BBC Top Gear Magazine

McLaren Senna

In a world-exclusive road drive, we take the Senna from Estoril to Monaco, two places pivotal to its namesake’s success

- WORDS: OLLIE MARRIAGE PHOTOGRAPH­Y: ROWAN HORNCASTLE

A roadtrip in the tyre tracks of Ayrton, from Estoril, his first-ever win, to Monaco where he dominated

Estoril, 27 June 2018. The rain has cleared away, but the place still looks a little forlorn. F1 doesn’t come here anymore, but the name has returned.

A car called Senna. The world’s fastest road-legal track car. That’s the billing. 800PS (789bhp), 800 kilos of downforce. It’s ready, dropped into Race mode, engine idling fretfully, pointed arrow-straight down the pitlane, sizing up the downhill approach into Turn 1, ready to head out and show what it’s capable of.

But this is a diferent story. One that ends not back in this pitlane after a handful of hot, furious laps, but some 1,500 miles away in another place that Ayrton Senna made his own. So, having clicked into frst and crept away, I turn a sharp right through the rusting barriers and out through Estoril’s gates.

You have to be very careful if you choose to name a car after the world’s most revered racing driver. That car had better live up to the man, respect his memory, refect his glory, be a ftting legacy. Ayrton Senna da Silva. Think not only of what he achieved, the 41 Grand Prix victories and three world championsh­ips, but what he was: perhaps the purest, most focused racing driver there has ever been.

Uncompromi­sing. There’s a word that fts both man and car. “You commit yourself to such a level where there is no compromise. You give everything you have, everything, absolutely everything,” Ayrton once said. McLaren’s compromise is more nuanced, couched in terms of regulation and legislatio­n: “Legalised for road use, but not sanitised to suit it,” says the literature. Butt ugly, insists almost everyone that sees it.

The basics are familiar from the 720S: carbon chassis tub, 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8, 7spd twin-clutch gearbox, interconne­cted hydraulic dampers. But then the enhancemen­ts: the loss of weight, the addition of downforce, the rise in power, the change of focus. The biggest achievemen­t of all is that it’s road-legal, meets all the requiremen­ts for pedestrian impact, for curve radius (sharp edges aren’t permitted), that a child’s head can’t ft between the slats on the rear deck. That’s an actual rule.

How it could get there in the frst place isn’t mentioned. But then we stop for breakfast ( bocadillo jamón ibérico would be a recurring theme across the Iberian Peninsular leg of our trip), and I see how people are drawn to it. And I fnd myself gesturing at the Inconel and titanium exhaust, not because of the exotic materials, or the fact it looks like a Star Wars character, but because it’s chufng hot. I warn them about the protruding front splitter, the way the doors spring up and out, not to press too hard on the delicate carbon panels that deliberate­ly deform in the airfow.

They treat it diferently to other supercars because it plays with their heads. They have the same reaction I did – why does it look like it does? And when the only person who can answer their question is an Englishman who blows on his fngers and points at the tailpipes because he doesn’t know the Spanish for hot, their only recourse is to poke and prod it themselves.

We’d left Estoril way before dawn, wanting to get a few hours in the can before breakfast. It was worth it, not just to avoid the recklessne­ss of rush-hour Lisbon or adapt to the car (the Senna surges against the clutch when manoeuvrin­g and the brakes need a fair amount of pressure before they start working), but for the dawn sky, a hot pink ripple through the cloud base. And that was Portugal done: 150 miles knocked out before pink had morphed into orange. One country down, three to go. Well, assuming we count Monaco as a separate country. It has its own Grand

Prix, which is reason enough for me.

Are the miles slipping by easily? No, not really. OK, you’re not out there battling the elements with your face, but there’s a wearing raucousnes­s to the experience. The engine is ever-present and makes a decidedly un-pretty noise – a fat, rowdy blare that echoes around the bare, uninsulate­d cabin. Vibrations are transmitte­d through the seat, so that after an hour in the super-light carbon shell you fnd yourself needing a comfort break…

But that’s fne, because the car will need fuel about then, too. Downforce might work for you on circuit, but not on road. That rear wing, for all its wind-sculpting abilities, swan-neck links, near-90º tilting range, wing-profle stanchions and so on, is nothing but a barn door where drag is concerned. And drag is a concern when it means fuel-light chicken begins before 180 miles have passed (cruising economy will later work out at 20.6mpg when a 720S will happily do 27mpg).

There’s also considerab­le road noise from the tyres, a smack of impact over each and every expansion joint, the hiss of angry air whipping over the bodywork, and in your peripheral vision white lines fash past the lower windows, the dots and dashes a Morse code message: t-a-k-e-m-e-t-o-a-t-r-a-c-k. And I know what you’re thinking – this is irrelevant, it’s a track car, so suck it up, buttercup.

But what will owners do with their cars? Because I could, I asked Bruno Senna. “The main objective was to do that [track work], but mine is the visual carbonfbre one, so I might track it once, but then not so much because all it takes is someone going into the gravel trap and then you have chips everywhere.” So that’s Ayrton’s nephew, another born racer, saying he’s not doing too much track stuf because of the threat of cosmetic damage. But at least he’ll drive his. Many, I suspect, won’t.

And that’s a colossal shame. Because what’s becoming rapidly apparent is that, if you man up, this is an awesome roadtrip car.

The greater the challenge, the richer the experience – that’s my philosophy (although it can also be contained in a single word: masochist). Driving from Estoril to Monaco in a GT would be no adventure, but in the Senna, you earn the miles. Dots have been joined between Cáceres, Salamanca, Valladolid, Burgos and Pamplona, and things have happened, mostly notably a wallet-lightening, hour-long Guardia Civil delay, backache and the discovery that western Spain has not only ski resorts but grassy plains that could double for the Serengeti. I try to fnd Toto on Spotify.

And then we’re into the Pyrenees. So far, the Senna has been a borderline brutal companion. But this is where it counts, where we learn if McLaren has created a car that actually serves a purpose besides fufng the racing egos of the wealthy. I’ve never been much of a one for round-and-round racing (don’t have the discipline), so maybe that’s why I fnd the NA-214 and NA-137 so much more enthrallin­g than a circuit.

This is total involvemen­t: scenery, road, environmen­t, trafc, never a moment you can switch of. Or want to. Because very soon I realise that what I’m driving is a spectacula­r road car. It’s begun already, of course. The driving position, the organisati­on and orientatio­n of the controls, >>

the feel of the naked Alcantara steering wheel in your hands. The cabin, stripped to little more than the bare essentials, hits exactly the right note: serious, solid, dramatic, focused, yet it also has aircon, USB slots and decent centre console storage. There is no boot. The seats are the wider Touring items. I’ve stufred a feece down either side to pad it out and stop me sloshing freshily about.

And now a sense of the car getting into its stride, its reach extending with every metre of altitude gained. Your rubbery nerve-endings and toneless muscles are the only bit of slack in the whole system. That a car named the Senna is better at driving than you are we can take for granted, but that it’s so able to deliver massive thrills when being driven at a fraction of its potential is perhaps McLaren’s greatest achievemen­t (OK, that and the road legality).

The suspension is genius. Convention­al springs are there only to assist, their work largely replaced by hydraulica­lly interlinke­d dampers that actively resist roll, pitch and dive by pumping fuid around instantane­ously, and which are able to react in just two millisecon­ds. It’s ludicrousl­y complex, of course, but it works, helping separate lateral forces from vertical impacts. On the smooth Spanish side of the mountains it doesn’t have so much to do, but the moment you cross onto gnarled French tarmac, you realise how uncanny it is.

I’m not fully sold on the engine. It’s certainly not short of thrust

– the delivery is uncomforta­bly, thrillingl­y rampant at the top end – but there’s still lag low down that never completely disappears. It’s a massively efective industrial component, rather than something living and beguiling. The turbo hiss is the best sound it makes.

The steering – calm, reassuring, confdence-inspiring, tactile, brimming with feedback – is sensationa­l, not only because you know exactly how much grip you have and what the front end is doing, but because it reliably delivers that informatio­n, no matter how fast or slow you’re going. You always know precisely where you are on the sliding scale of grip. And since the front tyres are only 245-section, it is possible to discover that the Senna will eventually nudge into understeer.

On track, it’s the brakes that dominate; out here, it’s the steering – everything fows from that. Trust in the steering brings confdence to exploit the power, to play with the balance through corners, to engage with a ridiculous­ly sharp-reacting yet approachab­le chassis. And backing it all up is the knowledge that you can always, always brake harder, stop faster than you currently are. This is especially useful when you steam around a corner and fnd a cow in your way. Or a sheep. Or a foal. Or a goat. Or the mess they leave behind, which soon cakes the Senna’s fanks and starts to smell… Yep, the Col de la Pierre Saint-Martin is far more heavily trafficked by pastoral wildlife than humans.

It’s bloody awesome, actually. The Spanish side is rich in variety from the moment you leave the autopista: fast sweepers, long straights, hairpins, a section where the Carretera del Roncal loops back over itself among trees that cling to the skin of rocks. The French side – tight, dark and weaving – is more oppressive and challengin­g. It’s the Senna’s manners on that side that impress me more as we descend the mountains at night. Its movements are so efcient and contained, but it’s less severe, less punishing, less winceinduc­ing than I expected. I fnd myself driving with all knobs turned to Track.

I’m tempted to give lowered Race mode a go – which creature will report me for driving in a mode that’s not road legal? – but the reduced ride height makes me nervous for the carbon splitter, and it’s not like I need even more rigid control. Ground clearance, I discover, when clattering over an unseen cobbled speedbump in the frst village we arrive into, is carbon-savingly better than you might imagine. The downside is that in daily driving it doesn’t have the stance it deserves.

Day one fnishes with 775 miles done and an 11pm McDonald’s run to check the drive-through ability of the window slots. Tip: don’t go for a Big Mac Maxi.

Another mountain session the next morning only serves to confrm how stellar the Senna is. I get so carried away we have to dispatch the support car for an emergency jerry can, before descending to Pau, topping up the tanks and heading out onto Friday afternoon autoroutes. This is the kind of journey I’d like to hope that Ayrton would have done, just taken himself of to do something for the hell of it. It was something Bruno said that had confrmed his more playful side: “Whenever he came home, we used to mess around on the farm. We’d go racing for hours, all day – it was such a good time. We drove the go-kart until the tyres failed. You could see the canvas, but you’d continue.”

The 500 miles to Monaco pass pleasantly enough. A rich orange sunset illuminate­s the A8, and I get some tunes going through the two-speaker lightweigh­t Bowers & Wilkins system. It’s not going to win any prizes, but listening to music, even if it’s tinny, is a tonic. People wave, the light fades, trafc thins, calmness descends.

And then we arrive in Monaco. And are instantly the biggest story in town. The Senna brings Casino Square to a standstill. A throbbing mob descends, phones wave, Instagram explodes. One bloke, fully grown, trembling from head to toe, grabs my arm and says: “I literally can’t believe what I’m seeing – this is the greatest thing ever! Thank you, thank you.” It’s clearly not, is it, mate – it’s just another hypercar. But then I realise it’s not.

Not one person mentioned Ayrton. But they all know that only one person can ever be the frst to bring a new hypercar into Monaco. Tonight it was me, in a McLaren Senna. And to them, that matters. When we drop ‘our’ Senna of at McLaren’s Monaco showroom, I’m doorsteppe­d by a loafer wearer, “I’ve got one coming,” he says, apropos of not much while shaking his heavy watch, “F**king ugly.” “What are you going to do with it, then?” I ask him. “Sell it,” he says with a shrug.

This place is wrong. I’m ashamed that these people who claim to love supercars know so

little about them, that their appreciati­on is so shallow. And especially here, where the links to Ayrton are so strong. Six times he won here. Six.

But there’s another side to Monaco.

I push through the madness of Casino Square, down to Mirabeau, around Loews hairpin, the right at Portier and into the tunnel. They come through here at 170mph even though it’s narrow and that kink is quite pronounced. I fnd a quiet spot in the harbour to get out, look back and take stock. Ayrton mastered this place by driving with ruthless precision. “My uncle was a man of extremes,” Bruno said. “As a racer he was extremely hard, really aggressive, but his human side was very soft, superfrien­dly.” Senna the car doesn’t have quite the same scope, but that’s not the point. It works on road as thrillingl­y as it works on track, is as focused and determined as the man whose name it bears. A ftting tribute to the legend that is Ayrton Senna.

“It works on road as thrillingl­y as on track, is as determined as the man whose name it bears”

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 ??  ?? McLAREN SENNA Price: £750,000 Engine: 3999cc, V8 twin-turbo, RWD, 789bhp, 590lb ft Transmissi­on: 7spd dual-clutch, RWD Performanc­e: 0–62mph in 2.7secs, 211mph Weight: 1198kg (dry)
McLAREN SENNA Price: £750,000 Engine: 3999cc, V8 twin-turbo, RWD, 789bhp, 590lb ft Transmissi­on: 7spd dual-clutch, RWD Performanc­e: 0–62mph in 2.7secs, 211mph Weight: 1198kg (dry)
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