It's pitch black, we’re in the
top lane of the six-mile bowl at Italy’s Nardo proving ground,
and we’re about to hit 200mph. Our eye is trained on the
speedometer, but also on the
car in front. Such is the heat
from its three exhausts, there’s
a solid, foot-wide ball of blue flame hovering behind the car!
Auto Express has joined Lamborghini for a top-secret test of the supercar that replaces the Murciélago. We’re driving the
second of three LP837 prototypes, and we’re deep into the top ratio on the new seven-speed gearbox.
Driving at high speed at Nardo isn’t as easy at it used to be, though – time hasn’t been kind to the surface, and even Lambo’s regular testers admit it’s pretty dangerous with a ‘technical’ speed limit of 150mph. The nose of the Lamborghini is thrown up and down violently over concrete pimples, and as the speed increases, the hits become so hard that the front suspension is clanging into the bump stops.
Yet if things are working hard below decks, the all-new engine and gearbox are coping easily; cruising on part throttle with plenty of punch left and going
a long way to justifying the
claims of technical director, Maurizio Reggiani that it’s
a 220mph-plus machine.
We’re out here well past
midnight because it’s the only time the big V12 Lambo can
run without its camouflage – the airflow at 200mph would rip it off.
Impressive as the 700bhp
6.5-litre V12 engine is, the
gearbox is every bit its
match. Lighter than the unit it replaces and now with seven speeds, it eschews double-clutch technology by running a twin-plate clutch and rips through gears faster than you can believe possible, each ratio banging home with a rich, metallic
thump. It’s also smooth at
low speed, which is perhaps
even more impressive.
We’re encouraged by the
engineers to give the prototypes a hard time. And the LP837s
feel immensely strong from
the second you climb aboard. The ride is brilliant, especially given that there is no electrically adjustable suspension and
that the single-rate, pushrod
system has been taken directly from racing. It’s also quiet
when you want it to be – maybe
a little too quiet – but it’s
absolutely brutal and manic when you go full throttle in
either the Sport or Corsa modes.
Finished models will rev to
an incredible 8,250rpm, and as for the sound? Well, a lot of the warbles and inconsistencies in the Murciélago’s engine are gone, replaced by a brutally
hard bellow that turns into
a full-blooded scream.
No other supercar is as easy
to drive fast. On Nardo’s tricky 4.5-mile handling circuit, the LP837 inspires confidence. The front end is communicative,
with its race-bred suspension attached directly to a carbon
fibre chassis. The back end
never feels like it will let
go in high-speed corners.
Instead, it’s composed, smooth and feels very adjustable. The rear end will step out only with everything switched off
and with extreme provocation from the driver. The new four-wheel-drive system instantly
distributes torque around the
car and eliminates understeer, letting all four Pirellis do their best to grip and go.
No other supercar feels as
integrated – and this is only a
prototype! It’s so easy to drive, quickly or slowly, that it basically eradicates the physical threat you felt every time you stepped into a Murciélago. Despite that, driving one is no less of an event.
Thanks to the carbon chassis, finished models will weigh around 1,450-1,500kg, but the newcomer feels lighter than that, probably because the chassis is so stiff that it does everything
you ask of it with near-intuitive directness. Inside, the prototypes were unfinished, but promise a high, wide central tunnel, a
much straighter driving position and a lot of the designs hinted
at with the Reventón project.