Business Day - Motor News

McLaren GT is serene speed

-

AMcLaren that wafts? Surely you jest? The GT is the most comfortabl­e McLaren yet and it does waft, relatively speaking. The car takes the carbon fibre body and mid-engine concept but packages it into a more comfortabl­e car that swallows a lot of luggage and covers great distances with a plush ride.

Above the mid-mounted engine is a 420l luggage compartmen­t that can take a pair of golf bags (and apparently a bicycle with its front wheel removed), and there’s also a 150l compartmen­t in the nose. Inside, the seats are more padded and the cabin bedecked in more luxurious materials than is the race-bred McLaren norm.

The GT is designed to cross continents in serene comfort, says Thomas Taylor, global product manager at McLaren Automotive.

“It has the comfort and refinement of a GT with the McLaren DNA of lightweigh­t build and driver engagement.”

After spending a few hundred kilometres driving through the south of France at the world launch, I found it to be a civilised McLaren without being a sanitised one. There is plenty of sporting adventure available from its 4.0l V8 turbo engine and from an active suspension system that turns the car from plush tourer to corner carver at a button press.

Yielding suspension and a traffic-friendly drivetrain allow the car to be ushered through busy urban grind without feeling like it’s always chomping at the bit for more action. In its mildest drivetrain and suspension modes, the GT eases through the stop-start urban grid with an easygoing nature and a throttle that doesn’t feel snatchy.

There’s enough ground clearance to tackle the vagaries of everyday commuting. The car has the same entry/departure angles as a Mercedes C-Class and can be confidentl­y guided over speedhumps and steeply angled driveways without scraping the undersides.

This isn’t to suggest the McLaren is watered-down or boring. Swapping the busy bustle of the French Riviera coastline for the twisty hills, the GT displayed no shortage of cornercarv­ing hustle.

McLaren didn’t include a track as part of its launch drive for a change, because that’s not the GT’s primary raison d’etre. But in those mountain passes it delivered the typically nimble handling of a mid-engined car, in the way the car seems to rotate around you in turns.

The steering doesn’t feel as sharp as McLaren’s sportier models a characteri­stic that is caused by the softer suspension as the steering ratio is actually the same at that of the more athletic 720S.

It’s not as edgy or as powerful as a 720S but neither does it have as firm and unrelentin­g a ride. The proactive damping control that debuts on the McLaren GT is a more advanced active suspension system and plays a major role in making this a superb tourer and accomplish­ed handler.

The traction from the Pirelli P Zeroes is excellent, and in its sport and race modes the car sharpened up into a very fine cornering tool. I like the way the stability control finesses the power delivery when the throttle is booted early out of a corner, rather than rudely cutting the torque.

The McLaren GT stays fairly well muted so as not to drone annoyingly on long trips, but an exhaust flap opens in the sports and track modes to give the car very

 ??  ?? The McLaren GT is designed to cross continents in serene comfort.
The McLaren GT is designed to cross continents in serene comfort.
 ??  ?? Active suspension turns the car from plush tourer to corner carver at the press of a button.
Active suspension turns the car from plush tourer to corner carver at the press of a button.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa