Toronto Star

Mercedes-AMG Project One supercar specs are almost insane

- Jodi Lai AutoGuide.com

Without question, the Mercedes-AMG Project One was the most significan­t debut at this year’s Frankfurt Motor Show.

There’s a lot of informatio­n to digest about this feat of engineerin­g, so here are the five most important things you need to know about the Project One:

1. It’s hybrid Like most hypercars (Porsche 918, McLaren P1, and the LaFerrari, for example), the Mercedes-AMG Project One is a hybrid: it’s powered by one turbocharg­ed internal combustion gas engine and four electric motors. A powerful lithium-ion battery pack is also part of the package, and Mercedes says about 80 per cent of the braking energy can be recuperate­d to charge the battery.

Not that people will really care, but the Mercedes-AMG is capable of travelling 25 kilometres on a single charge. We imagine not too many Project One drivers are going to take advantage of this.

2. It has more than 1,000 horsepower The specs for this two-seat, all-wheeldrive hypercar car are borderline insane. Its F1-derived engine (Mercedes-AMG prefers to call it a power pack) is a midmounted, high-revving 1.6-litre turbocharg­ed V6 with an 11,000 red line that works with four electric motors to output more than1,000 horsepower via an eightspeed automated manual transmissi­on. Top speed is 350 km/h and Mercedes says the Project One can hit 200 km/h in less than six seconds. The electric motors on the front axle can spin at 50,000 r.p.m.

We think Mercedes is being a bit vague with the final numbers because the Aston Martin Valkyrie, the Project One’s biggest competitor, is still in developmen­t, and we’re sure the AMG team is keeping a close eye on its British rival’s specs and is ready to one-up it when the time comes.

3. Lewis Hamilton helped develop it Lewis Hamilton actually helped develop the F1hybrid powertrain the Project One is based on, but he didn’t work on the hypercar directly. The star Mercedes race car driver was on hand at the reveal and seemed genuinely excited about the Project One, which gives us high hopes about how crazy it would be to drive. Mercedes touts this as an F1car for the road — even the interior looks like an F1 car with its squarish steering wheel, fixed bucket seats, and adjustable pedals.

4. Its styling is purposeful­ly toned down Mercedes faced some initial backlash because some thought the hypercar’s design wasn’t hyper enough. Mercedes-AMG boss Tobias Moers said, “We deliberate­ly wanted a calm design with no spectacula­r details . . . we wanted to focus on the powertrain.” Although we think the Project One looks quite striking (although not really beautiful in the traditiona­l sense), if you cover up the Mercedes and AMG badges, it might be mistaken for any supercar from a certain era, so some people might have a point when they say it doesn’t look like a Mercedes. But, like Moers said, the most important part of this car is the powertrain and the presumably incredible driving dynamics.

5. It’s expensive and extremely limited Of course, production has been limited to 275 units and pricing has been set at about $2.7-million in the U.S. We wouldn’t be surprised if most of those Project Ones have already been spoken for, which is quite typical when a rare and exclusive car of this nature is revealed.

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