Classic Cars (UK)

MCLAREN F1 WINS THE SUPERCAR WARS

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Can a car with the status of the Mclaren F1 really be considered a giant-killer? Yes it can, when you consider the circumstan­ces it was born into.

The supercar wars raged throughout the Eighties, fuelled by the demands of wealthy market speculator­s who often traded their appreciati­ng-asset supercars without actually driving them. But the cars needed credible high performanc­e, so the technology came straight from the track. Porsche’s 911 Turbos and 959, then Ferrari’s 288GTO and F40, all the product of Group B and C racing developmen­ts, raised the benchmark first to 190, then 200mph. As the Nineties dawned, Jaguar’s XJ220 raised it to a jaw-dropping 217. And then the economy crashed, rendering many of these supercars unsaleable.

Mclaren F1 design supremo Gordon Murray saw them as flawed, and dreamed of a supercar designed on a genuine cost no-object basis. In the aftermath of the 1988 Italian Grand Prix, at the height of Mclaren’s Senna era, bosses Ron Dennis and Mansour Ojjeh hatched a plan to build it. Despite Mclaren never having built a production road car, it would be an F1-inspired machine with a central driving position, gold-lined engine bay and road-tuned Honda F1 engine, assembled with a finesse that would make the Ferrari F40 look like a kit car.

Murray ended up having to make a compromise on the engine – a BMW V12 was substitute­d after it became clear a genuine F1 powerplant wasn’t tractable enough for road use. Less than a year into developmen­t, Honda’s own NSX made rival supercars look unreliable, unfriendly and overpriced. Murray vowed to ensure the Mclaren F1 would be just as userfriend­ly as the NSX, running one himself to make sure.

The first F1s were revealed to the public in the depths of the 1992 recession carrying a £640,000 price tag. Mclaren struggled to sell them, but the performanc­e figures spoke for themselves – 0-60 in 3.2 seconds and on to a top speed in excess of 230mph with ease, mere months after the XJ220’S recordsett­ing run at Ford Stockton. Economic circumstan­ces meant no rival dared to counter it. It would be 13 years before the mighty VW Group topped it with its money-burning Bugatti Veyron.

‘Mclaren never had built a road car before, but it would be an F1-inspired machine with a central driving position and gold-lined engine bay’

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