Video: McLaren Designer On The MP4-12C
Frank Stephenson chats to PH about McLaren's new supercar
For all those PHers who didn't win a chance to visit McLaren Automotive in our amazing competition recently, here's another chance to see some of the great stuff you missed out on.
We don't just want to rub it in (as if...), because this video edit of McLaren's design director Frank Stephenson talking about the new MP4-12C to our fortunate winners offers revealing insights into the genesis of our new British supercar.
The new film was compiled and edited just for PH by the in-house media team at McLaren, who have already sent us this movie covering the winners' tour. (Thanks again guys, but you're starting to embarrass us with all this good stuff!)
This movie mixes elements of Frank's spiel with more fab factory footage, and there are even some extra snippets of track action we've not seen before too. If you really want to know what the new MP4 -12C is all about, you can't get much closer to the project than this.
Although you really should have been there with us to meet Frank in person. (We'll stop now...)
He kept talking about transfer of F1 technology.
What F1 tech. was in fact incorporated?
(I'm not saying there wasn't any, I'd just like to know what specifically)
He kept talking about transfer of F1 technology.
What F1 tech. was in fact incorporated?
(I'm not saying there wasn't any, I'd just like to know what specifically)
I'm a very big McLaren fan and I'm sure the car is awesome - I just dislike bulls
t, and I was smelling some. (not that bulls
t is a novel thing when selling supercars)The shape of the steering wheel (positioning of the thumb indents) is also copies from the f1 car.
I expect there's a lot more stuff besides this.
“I don’t know how much you know about me, but this is my mum and dad.” Frank said frankly, showing a picture of a Viking Warrior and a Spanish samba dancer!
“Which is why I’m half precision and half passion.”
Then he detailed his colleagues achievements from the Art Centre College of Design in Pasadena, California and then slowly led into the fact that he designed the BMW X5, the new Mini, the Ferrari 430, the Fiat 500 and then, most recently, the McLaren MP4 – 12C.
Even though he was thirty minutes late (he couldn’t find anywhere to park), Frank’s speech over ran by about an hour. By the end many people were coughing, shuffling in their seats and the organisers were signalling for him to stop, but for those of us who love cars, it was one of the greatest hours of our lives.
He told us of the internal design battle between fifteen BMW design teams to compete separately to design the new Mini – a car that had been untouched by the designers pen since Alec Issigonis first Mini from 1959. The secret to Frank’s success was that he took the ’59 design, thought about the period and re-designed it for ’69, then ’70, then ’89 and then moved on to develop the 1999 design. Clever. Decade by decade the new Mini’s design had evolved, just as the legendary Porsche 911 has done from its own origins in the 356 and formerly the Beetle itself. Frank repeated this stroke of genius again, with the Fiat 500 that was launched in 2008 – a car that turned around the fortunes of the then struggling multi billion pound turnover car company.
So what, then, did I think when I met the man, shook his hand and gushed in his presence after the talk? Well, I first noticed his moustache and then the youth and enthusiasm in his eyes. Here was a finely tailored man who referred to Leonardo de Vinci, Alex Bell and the beauty of nature as his divine inspirations.
One might worry that mating a Viking warrior with a Spanish Samba dancer would produce a schizophrenic rottweiler, but Frank is Darwinian evidence that cross breeding brings it's own rewards, kind of like a labra-doodle, or in the case of a brand, the BMW Rover Mini.
Frank is already a legend himself, time will tell if the MP4-12C can follow in it's creators footsteps.
Brake steer - I'll have to look that up (oh OK, right). Is it still used in F1 - doesn't look like it - banned, right?
The carbon tub was a unique idea for a road car many years ago - and came from F1.
It looks to be very clever, and high tech, anything about it directly from modern F1?
The shape of the steering wheel (positioning of the thumb indents) is also copies from the f1 car.
Anything else that was carried over?
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