Autocar

MCLAREN 540C PORSCHE 911GTS

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There will be no tortured analogies, no reference to pool towels, 1966 or penalty shootouts. These two are too special for that, their roles too important. After three rounds and 14 increasing­ly competitiv­e contests, just two countries remain: the two greatest producers of sports cars there are.

It seems somehow right that it should come down to these two, and yet what different approaches these nations have taken to get themselves to the final. For Germany, it’s always the mainstream route, through massive premium brands such as Audi, BMW, Mercedes-benz and now Porsche. For England, it’s the specialist­s that have led the way: Caterham, Lotus, Aston Martin and now Mclaren, minnows that could be swallowed whole by the paperclip budget of any of the German brands that have been put forward.

But however they got here, we believe the Mclaren 540C and Porsche 911 GTS are the best sports cars in the business, at least by the rules of this contest. If we’d waited a little longer, the new 911 GT3 may have made a stronger case still, and you could argue the Mclaren 570S should replace with 540C because technicall­y it just nips under the price barrier. But you’d scarcely believe how little real-world pace the 540C loses and we doubt a 570S has ever actually been bought for less than £150,000, so the 540C it is.

One more thing: the cars are competing by themselves, but for their countries. We’re here to identify the greatest sports car-producing nation of all, and these are mere representa­tives; the best of the best, for sure, but examples nonetheles­s.

For such an extraordin­ary device, the 540C is the invisible Mclaren. It was commission­ed at a time when the company was a lot less confident about its future and place in the world than it is now and was

designed to ensure the company had something that could sell directly against the 911 Turbo. But it costs nearly £20,000 less than the 570S to buy, despite costing Mclaren hardly anything less to build. Which is why there is no GT version of the 540, nor will there be a Spider. Given its time again but with the benefit of hindsight, doubtless Mclaren would not have built it at all.

Which is exactly why it is such a bargain. The biggest difference between it and the 570S is that its engine produces 30 fewer horses, but because the 570S’s additional power is largely at the top end, you’re not going to notice what you’re missing unless you’re able to drive the wheels off both one after the other. Of course, we have done exactly this and it’s interestin­g to see what a difference that 30bhp makes, because even among cars with outputs in the mid-500bhp bracket, it is substantia­l; but unless you’re going to go redlining everywhere, the 540C does just fine.

And against the 911 GTS, where its advantage is closer to 90bhp, it offers a different category of performanc­e. Don’t read too much into the 911’s 4.1sec 0-62mph time, because were you to equip it with a paddle-shift gearbox like the Mclaren’s, that time would fall swiftly to 3.7sec, closer than you might think to the 540C’s 3.5sec sprint. But in reality, the Mclaren really does feel much faster. It has more turbo lag, but when it kicks in a lower gear, it provides you with that uncomforta­bly hurtling feeling that is the hallmark of all exceptiona­lly fast cars. And quick though the 911 is, it can’t quite do this.

But nor does it need to. Truth is (and we tried this, too), that so long as sane drivers are at the wheels of both cars, the GTS will sit neatly on the tail of the 540C from dawn until dusk. Sure, around a track, we’d expect the Brit to drive away from the German in short order, but in the always restrictiv­e environmen­t of even quiet moorland roads, both cars have potential to spare. The fact that the Mclaren has rather more of it is really neither here nor there.

Nor can the Mclaren make any subjective claim to powertrain superiorit­y just because its engine has more cylinders. It is the Porsche engine that sounds better at all speeds and it is Porsche that provides a choice of two or three pedals in the footwell. And with a manual gearbox as good as that now used by Porsche, that is a sizeable point in its favour. Yes, the Mclaren shifts gears pretty instantly in both directions and there is certainly pleasure to be had from the uninterrup­ted progress that results, but physically to use a lever to select the next ratio is always going to be a more involving process. And few levers find their way around the gate more sweetly than that of this Porsche. For a sports car, a pure driving machine, this stuff really counts.

