 1-to-2-inch carbon fibers laced with resin and packed into a precise mold in a heated 1100-ton press. To bask in the admiring paparazzi glow, you plug the tops into receivers fitted to the trunk. That consumes 90 percent of the limited luggage space, a problem for your valet to resolve.
Other Roadster-specific features are twin pop-up B-pillar posts that deploy in the unlikely event of a rollover, side-window glass beveled along its top edges for tight sealing, and a small glass panel between the rear roof pillars that can be lowered to orchestrate the back breeze and V-12-engine serenade. The total weight gain is a modest 110 pounds.

While sculpting the original Aventador, Lamborghini’s chief designer Filippo Perini drew inspiration from shiny green beetles with zigzag legs, the F-22 Raptor, and the B-2 stealth bomber. His team added a few stylish hexagons to the Roadster to underscore Lamborghini’s admiration of the sixth element—carbon. Four overlapping tempered-glass panes set inside two elongated hexagons solve the problems of maintaining a view of the engine while venting heat and providing weather protection. Other hex shapes surround the exhaust pipes, cover the fuel filler, define the door openings, and guard the engine stop-start button against accidental use.


On the dark side of this bad beetle, there’s a powertrain layout as mesmerizing as the jagged exterior. The 691-hp 6.5-liter V-12 mounted just behind the cockpit has the output end of its crankshaft aimed forward. A power takeoff sandwiched between the engine and the seven-speed Oerlikon-Graziano automated gearbox spins two driveshafts offset to the right of the car’s centerline. One drives the rear limited-slip differential housed inside an extension of the engine’s oil sump, the other delivers torque through a Haldex coupling to the open front diff. While up to 60 percent of the available output can be routed forward, in practice the front twist varies between 0 and 30 percent. In other words, the Roadster’s rear Pirelli P Zero boots— now offered with APP TECH forged wheels in an optional 21-inch size—do most of the work, as they should for optimum steering and handling.

Instead of diving into the hybrid end of the pool, Lamborghini engineers dipped a toe into heightened efficiency waters with two new engine-control schemes. One bank of cylinders is disabled while cruising in upper gears at speeds below 84 mph by temporarily interrupting fuel delivery. At traffic lights, a stop-start system shuts down the whole engine, relighting the fire on cue in only 180 milliseconds with a starter powered by a super capacitor. EPA highway mileage climbs from 17 to 18 mpg, while the Aventador’s 11 mpg city rating is unchanged.

Fuel economy is likely a low priority for anyone stepping into the scissors-door’s maw and swinging a leg over the Roadster’s foot-wide sill. Once the entry procedure is mastered, the firmly bolstered bucket seat, flat-bottomed wheel, sparkling liquid-crystal instruments, and a center-console control array worthy of a 747 begin their beguiling act. Punch the starter button to cue the 12-cylinder rock-band yowl and you begin believing that this seat really could be worth its outrageous price, a mere $44,100 more than the coupe’s.

The Adventador Roadster’s unmatched dynamic range is the clincher. Instead of surfing through tedious configuration menus, tapping two buttons commands your choice of Strada, Sport, and Corsa modes while programming key powertrain, chassis, and body-panel variables. Corsa delivers the physics equivalent of a horizontal bungee jump: Clicking the paddle shifters smartly will whipsaw your viscera to 60 mph in about three seconds and through a quarter-mile in eleven. Timely wheel and pedal work deliver near-1.0-g cornering and head-banging, 1.0-g-plus braking. The audio track sounds like a stirring mix of Winternationals and Le Mans rips. Strada is where the steering and ride soften for the ride home from a hot day at the track and the seven-speed gearbox upshifts with Hydra-Matic politeness. Sport is the happy compromise where the hydraulically assisted steering effort is dialed back from exercise-machine mode, the wheels wage peace with bumps, and a choice between manual or automatic shifting is provided.
The Aventador Roadster’s brilliant performance portfolio and endearing manners spot it in the thick of the 200-mph club that currently includes three Ferraris (458, FF, F12berlinetta) and McLaren’s MP4-12C. A 991-series Porsche 911 GT2 RS will likely join the throng in a year or so. What distinguishes the Roadster in this illustrious group is that it offers a turbulence-free alfresco mode without compromising its driving virtues. That, and the fact that it achieves its speed without resorting to turbocharging, is what makes this car a smart alternative to Bugatti’s Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport at roughly one-fourth the price.


Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Lamborghini Aventador Review


Being so wide (79.9 inches -- a Cadillac Escalade is 79.0 inches wide), the Aventador was difficult to place accurately. Worse, when you did manage to correctly put it where you wanted, the Lambo sometimes did something unexpected. At times, the big bull would happily pull through a corner. Other times, the blinky yellow traction-control light would flare up.
The hot-shoe's take: Huge power. It is very much a raging bull to drive. This car requires both hands and your full attention. It's actually very, very good under power accelerating off a corner. It can be a little dicey on the way in. Extremely powerful machine, a handful on the way into a corner, and very good under power with lots of traction. Not an easy car to go fast in. I definitely worked up a little bit of a sweat.






Saturday, August 4, 2012

Lamborghini

According to legend, the birth of Lamborghini has taken place after a fight between Enzo Ferrari and Ferruccio Lamborghini. The latter complained to the Drake's not lofty quality of the GT cars from Maranello. The debate between the two occurred in the early 60s Ferrari and Lamborghini dismissed, telling him to "think about the tractors that I take care of self."

See pride, Ferruccio Lamborghini decided to give his life to a car manufacturer. Thus, in 1963, left the development of the first Lamborghini vehicle. The seat of Cento (FE) - where the Lamborghini tractors were produced - working team composed by the designer Giampaolo Dallara Giotto Bizzarrini the engineer and designer Franco Scaglione.

350 GTV
The "trio" gave birth to the Lamborghini 350 GTV prototype supercar exhibited at the Turin Motor Show of that year and featuring the 3500 V12 engine which provided a top speed of 280 km / h. Also in '63, started the work of the plant in Sant'Agata Bolognese.

350 GT
At the Geneva Motor Show in 1964, was presented the Lamborghini 350 GT production version of the 350 GTV. The car was designed by Carrozzeria Touring and was moved by 3500 V12 engine with 270 horsepower pushing the car up to 250 km / h top speed. In addition, the Lamborghini supercar had the cockpit configured in the unusual pattern 2 +1. Debuted in the '65 Lamborghini 350 GTS Zagato and 3500, while at the Turin Show was presented the prototype P400 rear engine. This was the new unit 3900 V12 350 hp and 430 hp in standard version S.

The Miura
The prototype P400 prefigured the first vs Ferrari model of Lamborghini. The Miura, officially presented at the 1966 Geneva Motor Show. Besides being the symbol of Lamborghini, the Miura was the first model to bear the name of a herd of bulls. In fact, bull officially became the brand identity of Lamborghini, zodiacal sign as owner of Ferruccio. The car was designed by Marcello Gandini, at that time head of Centro Stile Bertone. The Miura was equipped with a 4000 V12 engine from 350 horsepower that can reach a top speed of 270 km / h.

400 GT
In '66 was also presented the Lamborghini 400 GT, a GT 2 +2 always moved from the 4000 V12 engine but with reduced power to 320 hp. In addition, two prototypes were presented as the 400 Monza and the Flying Star.

Two years later, based on the 400 GT was born his deputy, or the Lamborghini Islero, also driven by the 4000 V12 engine with 320 horsepower. In 1968 he was also presented the Miura Roadster, remained at the prototype stage.

In '69, however, the range was enlarged from 370 hp to the Miura S and the Espada. The latter adopted the 4000 V12 320 hp engine and was the standard version of the prototype Marzal, designed by Bertone and presented two years earlier.

Jarama
In 1970, at the Geneva Motor Show Lamborghini Jarama was introduced that replaced the Islero, with whom he shared the 4000 V12 engine with 320 hp. In '71 debuted the Miura SV, the latest evolution of 385 hp. Instead, at the Geneva Motor Show the same year he was presented the prototype LP500 engine mounted longitudinally rear.

In 1972 the range was expanded again with the Lamborghini Urraco, 4-seater sedan designed by Bertone, moved by the 2.5 V8 engine 220 hp. In '73 he left the scene the Lamborghini Miura, Countach superseded by version serial protoripo LP500.

In 1974, with the presentation of the prototype Bravo. In addition, other versions of the Lamborghini debuted Urraco: the P300 and P200 from 265 hp from 182 hp, it is intended solely for the Italian market.

The crisis
The Lamborghini crisis was caused by the development of a luxury SUV and alliance with BMW to design the M1. Shortly after the presentation of the prototype in 1980 Athon, Lamborghini went to meet with failure. The company revived the next year thanks to the French group that presented the Jalpa Mimran supercars like the new course.

Countach
Then came the Lamborghini Countach Quattrovalvole in 1985 and the following year, the LM-002 SUV. But in order to survive, Lamborghini needed a strong international partner. Thus, in 1987, the House of Sant'Agata Bolognese was taken over by Chrysler Corporation, headed by Lee Iacocca.

The first step was the creation of Chrysler Lamborghini Engineering Division, led by Mauro Forghieri, which was designed by Formula 1 V12 engine which was adopted a year later and stables used by Larousse, Lotus and Minardi.