Evo

AC Cobra 378 Superblowe­r MKIV

With nearly 600bhp from its supercharg­ed V8, this is the most powerful production Cobra ever. Hold on to your hat!

- by STEVE SUTCLIFFE PHOTOGRAPH­Y by PETE GIBSON

THERE ARE DEFINITELY FASTER, MORE sensible, less impractica­l sports cars on which you could spend just £500 less than one hundred and thirty thousand pounds. But there can be few cars on this earth that meet with such universal approval from the general public as you rumble past with your hair (or what’s left of it) being blasted this way and that by the wind.

And there aren’t many sports cars that sound like the new AC Cobra 378 Superblowe­r MKIV either, or which will make you feel so uncaringly good about life when you’re behind the wheel. Especially if the sun happens to be shining and, just for a moment, you allow yourself to forget about all the rubbish that’s going on in the world right now. So although it’s an acquired taste, and at this kind of money is also very much a toy for the exceedingl­y well heeled, there really is nothing quite like the Superblowe­r, and there are a great many different reasons why.

For starters, it’s the only official, bona fide Cobra you can buy, except for the regular 378, also from AC, which we drove and were impressed by in 2018 (evo 254). So although there are a lot of perfectly decent Cobra replicas around, some of which are very good to drive, only this one is the real deal.

Secondly, it is quite exquisitel­y well made, with incredible paint quality and a sense of craftsmans­hip that runs deep throughout the car, nose to tail, door to door. It’s better made than it was before to be honest, build processes having been ‘significan­tly improved during the last three years’ according to AC’S owner Alan Lubinsky, having started from an already strong base.

Thirdly, this one has a supercharg­er attached to its 6.2-litre Gm-sourced ‘LSA’ V8 engine, so it goes like the proverbial you-know-what when you find the right road on which to put your foot down, seemingly from any revs in the first five of its six

gears. This test car also has a pair of side exhausts, a system made for AC by Falcon in Norfolk, who complete the sign-off work on all of AC’S cars when they arrive in the UK, having been part assembled in Port Elizabeth, South Africa. It costs an additional £3500 and is worth every penny – once you’ve learned how to disembark without singeing your calves in the process.

Although the senses of drama and excitement were already vivid in the regular 440bhp 378 Cobra, adding a supercharg­er and then allowing the whole lot to breathe through all-but-unsilenced exhausts, the end of one of which is no more than two feet away from your right ear, well, let’s just say it enhances the driving experience somewhat. By a factor of around 11 if you open the taps at anything approachin­g full steam and get the horizon firing itself towards you via the not-very-good-at-being-a-windscreen windscreen.

So what kind of power and performanc­e are we talking about here? In the era of the hypercar, the Super blower’s outputs of ‘580-600bhp’ and ‘between 550 and 600lb ft’ might not sound all that earth-shattering, but in a car that weighs only a couple of crisp packets more than 1100kg, these kinds of numbers mean the accelerati­on is not exactly for the faint of heart. Zero to 60mph is in the very low threes because, apart from anything else, the Cobra has a quite astonishin­g amount of traction – always has had thanks to its relatively soft but highly effective rear suspension and, in this case, a set of fat Avon CR6ZZ rear tyres. Just guessing (so not quoting) I’d say it could also reach 100mph in well under seven seconds. So it’s quick by just about any standards, and of course feels approximat­ely twice as fast as it actually is.

The Super blower uses the same Tremec T56 gearbox as the regular 378, with the same ratios, and is likewise equipped with a limited-slip differenti­al. Yet despite the generous outputs, only if you give it absolutely everything in first gear will it break traction when leaving the line on a dry road. (The photo you see here of it smoking its tyres required some fairly major gymnastics with throttle and clutch to achieve.) If you just drive away gently-ish in first then nail it, the tail merely squats dramatical­ly and you go, with no wheelspin whatsoever. At the same time you’ll generate an awful lot of raw accelerati­on plus an almighty crack of sound as you disappear up the road.

The gearshift is light and unusually good for a T56. The ride is also surprising­ly decent, the

‘It’s quick by just about any standards, and feels twice as fast as it actually is’

suspension soft but not to a point where the car lacks body control. It achieves a good balance between ride refinement and suspension control, without too much roll when you lean on it, either. It’s a set-up that feels like it’s taken a great deal of time and effort to perfect, which is where Falcon’s other main contributi­on has occurred: a core team of engineers, some of whom used to work just around the corner at Lotus, now fine tune the cars to a much more detailed degree, working with individual owners to get their cars exactly how they want them. As a result, each car now ‘feels much more bespoke’ according to Lubinsky.

Even the steering has got better, feeling more cohesive since our last outing in the regular 378 model, and it was already not bad at all. Gone is the old rack, replaced by a fractional­ly slower but more modern VW Polo steering system, along with some of that car’s higher-quality interior bits and bobs, including its indicator stalks. And if you think Polo stalks don’t deserve a place in a 50-grand sports car, let alone one that costs £130k and comes from AC, think again. They look good and work perfectly well, managing to gel nicely within the rest of the distinctly retro interior.

But the best thing of all about the Superblowe­r is not that it looks and sounds a million dollars, or that it goes like stink in a straight line (highly welcome though these factors undoubtedl­y are). It’s that it drives well, too, drives properly. Like a well-sorted sports car that might be from a different era dynamicall­y, yes, but one which is actually pretty damn good to drive all in its own right, even beside the most contempora­ry sports cars from 2021.

There are no excuses required for this car, in other words. It stops well, despite not having anti-lock brakes. It steers well. It rides comfortabl­y. It handles.

True, the driving position is from yesteryear, the active safety features are non-existent, the cabin is snug for two people to put it mildly, and the roof is nowhere beside the electrical­ly powered pieces of street theatre you’ll find in modern two-seaters from Porsche, Mclaren, Mercedes or Ferrari.

But not one of them, not even a Ferrari, will make you feel as good as the Cobra Superblowe­r does, hood down, throttle wide open, side exhausts on full reheat on a bright, sunny summer’s day. And that’s priceless, with or without the VW Polo indicator stalks. ☒

Engine V8, 6162cc, supercharg­ed Power 580bhp+ Torque 550lb ft+ Weight c1100kg (c536bhp/ton) 0-62mph 3.3sec (est) Top speed 170mph + (est) Basic price £129,500

+ The looks, the sound, the driving experience

- Quite pricey

evo rating ★★★★☆

‘The best thing of all about the Superblowe­r is that it drives well too’

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 ??  ?? Top right: Gm-sourced supercharg­ed 6.2-litre V8 is good for over 580bhp – quite a step up from the 320bhp of the supercharg­ed 5-litre Ford V8 fitted to the original Superblowe­r of 1999-2002
Top right: Gm-sourced supercharg­ed 6.2-litre V8 is good for over 580bhp – quite a step up from the 320bhp of the supercharg­ed 5-litre Ford V8 fitted to the original Superblowe­r of 1999-2002
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 ??  ?? Above right: wheels are 7.5 x 15in front, 9.5 x 15in rear, and wear high-profile Avon tyres for a suitably period look; ventilated discs sit behind, with race-spec calipers
Above right: wheels are 7.5 x 15in front, 9.5 x 15in rear, and wear high-profile Avon tyres for a suitably period look; ventilated discs sit behind, with race-spec calipers
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