Bangkok Post

RAGING AVENTADOR

Lamborghin­i’s super sports car receives four-wheel steering and a 40hp power hike. Do they finally enable it to realise its full potential?

- By Dan Trent

If this new Lamborghin­i Aventador S has a job to do — over and above the usual one of providing the most attention-seeking and dramatic way of getting from A to B— it is to prove to the world that Sant’Agata’s “super sports car” can be as much about substance as it is about style.

The original Aventador LP700- 4 remains a spectacula­r-looking supercar, underpinne­d with a genuinely impressive pushrod-suspended, carbon fibre chassis and a thumping 700hp naturally aspirated 6.5-litre V12. No mistake, the Aventador is the “proper” Lamborghin­i for those who consider the Huracan merely an Audi R8 in Italian designer clothes.

But for all the rebellious, hairy-chested tradition drawn from the Miura, Countach, Diablo and Murcielago, the Aventador has been accused of being somewhat dumbed down in the driving stakes. Sure, it was fast, noisy and bold. But it was also heavy, blunt and with a handling balance tipped more towards “safety” understeer than whiteknuck­le thrills. The limited- production SV versi on launched in 2015 proved that with a few dynamic tweaks and a little extra power there was potential in the Aventador to ruffle a few feathers in the supercar establishm­ent, exactly as the brand has since its founding in 1963. By stripping out 50kg, increasing the power to 740hp, adding the controvers­ial variable- ratio Dynamic Steering and improving the car’s aero, Lamborghin­i was able to get within a whisker of the Porsche 918 Spyder’s lap time around the Nurburgrin­g. Not bad for a car relying on good oldfashion­ed V12 grunt over hybrid gimmickry and with a list price about a third of that of Porsche’s technologi­cal tour de force.

For the Aventador S, Lamborghin­i has carried over some of what it learned from the SV — dynamic steering included — while making the aforementi­oned power increase and aero upgrades. It has also added that latest supercar must- have, four-wheel steering, and thoroughly reworked the suspension and control systems. It’s done all this without adding to the weight, which remains at 1,575kg by Lamborghin­i’s preferred “dry” figure. To put that into context, a Huracan is 1,422kg by the same measure.

The Aventador S still feels hefty, but has more aerodynami­c grip and increased agility from the four- wheel steering, so Lamborghin­i clearly hopes to address the criticisms about the Aventador’s lack of dynamic sparkle. Just in case you thought it was in danger of taking life a bit too seriously, there’s a new configurab­le driving mode over and above the familiar Strada, Sport and Corsa settings. It’s called Ego. Further evidence that the S upgrades are more about handling than bottom-line stats comes when you browse the spec sheet. The 350kph top speed remains as before and the 0- 100kph time is also identical to the LP700-4’s at 2.9 seconds. It will push past that to 200kph in 8.9 seconds from rest, while 0- 300kph takes just 24.2 seconds. Be under no illusion: the Aventador S is a ferociousl­y fast car and underlines just how outrageous that V12 remains, even in this age of hybrid assistance. Forget any electrical­ly assisted pretence of saving the planet while travelling at 300kph, though ; updated or not, the V12 still chucks out a suitably unapologet­ic 394g/ km of CO2 while achieving an average of just 5.9kpl. Prodig ious st ra ight- li ne speed and profligate fuel consumptio­n are a given in a V12 Lamborghin­i, of course. What the four- wheel steering and other changes do is attempt to make it as keen to go around corners as it is to make lots of noise about going fast and burning lots of fuel. As in other applicatio­ns, the four- wheel steering turns the rear wheels in the opposite direction from the fronts for greater agility in low- speed corners. At higher speeds, it turns them the same way as the fronts to give greater stability. Meanwhile, the variable steering can go from 2.1 turns lock to lock to 2.4, offering scope for front- end bite as well as relaxed

cruising and good manners around town. For those who dare to go on track, 130% more downforce at 240kph from a new front bumper and splitter further emphasises Lamborghin­i’s efforts to improve the front-end grip, suggesting it’s listened to the earlier criticisms. Does it all work, though? Lamborghin­i’s desire to show that it does was somewhat scuppered by freak weather on the Valencia- based launch event — not that you’d know it from the photos accompanyi­ng this article. Four- wheel drive or not, a waterlogge­d track in the midst of the Spanish region’s biggest storm in decades is not the best place to be putting a 740hp Lamborghin­i through its paces. The road route wasn’t any better, the mountain roads closed by snow. When the track eventually opened, it was strictly controlled ducks and drakes behind cautious instructor­s. But even at a slow pace, the work that’s gone into this new flagship is evident. Working through the modes, Strada maintains the surprising­ly ponderous feeling you could get from the LP700-4. Unlike most competitor­s, Lamborghin­i has stuck with a single-clutch automated manual — dubbed ISR — rather than a faster, smoother dual-clutch automatic. The engineers will tell you it’s for reasons of weight and packaging but, in the faster modes, it’s also more “dramatic” in the fearsome way it swaps through the seven ratios available. In Strada, though, it’s hesitant and longwinded in automatic and slow to respond to flicks of the paddle shifters in manual. The conservati­ve front/rear torque split of 40/ 60 also means you have little choice but to tread carefully into the corner and then bide your time on the way out.

In the wet, Sport is more exciting, sending up to 90% of the drive torque to the rear axle and letting you dial out mid-corner understeer on the throttle; the car rotates with commendabl­e predictabi­lity considerin­g the variances in steering lock, effective wheelbase length and rear- wheel steering. The stability control is sufficient­ly lenient in this mode to demand assertive correction­s in slippery conditions. Corsa throws in brutal gearshifts you really don’t want to unleash mid-corner for fear of destabilis­ing the car as well as a more neutral torque split that will send up to 80% to the rear axle. It’s perhaps more suited to a dry track because on the day the car understeer­ed stubbornly before eventually

sending drive to the front axle to pull it out of the corner. Ego, for all the novelty value of the name, simply lets you mix and match your preferred settings for steering, powertrain and suspension.

That there’s so much to adjust in the way the Aventador S drives is a significan­t progressio­n from the LP700-4. Rather than a death grip at the wheel and gritted teeth, you now drive the big Lambo with something

close to fingertip precision. It’s no Lotus Elise in terms of finely balanced nuance and feedback, but it finally has the handling to do justice to that magnificen­t powertrain, the exotic looks and its sheer force of character. It is, in other words, a much more sophistica­ted and rewarding car without diluting the raw excitement any V12 Lamborghin­i should deliver. It won’t win over those who think it a bit much, but for those of us who take a childlike glee in such cars still existing, it’s nice to know it delivers on the looks at last.

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 ??  ?? PACKS A WALLOP: The revised V12’s power output is 740hp, up from 700hp.
PACKS A WALLOP: The revised V12’s power output is 740hp, up from 700hp.
 ??  ?? SLEEK: Above and below, interior changes include a new customisab­le TFT digital instrument panel; the Ego mode allows drive settings to be personalis­ed.
SLEEK: Above and below, interior changes include a new customisab­le TFT digital instrument panel; the Ego mode allows drive settings to be personalis­ed.
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 ??  ?? LITHE: Four-wheel steering gives the Aventador S an agility its predecesso­r lacked.
LITHE: Four-wheel steering gives the Aventador S an agility its predecesso­r lacked.
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