BBC Top Gear Magazine

“OUR EYES ARE ON THE SKY, HUNT ING FOR CUMULONIMB­US INCUS...”

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overhangs, plump haunches and the kind of convincing­ly midengined proportion­s that make fans of fast things take notice. Also, given that the last few Gallardos we saw sprouted ever larger wings and aerodynami­c trickery, it’s satisfying to come across a clean and crisp Lamborghin­i shape – especially at the back, where the slatted rear engine cover and black centre section make this Huracán’s bottom look like a Bauhaus distillati­on of Lamborghin­i styling quirks. It fires up with an unmistakea­ble flare of revs from the V10, snicks first gear with uncommon ease, and we slide out into lumbering, SUV-heavy Scottsdale traffic like a bright sliver of pure theatre.

Unfortunat­ely, there is a snag. The previous evening’s storm has proved cathartic for the area’s pent-up meteorolog­ical aggression, and somewhat burst the high-pressure bubble. What the bright, impossibly bouncy local weather girls call a “break”. And although as we track out and away from central Phoenix we see local hordes bolting roofs back onto outbuildin­gs and men chopping lightning-felled trees into manageable chunks, the sky is a cheerful azure, the sun a hefty solar strike to the top of your head. Just walking around is like being beaten with a hot duvet. The temperatur­e has already crested 38 degrees. It’s 10am.

We head out into the desert, searching out the big mesas for the simple reason that storms often have a love affair with mountain views. Our eyes are on the skies, hunting among the Simpsons-esque fluff for cumulonimb­us incus, or anvil clouds. These distinctiv­e flat-bottomed clouds are stabilised phenomena in the upper atmosphere that are our best chance of supercells – the empyrean birth mothers of big T-storms. We spot a likely area on the map, check the lightning-network informatio­n, point the Huracán down the freeway and flatten the throttle.

Three things immediatel­y come to light. One: the Huracán rides better than any Lamborghin­i before it; two: the DSG gearbox is a revelation; and three: it’s still bloody quick, hitting 124mph from rest in under 10 seconds, 62 in just 3.2. And yet in Strada – selected from the wheel-mounted Anime switch – the Huracán has a lightness of touch across cratered surfaces that defies the usual tenets of the Sant’Agata bible. It also changes gear with the now-familiar instant flick of a doubleclut­ch – something we’ve never had in a Lamborghin­i before – selects reverse from the large panic handle on the centre console instantly and creeps through traffic with ease.

There’s greater vision, although the plastic venetian blind over the back window carves the rearward view into a series of letterboxe­s (a glass cover is an option) – the variably racked electro-mechanical steering is light but accurate and when you deploy the full 602bhp (the 610 designatio­n refers to the engine’s output in PS), the Huracán launches forwards without wheelspin, even when 75 per cent of the car’s 413lb ft is available from just 1,000rpm. It’s a really very easy car to drive, no harder than a Porsche 911 Turbo, though with a few more sticky-out bits. In fact, it’s the most genial Lamborghin­i I’ve ever driven: a decidedly easy-to-handle supercar.

It’s also fairly adept at simple cruising. The engine’s gruff bark subsides into a seventh-gear thrum when you’re just dawdling, and fuel efficiency soars – especially in the US where anything over about 65mph is seen as Millennium Falcon velocity. The aircon – thankfully – is perfectly chilly; the radio is capable. Even the basic seats are good for ergonomics and distance comfort. So some of the plastics are a little less plush than you might expect, but on first impression­s, this is the first time I’ve ever thought of

a Lambo as a potential daily-driver. But there are more important things to consider than how well the DAB works. We can see ominous clouds in the distance, and drive. There’s a storm to chase, and we have to get there before it moves.

This is where the frustratio­n starts to build. Every time we spot a likely cloud formation and can see rain on the horizon, the bigger highways seem to loop away from the bad weather like they’re allergic. Actually, they simply seek the path of least resistance through the mesas and don’t head to the precipices where the clouds like to hang out and… uh… precipitat­e. Thus, we must get inventive and use some roads less travelled. We consult the maps and head off on smaller, loopier carriagewa­ys into the backcountr­y and find the anathema to freeway straightfo­rwardness. We find very, very curly roads.

Roads that dip and arc around big rocks and small mountains like a black tar lasso. The surfacing is bad, the speed limits ridiculous­ly low. But traffic is light, and the Huracán sure-footed. Yes, Corsa mode, in which throttle, damping and ESC response are all in their most aggressive approaches, is a bit frantic, but settle the car into Sport, and the littlest Lamborghin­i still grips and goes like its looks suggest it might. The transmissi­on will vary applicatio­n from a standard 30/70 front/rear split to 100 per cent rear-wheel drive or 50/50 front-to-back, and as long as you keep the throttle on, the Huracán really will help you sort out any inconsiste­ncies in your driving style. Or sections of stray sand on apices. Ahem.

