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

Monday, May 16, 2011

2011 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Bicolore

Since 2004, Sant'Agata Bolognese has built and bid a fond farewell to more than 10,000 Lamborghini Gallardos. It is the most successful model in brand history by a long shot. The chiseled sports car, with a menacing 5.2-liter V-10 stuffed mid-belly, always directed its 500-plus horsepower to all four wheels.
But in 2009, things changed when Lamborghini created a rear-wheel-drive LP550-2 Valentino Balboni to celebrate the decades-long career of its most vaunted test driver. Much to the chagrin of super-rich Lambo fans looking to get their hands on one, only 250 examples were created.
2011 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550 2 Bicolore Rear Three Quarter
 
This year, things have changed once again. Lamborghini has heeded its well-heeled clientele's wishes for an unlimited edition Balboni, creating a new two-wheel-drive bull capable of fulfilling inner drifter fantasies. It is called the Gallardo LP550-2 Bicolore.
"The Bicolore is more demanding," explained Lamborghini America chief operating officer Wolfgang Hoffmann at a pre-test-drive conference. "The four-wheel drive customer is different than the two-wheel-drive customer."
Indeed, the latter must be a little mad.
Gripping its Alcantara-wrapped wheel tightly on Turn 4 at New York's Monticello Motor Club, I quickly learn that in the 542-horse LP550-2, a rendezvous with a corner demands 24 Hours of Le Mans focus. Get it wrong, and you could send the Bicolore with its 398 pound-feet of torque off into the weeds, or worse, the car could be come a crumpled mess and you immobilized on a stretcher.
Preventing calls to the local medics is always a good thing, so engineers implemented a few upgrades to help you avoid such scenarios. A revised extended nose sucks the car closer to planet Earth and shoves cool air toward the 14-inch, eight-piston brakes. Slightly softer springs and dampers deliver a more civilized ride for daily duty. They also promote stickier grip during the Bicolore's lewd-sounding "Thrust Mode" launches.

2012 Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4

According to Lamborghini, the all-new 691-horsepower Aventador LP 700-4 supercar can blast from 0 to 62 mph in a scant 2.9 seconds. How much time is that? About how long it takes to query, "How long is that?" This, of course, means the burst to 60 will be an even brisker 2.7, or "How long is..." Still better is Lamborghini's projected quarter-mile time of 10.5 seconds, a full tick ahead of the last 638-horse Corvette ZR1 we tested. Wow is right.
Supercars from Sant'Agata have always been known for crazy speed, so in the interest of full disclosure, the Aventador's top clip is an especially ludicrous 217 mph. Also ludicrous: a sticker price starting at $393,695, or over thrice the price of said ZR1. That's a lot of moola, for sure, but given the Aventador's scintillating stats, it begins to look less rip-off Vette and more bargain Bugatti, a car that costs roughly $2 million yet is barely quicker. All that said, when waxing lyrical about his brand's latest achievement, Lamborghini president and CEO Stephan Winklemann isn't as enamored with the Aventador's dynamite acceleration, or stratospheric top speed, or single-family-home price tag as he is with the supercar's handling. Yes, unlike Lambo's previous poster material -- last year's Murcielago, and the Diablo and Countach before that -- the Aventador's number-one development objective was to turn right and left as skillfully as it jets straight ahead.
If you don't believe me, consider the following: Instead of holding the Aventador's press launch at a multi-mile airstrip or high-speed oval, both of which are conducive for accel and Vmax testing, Lamborghini chose the Autodromo di Vallelunga, a tidy, 10-turn track just outside of Rome. This is a venue where the steering wheel rarely resides on-center. Further, the Aventador utilizes numerous high-tech advancements designed for conquering extreme lateral -- more so than longitudinal -- forces: electronically controlled Haldex IV all-wheel drive, a dry-sump oil system, F1-style pushrod and rocker-arm-actuated coil-over shock suspension, and a 150-percent-stiffer 325-pound carbon-fiber monocoque structure that helps reduce the body-in-white to 506 pounds, about 30 percent lighter than the Murcielago's. Ferrari flagships have always been superior track stars, a fact the Aventador is out to change