RE: Ear-ravishing convertibles | Six of the Best

RE: Ear-ravishing convertibles | Six of the Best

Saturday 13th April

Ear-ravishing convertibles | Six of the Best

We got excited and forgot to put any cheap ones in, so just imagine your numbers have come up...


Lamborghini Huracan LP 640-4 Performante Spyder, 2019, 5k, £229,995

There are several different ways your ears can be assailed by a motor car. Near silence can be just as admirable as a peace-shattering din. But here we’re getting ourselves worked up into a lather by thinking about the latter. Case in point: the Huracán LP 640-4 Performante Spyder. Any number of Lamborghinis might have plugged this gap, but PH’s abiding memory of being in the vicinity of the 640hp winged iteration of Spyder was that it might be too loud. And that was in a lay-by in the middle of nowhere. On a high street, the tweaked 5.2-litre V10 sounds positively apocalyptic. Which, let’s be honest, is exactly what you want from a Lamborghini that seems to have fallen out of an 11-year-old’s fever dream. Here’s one of several immaculate examples currently loitering in the classifieds. 

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Ferrari 458 Speciale Aperta, 2015, 110 miles, £775,000

If the Huracan verges on too much, the ultra-rare 458 was never enough. On the basis that it was the final resting place of the naturally aspirated, heaven-sent 4.5-litre V8, the Speciale A would have been momentous had Ferrari built thousands. But it chose to build just 499, of which only 49 were right-hand drive. Cue humongous valuations and hen's teeth reputation. But if we’re talking the creme de la creme of convertibles, the flagship 458 must be included because its engine, with its 9,000rpm redline, really must be seen (and heard and felt) to be believed. This one, UK-supplied and with just one previous owner, is valued at £775,000. It would therefore be unsettling to add to its 110 miles. But you absolutely should. 

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Porsche 718 Spyder RS, 2024, 135 miles, £219,990

Let no one say that we’re obsessed only with a bygone era. Sure, today’s engines (and exhausts) tend to be a bit more hemmed in by legislation, but there are still plenty of cars out there capable of playing a merry tune on your eardrums. Like the 718 Spyder RS, for example. Sure, it’s another roadster which, thanks to inbuilt scarcity, suffers from super-sized sticker prices - but there really are precious few convertibles from any era that gargle air and fuel quite as thrillingly as the run-out 718. Also, it’s still a Boxster at heart (and less aggressively sprung than the GT4) so it’s thoroughly usable on the road, too. There’s just that six-figure asking price to hurdle. Although with the 718’s termination imminent, your investment in one like this 135-mile example, is unlikely to go backwards anytime soon. 

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Aston Martin Vantage S V12 Roadster, 2018, 9k, £169,950

Mirroring the sentiment above, we’d originally planned to feature the latest Vantage V12 Roadster (this one specifically) but another super-sized asking price put us off. Also it would’ve meant recommending another auto box, and there really is something to be said for the inimitable sound of getting a manual downshift just right. Especially in conjunction with a preposterously large petrol engine. So how about this one-of-one spec V12 Vantage S in special order red with only 9k on the clock? Granted, there are sweeter handling convertibles available, but the selling point here is the heavenly choir under the bonnet. Also, it’s nearly £100k cheaper than its successor, and better looking to boot. Convinced? 

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Mercedes SLS Roadster, 2011, 18k, £129,990

No? Well, how about making an additional £40k saving to secure the singular shape that is the SLS Roadster? Sure, it’s not objectively pretty like the Vantage, nor sizzling to drive like something mid-engined would be (and even in its day the inferior seemed less than convincing) but all those misgivings will be forgotten when you fire up the sonic petrol bomb that is AMG’s dry-dumped V8. Sure, the engine, and the model generally, peaked with the monster-grade Black Series, but there’s a lot to be said for removing the SLS’s roof and taking in the soundtrack al fresco - even if you do lose the wow factor of those gull-wing doors. This one has only covered 18k in 13 years. It too deserves better. 

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Lotus 3-Eleven, 2017, 12k, £99,000

There’s sound you hear, and then there’s sound you feel. All of the cars above have it in them to rattle your bones a bit, but if you really want to immerse yourself in the experience, then you’ll be wanting something you can be strapped into. Everyone will have their favourite here (no end of them made in this country) but we’ve gone with the 3-Eleven thanks to its banzai 3.5-litre V6. Lotus’s last truly great car? It might well be; certainly the modern-day firm is never going back to anything like it. The way it drives is scarcely believable, but the accompanying noise is something else. And while it needs a circuit to properly do its thing, it’ll still turn any sunny day spent on a B road inside out. All you need are eyes and ears. Oh and £100k. 

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Author
Discussion

wistec1

Original Poster:

310 posts

42 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Only the Porsche winks at me so best to bring us six sensibly priced subjects next time.

ThunderSpook

3,631 posts

212 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
The history on that Ferrari is saddening.

Mysstree

459 posts

47 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Stretching it a bit to call the Porsche and Lotus convertibles.

AndySheff

6,641 posts

208 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Huracan for me. Better buy a ticket !

Billy_Whizzzz

2,026 posts

144 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
718 Spyder RS please

mooseracer

1,928 posts

171 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
ThunderSpook said:
The history on that Ferrari is saddening.
Isn't it just frown

It is the car I'd have from this list (the 458 is peak modern Ferrari imo) and I'd love to be rich enough to buy it and then drive it's doors off.

The Lambo for the giggles too

200Plus Club

10,815 posts

279 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
mooseracer said:
Isn't it just frown

It is the car I'd have from this list (the 458 is peak modern Ferrari imo) and I'd love to be rich enough to buy it and then drive it's doors off.

The Lambo for the giggles too
Absolute waste of a fabulous car. Someone with money should buy it and rag it around now just because they can.

Lester H

2,768 posts

106 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
ThunderSpook said:
The history on that Ferrari is saddening.
Yep. It’s the result of treating a car like a piece of rare art, or, in a sense, an idol. Must be more fun to source a nice Ferrari for 60k - they are out there, more than people think- and use it, even if you keep it “for best”, use it!

cerb4.5lee

30,945 posts

181 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
AndySheff said:
Huracan for me. Better buy a ticket !
Same!

Vsix and Vtec

666 posts

19 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
I'd be hard pressed to pick between the 3-eleven and the Aston Martin. Lovely things. I get the feeling the Aston would be significantly more comfortable, but I doubt any of the other six will give you the fizz quite like carving up the road in something like the 3-eleven, that's just special.

911Spanker

1,270 posts

17 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
That Ferrari's service history is pathetic. Has the engine ever been warmed up?

DanL

6,247 posts

266 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Pretty surprised that an SLS seems to be the most reasonably priced thing on the list! biggrin

hungry_hog

2,288 posts

189 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
that Ferrari has spend a lot of time being trailered!

RONV

541 posts

135 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Mine a very rare one we were at Le Mont Saint Michel.

Edited by RONV on Saturday 13th April 08:43

horsemeatscandal

1,264 posts

105 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
fk me, pushing quarter of a million for a Boxster? And how much for that ugly, old Merc? I really am naïve.

Robertb

1,514 posts

239 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Surprised not to see a nice Griffith 500.

Seems like a very pricey list.

I’ve not found modern Ferrari V8s good sounding…. Tuneless blare to these ears. Would far rather a 355 Spider/GTS

981 Boxster Spyder sounds better than the GPF’d new one too, for well under half the £


Edited by Robertb on Saturday 13th April 09:05

Wren-went

806 posts

39 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Wouldn't say no to any of them, SLS AMG looks a bargain compared to the rest .

Glenn63

2,842 posts

85 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Perf for me if I can only have one. That vantage is delightful though and I love an SLS. Great selection.

stuart100

491 posts

58 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
They all look well over priced to me. Special editions or not.

SpudLink

5,951 posts

193 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Vsix and Vtec said:
I'd be hard pressed to pick between the 3-eleven and the Aston Martin. Lovely things. I get the feeling the Aston would be significantly more comfortable, but I doubt any of the other six will give you the fizz quite like carving up the road in something like the 3-eleven, that's just special.
I suspect the 3-11 would only be “ear-ravishing” for bystanders, because driver and passenger would be wearing earplugs. But it’s the car I most desire from that list.