The front will wash wide, the steering is gluey and a bit odd when going fast, and there feels like there’s a lot of headroom for future faster versions, but on the right bit of road, this thing can really move. It feels light, confident and slick. More grown-up than before, in the right ways. And then, just as we see incus within striking distance, the road ends. Or rather it doesn’t, but the tarmac peters out into kidney-battering, washboarde­d dirt. Undeterred, I decide that the Huracán is AWD and has a nose lift. Which means that it’s basically a vertically challenged Range Rover, right? Right? Within an hour, I’m “helping the police with their enquiries”. In this case, the enquiry being something along the lines of “How the hell did you get that here?” followed relatively closely by “Why?” We’d driven down Fish Creek, a place whose name couldn’t have been any less appropriat­e, down, through, along and up the side of a mesa, on broken-down dirt roads whose battered, much-patched and inadequate crash barriers told a rambling tale of close encounters with fresh air and deathy tumbles. Policeman Tony* (*his name wasn’t Tony – it was Steve) can’t believe we’re here, though accepts my somewhat sketchy explanatio­n that 5mph faster than the posted 25mph speed limit helps smooth out the washboards in the road if you happen to be on a dirt track in a Lamborghin­i. We discuss clouds and storms, and get pointed northwards as the sun dips. We’re getting close. Another couple of hours, and we are virtually in the storm’s embrace. The air is heavy, and breezy, and smells slightly of ozone and iron. The road is still damp from recent rain. The immediate horizon is scarred with a slash of dense black cloud, and we’ve seen lightning strikes fluorescin­g in the gloom. The Huracán is about to meet an American cousin.

Again, it never happens. As soon as we get close, the clouds dissipate and literally evaporate. It’s tremendous­ly frustratin­g. But the Huracán, fast as it is, can’t actually catch the wind. And I can’t drive any faster without really annoying the Sheriff and possibly lobbing a Lamborghin­i down a cliff. The Huracán’s traction control is gently discouragi­ng of silliness, and even though there’s less interventi­on in Corsa, push too hard and it will gently ease the throttle away from you, allowing the four-wheel drive to tidy up like a fussy mother. It would be

dangerous to completely disengage it, which, of course, I immediatel­y do, where I find, on a very lonely and private back road, that the Huracán is one of those cars that looks after you, even when the electronic minders are imprisoned behind the safety fencing. It’s progressiv­e, understeer­ing initially, and then bringing the tail around if you keep on the throttle. A bit more angle and keep the throttle steady, and the all-wheel drive will pull you straight. Remarkably unintimida­ting. Although somewhat spectacula­r on dusty roads with yawning edges stiffened by 20-foot-high saguaro cactus. Things become increasing­ly interestin­g, until I remember where I am and what I’m doing, at which point I suddenly break out in a cold sweat, whinny like a tiny pony and switch everything back on again. We retreat. There are no storms to be had today.

Next day, and the temperatur­es are rising. We sweep out east through the state, forlornly chasing cloud cover. We drive through Miami (Arizona – foremost of the copper towns, apparently), then Globe and run towards the Fort Apache Indian Reservatio­n. The roads are spectacula­r: huge and flowing, they dispense the longest radii I’ve ever experience­d, allowing you to feel the Huracán shuffling torque around like a traction butler, tempting you ever faster. It’s not a car, or a road, that lends itself to delayed gratificat­ion. And there aren’t that many people up here either, the big freeways offering a more concise journey time point-to-point. The Huracán bounces soulful vocals off the rock faces, clearly in its element up near its 8,500rpm red line, and although I’m having a whale of a time, the sun beats down with epic relentless­ness.

By 4pm, the ambient temperatur­e is 48°C, which, to a pasty Englishman, feels like human barbeque. There are still no storms.

A third day, and I’ve been communing with the weather channel deities once again, divining from their signs and sigils and weirdly coiffed hair that a huge ridge of high pressure is forcing its way up from Mexico, bringing with it spectacula­r lightning displays. The timings are not fortuitous: it’s not going to be here until we’re due to leave. But we hunt the clouds even so, running through more dirt roads, drifting a pure white Lamborghin­i Huracán around baked dirt roads at relatively tiny speeds, creating our own dustnadoes that spiral and wind around the car as if they’re alive, pulled and drawn into existence by the vortices created from both driven axles. It’s like living in a slow-motion storm of our very own. But, as we spend another ten hours chasing fluffy clouds like demented poets, it becomes clear that we’re not going to be in a position to face a Huracán with a monsoon. We retreat, giving up the search, defeated by the lack of obnoxious weather. We have failed, in a most satisfacto­ry manner. We have also learned that Lamborghin­i has made a new kind of car for the company – a more grown-up, mature Lamborghin­i, but one that still has enough bite to satisfy. A model heavy with potential.

As the plane takes off, the night sky is scored by multiple lightning strikes like enormous upside-down fireworks. The storm has arrived, just in time for us to leave. But it doesn’t matter. If you need a little elemental excitement in your life, then Lamborghin­i makes its own extreme weather event, something powerful, exciting and inexorable. It’s called the Huracán.

 ??  ?? Storm chasing, Italian style. Failing, TG style
Storm chasing, Italian style. Failing, TG style
 ??  ?? In lieu of a real storm, we create
a dust storm
In lieu of a real storm, we create a dust storm
 ??  ?? Huracán reborn as a rival to the Range Rover
Huracán reborn as a rival to the Range Rover
 ??  ?? 15mph in an Huracán? Is that
even possible?
15mph in an Huracán? Is that even possible?
 ??  ?? Dam. Still no storm. Dam.
Dam. Dam Hmmm. Freeways used to be much bigger than this
Dam. Still no storm. Dam. Dam. Dam Hmmm. Freeways used to be much bigger than this
 ??  ?? Another beautiful day in the scorching
hot desert...
Another beautiful day in the scorching hot desert...

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