Mercury (Hobart) - Motoring

BULL RING BLASTER

Lambo unleashes world’s fastest road car

- JOHN CAREY

I n the centre of Lamborghin­i’s shield-shaped badge is a charging bull. It looks enraged, but it’s nowhere near as angry as the latest car from the Italian brand. The new Aventador SVJ is absolutely furious. And fast... Powered by the most powerful V12 engine ever bolted into a road-legal Lamborghin­i, the Aventador SVJ is the current Nurburgrin­g production car lap record holder. Back in July it lapped the legendary German circuit in a fraction under 6 minutes 45 seconds, more than two seconds faster than the then-reigning champ, Porsche’s 911 GT2 RS.

In Lambo lingo “SVJ” means track-worthy. The letters stand for Super Veloce, Italian for super fast, plus Jota, Spanish for ‘J’, and a reference to the section of the internatio­nal motor racing rule book defining race car categories. Simpler to think of it as the maddest version of the baddest car Lamborghin­i makes. It’s also likely to be the full stop at the end of the Aventador story.

The two-seater with a carbon-fibre chassis and racer-style pushrod suspension first appeared back in 2011. Since then, Lamborghin­i has regularly released versions with more power, improved handling and altered looks. The Aventador SVJ has all of these.

Lamborghin­i has sold more than 8000 Aventadors so far, but will build only 900 examples of the SVJ. The company will decide how many will go to each market around the world in late September or early October, so it’s not yet known how many will make it here.

What is certain is that Australian buyers will pay about $1 million to put an Aventador SVJ in their garage. The list price is $949,640, not including on-road costs.

This buys more than just a car. The Aventador has always been the ultimate accessory for someone who believes not nearly enough people are staring at them.

With the SVJ, Lamborghin­i’s design department has made the Aventador even harder to ignore. The car’s wedge-shaped body and scissor doors have always delivered visual drama. The SVJ adds a new rear wing and a pair of massive, knee-height exhaust pipes. They’re not just for show...

The pipes are a hint Lamborghin­i’s engineers have given the Aventador’s high-revving V12 a big upgrade. The cylinder heads of the nonturbo 6.5-litre engine have been redesigned and the exhaust system made more compact. Delivering 566kW at 8500rpm, the SVJ is 10 per cent more powerful than the original Aventador.

The wing features Lamborghin­i’s patented ALA (Aerodinami­ca Lamborghin­i Attiva) system, which presses down on the slip-prone rear tyre on the inside of the curve, but not on the outside tyre. Lamborghin­i engineerin­g chief Maurizio Reggiani calculates ALA applies an extra 20kg or so.

According to Reggiani, computer simulation­s show this tech cuts tenths of a second from the Aventador’s Nurburgrin­g lap time. Without it, in other words, the car wouldn’t have been able to break through the 6 minute 45 second barrier.

Lamborghin­i presented the Aventador SVJ to media at the Autodromo do Estoril near Lisbon in Portugal. Wise choice. A racetrack is the place to find out what it can do.

Choosing Corsa mode prepares the engine, its seven-speed automated gearbox, all-wheeldrive system and chassis for circuit action, making everything more responsive. There are also Strada, Sport and pick’n’mix Ego modes.

The SVJ’s standard carbon-ceramic brakes are fierce enough to almost leave seatbelt bruises on your chest. The steering is super- precise and provides a great sense of connection with the track.

Cornering presses you hard into the deepdished, racer car-style seat. But bends also demand a delicate touch on the accelerato­r pedal to keep the car neatly balanced. Too much power too early and the Lamborghin­i’s sticky rubber will begin to slip.

The best part of each lap begins with the right-hander onto Estoril’s long straight. It’s taken in third, with the V12 wailing at 7000rpm. Once the steering wheel is straight it’s time to press the pedal all the way to the carbon fibre. The sound rises to a scream as the revs soar. It’s time to tap the right-hand paddle shifter.

Bam! The gearbox slams into fourth and the driver feels a violent slap in the back. Soon, with the grandstand blurring by at over 200km/h, it’s time for another whack as fifth gear is engaged.

It’s as subtle as a bull ride, which is just the way Lamborghin­i buyers like it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia