Posts Tagged ‘McLaren F1’

Our Favourite Extreme Machines

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Sinclair C5

The C5 was stupid-​​looking, probably dangerous, but strangely prescient and now kind of retro and cool. Clive Sinclair’s doomed project was the product of the extreme entre­pren­eur­i­alism of the early eighties.

The Buckeye Bullet

A student-​​constructed electric vehicle that recently set a land speed record at 307 MPH

The ‘Tajima Monster’

This 897-​​horsepower twin-​​turbocharged Suzuki SX4 negotiated the 12.42 mile Pikes Peak course in 10 minutes and 11.49 seconds.

McLaren F1

The long-​​time holder of the fastest-​​car title, engine bay lined with gold makes it the most bling too

Maybach 62

The biggest car currently on sale, but a sales disaster for parent Mercedes-​​Benz: crass, ugly and overly bling. Also the heaviest.

Smart ForTwo:

Currently the shortest car on sale but Gordon Murray’s new T25 city car will be 30cm shorter and have an extra perch

Caparo T1:

You’d struggle to call it a car, but it does wear number plates and has a power-​​to-​​weight ratio that blitzes anything else you can buy with 575bhp in a body weighing less than half a tonne

Bugatti Veyron Super Sports

Not again! But we didn’t mention that alongside all its other records, it’s also the most expensive and least-​​efficient car you can currently buy?

Compiled by Michael Fordham & Ben Oliver

Car Crush No.2

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

f1lm[1]

Recently stumbled upon a picture that set my heart aflutter with boyish dreams of love, speed and conquest.
Sometimes, it’s good to share the porno­graphy of automotive power without having to justify it.
We doubt that the new Mclaren road car will come close to the F1’s snarling, brutal beauty.
So, we thought we’d share pictures of our current car crush.

f1family[1]

The Eight Principles of the Classic

Friday, July 10th, 2009

There’s a lot of misun­der­standing about the word ‘classic’. And for such a contro­versial word, petrol heads and general lovers of cars and bikes use the word perhaps more than any other. In a noble attempt to clarify our terms at the start of our ‘classic’ feature thread, we thought we’d consult the good book: and find examples out there in the real world that exemplify the various defin­i­tions of the ‘C’ word. Tell us what you think of our choices, and please, feel free to suggest your alternatives.

Classic (adj) (as defined by Collins Dictionary 1991)
1 ‘of the highest class’ : The Rolls Royce Phantom Coupé

rolls-phantom-coupe

Synonymous with the highest possible ideals of motoring perfection, many believe that Rolls Royce has reached new heights with the latest range of models. Combining as it does super­lative performance with bespoke tailoring, could the Phantom Coupé be the most classic Rolls ever?

2 ‘serving as a standard model of its kind’: The Honda Civic Type R

civic-typer2

In its many and various manifest­a­tions the Civic Type R has set the standard by which all hot hatches are measured. They are engin­eered with the perfect balance of fun-​​focused emotion and workaday reliab­ility – and that’s what Hot Hatches – the icon of the everyman – are all about.

3 ‘adhering to an estab­lished set of principles’: The Morgan Plus Four

morgan-plus42

Sticking with a formula of hand-​​wrought production values in a self consciously retro­spective style, a Morgan is instantly recog­nisable. Though that self-​​conscious styling plays on deep-​​lying popular ideas of what consti­tutes a classic (falling perhaps into cliché), it achieves its aim every time.

4 ‘charac­terised by simplicity, balance, regularity or purity of form’: Harley Davidson Sportster

harley-davidson-sportster

Love them or hate them, the perennial popularity of the simple but burly V-​​Twin form is the core of one of the strongest brands mankind has ever known. As such, the consist­ently pure idea that is the Harley will continue to rumble into legend.

5 ‘of lasting signi­ficance or interest’: McLaren F1

mclaren-f1

In 1998 the McLaren F1, setting a still rarely matched top speed of 243 MPH, almost single-​​handedly ushered in the era of the road going hypercar. Representing the boomtime economics of GP-​​roadcar crossover it remains a totem­ically signi­ficant classic – even in a world where the Bugatti Veyron exists.

6 ‘continu­ously in fashion because of a simplicity of style’: The Mini

mini

Despite the current mania generated by the fiftieth anniversary of the launch of Alex Issigonis’s Mini design, the little cars never really went out of fashion. Devastatingly simple, accessible and fun, the design will be forever associated with a time and a place in when Britain was at the centre of style.

new-mini

And it’s difficult to argue that the new Mini doesn’t carry on many of the tradi­tions initiated by the BMC version. Loved partic­u­larly by women of a certain age, and an ongoing exemplar of the British thing (ok, we know they’re German, but still…) their strato­spheric sales figures are testament to the brand’s ongoing appeal.

7 ‘of the highest excel­lence’: The Land Rover Discovery 3

land-rover-discovery3

With its ability to range deep into the most inhos­pitable terrain imaginable as well as being the perfect luxury long-​​distant ride for a family of six (or a handful of outdoor adven­turers), the Disco 3 is the apogee of a much-​​maligned form.

8 ‘regarded as defin­itive’: The Lamborghini Countach LP400

lamborghini-countach1

If you were a man-​​child of the seventies or early eighties, the Countach will always be the defin­itive dream car. The Gandini designed shell, the scissor doors and its multilayered hooligan chic remains unsur­passed. Hats off to Bertone.