Senna's NSX Masterclass

The late, great Brazilian driver and his Japanese R&D

In 1991 the launch of Honda’s NSX had a tectonic effect on the world of supercars. Japan’s first pretender to the throne of track bred, street-​​legal speed was light and preter­nat­urally responsive — but was also rigor­ously reliable and easy to live with. It was built and delivered with same indes­tructable yet passionate engin­eering as a Civic. It didn’t matter that the NSX had almost the same basic interior and little more badge appeal than Honda’s mass market everyman — if driving was your thing, nobody did it better.

This car was responsible for raising not only Honda’s performance kudos, but made the boys at Maranello tremble. Their current Berlinetta, the 348, was as quick but sloppy in its handling and finish. The European aristo­crats were forced to raise their game.

In 1989 the Brazilian maestro Ayrton Senna had been at Suzuka to test the McLaren Honda, but he ended up doing a few laps in the prototype NSX. His critique was brief and relat­ively humble: “It feels a little fragile,” he said.

The story goes that the Honda engineers went back to the drawing board and came back eight months later with the prototype’s body stiffened by 50%. The torsional weakness that Senna had identified in the long, low slung NSX frame was gone. Senna went on to help Honda develop the suspension settings that helped make the car a brilliant handler.

The testy Brazilian driver wasn’t univer­sally loved by F1 fans before he was tragically killed at San Marino in 1994, but all we remember of him is the way he applied his natural gifts. And rightly so.

Similarly the ‘plasticky’ feel of the NSX and its lack of European panache are all put into shade by the incredible driving exper­ience it gave its pilots. Even the car’s looks, which were rooted more in the eighties than the nineties, conjure these days a retro kind of cool.

We’re not sure if the footage below is from the original Suzuka session or from one that came later. Whichever it was, it’s a thing of beauty to watch.

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Do you have an opinion on this post? Have we forgotten anything we should have mentioned or made an error? Whether you want to pat us on the back, or vehemently disagree, we'd love to hear what you think - enter your comments below:

  • Jakethesnake

    Nice to see the great man at work. I never thought the NSX was plasticky: always looked cool to me!

  • Laury Curran

    Interesting to watch Senna’s throttle control. on/​off/​on/​off/​ON constantly trying to feel the limit of the car in the corner.

  • Mike

    Yep, wasn’t he known for some kind of mystical throttle-​​feathering?

  • Quavey

    We’re not sure if the footage below is from the original Suzuka session or from one that came later. Whichever it was, it’s a thing of beauty to watch”

    Looks like the car in the video is the NSX R —  a later model so this cant be the original footage. Nice little video though :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/sam.carpenter1 Sam Carpenter

    Excellent article. I love his original comment… so vague, yet paradox­ically so complex! Can’t wait to drive one of these.

  • Sam Lever

    How many World Championships should Senna have gone on to win? He was the greatest of his age by a mile.

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