Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Mega McLaren T

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HE 600LT – the LT stands for ‘Longtail’ – is the lightest, most powerful and quickest McLaren Sport Series car in the company’s history. But, before getting into it, a quick history lesson for those not fully up-todate on McLaren’s racing successes.

The dramatic ‘Longtail’ iteration of the ground-breaking McLaren F1 GTR made its debut during the 1997 season, its distinctiv­e stretched silhouette earning it the now-iconic name.

As well as the elongated bodywork that reduced drag and increased downforce, there were developmen­ts beneath the stretched skin, including fully adjustable suspension and a sequential transmissi­on.

The ‘Longtail’ was more than 100kg lighter than the already flyweight Le Mans-winning F1 GTR and became one of the most illustriou­s GT race cars of all time, taking victory in five of the 11 rounds of the 1997 FIA GT Championsh­ip, and finishing first and second in the GT1 class at Le Mans. Its nearest competitor was almost 30 laps behind.

McLaren revived the ‘Longtail’ name for the road in 2015 with the launch of the 675LT Coupe. Priced at £255,000, 500 were made.

They are now worth 20-25 per cent more than that. A 675LT Spider was also produced due to customer demand. All 500 were sold within two weeks.

Back in the present day, the 600LT opens the fourth chapter in the McLaren ‘Longtail’ story. It is the most trackfocus­ed – yet road legal – McLaren Sports Series model yet.

It certainly looks the part. The new addition to the LT family has all the physical hallmarks of a true ‘Longtail’ including an extended front splitter, lengthened rear diffuser, fixed rear wing and stretched silhouette – by 74mm compared to the McLaren 570S Coupe.

Together with a flat carbon fibre floor, the unique bodywork boosts aerodynami­c performanc­e to produce 100kg of downforce at 155mph – thus generating the significan­tly increased grip and greater high-speed stability that makes the 600LT an excellent track car.

And, at the Hungarorin­g F1 track just outside of Budapest, it showed just how good it was.

Yes, it’s quick – very quick. With the engine management system of McLaren’s trusty 3.8-litre twin-turbocharg­ed V8 recalibrat­ed, the 600LT can call on 592bhp at 7,500rpm and maximum torque of 620Nm. This delivers astonishin­g performanc­e – 0-62mph takes just 2.9 seconds while 0-124mph is achieved in a remarkable 8.2 seconds. Top speed is over 200mph.

Power from the mid-mounted engine is delivered to the rear wheels using a dual-clutch seamless-shift seven-speed gearbox.

Fully automatic mode is the default set-up during normal road driving though there are paddles mounted behind the steering wheel.

As with all new McLaren’s the character of the V8 and the dual-clutch gearbox can be tailored using the Active Dynamic Panel, with a choice of Normal, Sport and Track powertrain modes.

The independen­t, continuous­ly variable adaptive dampers and front and rear anti-roll bars featured on all McLaren Sports Series models have been kept but have undergone major re-engineerin­g to work in concert with the new suspension to deliver the most track-focused performanc­e possible.

The adoption of the braking system from the Super Series 720S, which features lightweigh­t aluminium calipers and stiffer carbon ceramic discs, also reduced weight by 4kg as well as producing phenomenal stopping power.

Much thought has gone into the 600LT and it comes together perfectly. I’m no racing driver but lapping a track in the 600LT certainly makes you feel like one. Yes, accelerati­on is brutal and the power is just immense – as you change gear, the car literally punches you in the back as if to say, push harder.

This is matched by the loud, angry yet thrilling soundtrack from the two top-exit exhausts over your shoulder – which spit blue flame at night – and the evocative aural ‘crack’ on upshifts and downshifts.

The Sports Series flagship is outstandin­gly stable when cornering, and even if you throw it over the kerbs it remains composed and easy to handle.

It’s ability to hold the road while cornering at speed is just phenomenal and breeds confidence. I can honestly say I’ve never driven a car that fast anywhere. Yet, at no time did I feel I was anywhere near losing control even if I was driving to my – if not the McLaren’s – limit. It’s a grin-inducing marvel of engineerin­g and technology. If McLaren keeps producing cars like this, we’ll have to invent new

superlativ­es.

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