But so does the way a sports car feels in your hands. And, of course, the 911 is exceptiona­l in this regard, especially in this lightest spec a GTS can be. Its steering is pin-sharp, its damping superlativ­e. If you want to feel confident while driving a

Against the 911 GTS, the 540C offers a different category of performanc­e

rapid car quickly, there’s no better place to shop.

On the other hand, if you want to feel like a superhero, you’re going to need the Mclaren. Its handling is better than exceptiona­l: it is incredible. Porsche abandoned hydraulic power steering years ago but Mclaren proudly states it’ll be the last manufactur­er on earth to embrace electric assistance. Drive the 540C on an undulating road and you’ll see why. The feel the helm provides, that sense of contact with the road it imparts, is such that when you jump back in the 911, it’s like you’ve donned a pair of thick gloves. It still does exactly what you want and when you want it to, but that level of communicat­ion is missing. You get more through the Mclaren’s carbonfibr­e shell, too, its ultra-stiff constructi­on providing the perfect platform for its exquisitel­y tuned suspension to work upon.

There’s also another thing, important even in the realm of the sports car. The Mclaren feels special in a way the Porsche does not. Look at its stance, its styling, its partly exposed carbon shell, its low-slung driving position, its elegant yet futuristic interior design: all speak of an exclusivit­y, a quality of experience and a likelihood of retained memories the 911 cannot touch. Yes, we think this second-generation 991-series is one of the prettiest in 911 history, but it’ll take more than that, centre-lock wheels, a bit of Alcantara and a few GTS badges to bridge the gap – no, gulf – between it and the Mclaren in this respect.

Yet other gulfs exist, too. Sports cars must also be usable, and while we applaud Mclaren for giving the 540C a big boot, such exceptiona­l visibility and (rubbish sat-nav aside) a pretty impressive ergonomic environmen­t, it does not have 911-grade visibility, nor its ground clearance. It’s a little harder to enter and much, much harder to exit. You can’t thread it through gaps like you can the Porsche and, of course, it has no rear seats. By the standard of mid-engined exotics, the Mclaren Sports Series (540/570) is probably the most practical and usable of them all, but a 911 it is not.

Which is why, were this a convention­al twin test, we’d factor in the price differenti­al and award victory, by the smallest margin, to the Porsche. Recently, we named the GTS our favourite car on sale and nothing we’ve seen here changes that.

But, as we know, these two cars are mere envoys, ambassador­s for their countries. So which makes the best case for theirs to win the sports car world cup? Both are emblematic of the cars they do best. The Porsche is a version of a big-selling product and part of a model range that shifts nearly a quarter of a million cars a year. The likes of Audi, BMW and Mercedes-benz are, of course, many times bigger still.

Conversely, Mclaren is the ultimate expression of a culture of, and an appetite for, the purest of sports cars that is richer and longer lasting than any other in the world. But we don’t need to look back to old Triumphs, MGS and Austinheal­eys here, because in addition to those that have already taken part in others, from Ariel past Morgan to Radical, those traditions live on today, faster, more pure, exciting and true to the sports car ideal than ever.

Which is why we’re giving the sports car world cup to England. The 540C may be only very nearly the best sports car in the world, but as an example of the kind of car that England does best and illustrati­ve as it is of this island’s unrivalled record in this field, there is none better to come forward, step onto the stage and collect the award.

If you want to feel like a superhero, you’re going to need the Mclaren

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 ??  ?? Roads like this have helped shape how the UK creates sports cars Both have iron brakes as standard and both are so good it makes you ponder whether it’s worth paying for carboncera­mics.
Roads like this have helped shape how the UK creates sports cars Both have iron brakes as standard and both are so good it makes you ponder whether it’s worth paying for carboncera­mics.
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 ??  ?? The most complete all-purpose sports car you can buy.
The most complete all-purpose sports car you can buy.
 ??  ?? Rubbish sat-nav aside, the 540C has good ergonomics
Rubbish sat-nav aside, the 540C has good ergonomics
 ??  ?? Excellent visibility is part of the 911’s fine driving environmen­t
Excellent visibility is part of the 911’s fine driving environmen­t

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