Skip to main content

FIRST DRIVE: Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale – As Good As It Looks?

Robb Report Car of the Year 2012: Winner Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4



DRIVING WEDGE
That the most outrageous Lamborghini ever made was chosen Car of the Year by a vote of nearly two to one is remarkable. Granted, the Aventador LP 700-4 is a stellar achievement—as a design exercise and as a series-production reality. Yet it is difficult to imagine most of the event’s judges actually driving it. But drive they did, and each returned from his or her ride bearing a broad smile and a healthy respect for the low-slung, high-performance monster.

In past Car of the Year contests, vehicles as radical as Lamborghini’s flying wedge have not garnered mass appeal among our judges; most have found such machines intimidating to operate and ergonomically challenging. Yet almost all of the nearly 100 drivers—our largest gathering ever—were impressed by the relative ease with which the big brute can be cajoled from a trot to a full-snort stampede. Doubtless, the seamless 7-speed automated manual gearbox shortened everyone’s learning curve and made memories of the Murciélago’s recalcitrant stick shift disappear as quickly as anything in the Aventador’s rearview mirror. —Robert Ross


SPEED AND SOPHISTICATION
Our judges’ nearly unanimous passion for the Aventador was ignited not by its raw power or its Darth Vader architecture. Instead, the adjudicators fell hard for its sophistication, which includes a cabin so comfortable it borders on relaxing and performance-related technologies that set new standards of civility and refinement for reaching speeds as fast as 217 mph.

Like previous Cars of the Year, the Aventador is a triumphant milestone that meets its design purpose and fulfills a concept that others (including seven different owners for Lamborghini since 1963) have been unable to realize. So fire up this magnificent V-12 machine, short-shift the first three gears to redline, stomp on the gas pedal, and relish the ballistics.
One of our judges, Bordeaux winemaker Pierre Seillan, was not struck entirely speechless by the excitement of driving the Lamborghini. But he was shocked into reverting to his mother tongue: "Fantastiqueextraordinaireincroyable." —Paul Dean

TAMABLE BULL
The Aventador is unquestionably one of the year’s most intimidating automotive specimens. With scoops, edges, and scissor-style doors, the car screams velocità when sitting still, before it delivers a 700 hp kick of endorphin-producing force from an all-new V-12 engine. But as our judges discovered, the Aventador is a more versatile vehicle than its jet-fighter shape suggests—and more versatile than its Lamborghini predecessors, the Countach, Diablo, and Murciélago. The Aventador gallops and surges across pavement where the others groped and lurched, it sweeps through corners instead of shuddering, and it breathes fire instead of spitting venom.
These revelations should come as no surprise, because the Aventador’s smaller sibling, the Gallardo LP 560-4, took our contest’s top honors just three years ago. —Paul Meyers
SPECIFICATIONS  Configuration Mid-engine, all-wheel-drive sports car Engine 6.5-liter V-12 Transmission 7-speed automated manual  Power 700 hp at 8,250 rpm Torque 509 ft lbs at 5,500 rpm Curb weight 3,472 pounds Zero to 60 mph 2.9 seconds  Top speed 217 mph Base price $387,000 Lamborghini, www.lamborghini.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Randy Pobst on tuning the 800HP Genovation GXE

Garmin | Descent G2 Watch-style Dive Computer

Cute girl drifting in rally car unfastened

The 9th Dream Car from the Top 10: GM-X Stiletto

When we think of dream cars, our minds often race to sleek designs, innovative technology, and that unmistakable feeling of pure, unbridled passion. The GM-X Stiletto encapsulates all of these elements and more, making it a worthy contender in our top ten list. Ranked at number nine, this concept car from 1964 remains a beacon of automotive ingenuity and a symbol of a bygone era that continues to inspire. A Journey Back to the Jet Age To fully appreciate the GM-X Stiletto, we must travel back to the 1950s and '60s, a time when America was captivated by the future. The jet-age was in full swing, and cars were designed with a sense of bold optimism. Under the visionary leadership of Harley Earl and Bill Mitchell, General Motors created vehicles that mimicked the sleek lines and advanced technologies of jet aircraft. The GM-X Stiletto, born in 1964, was a product of this era's boundless imagination. The Visionary Design The GM-X Stiletto was first unveiled at the 1964-1965 World’s...

【中継】日産モータースポーツファンイベント

Classic Cars of Mannix (1967 TV Series) Season 1

Road Tripping The 2025 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray - What’s it Like?

Richard Hammond FINALLY Drives The New Renault 5!

Kia unveils with momentum at NYIAS

What Ferrari JUST REVEALED About Their 2025 CAR Is INSANE!

Labels

Show more