RE: Noble M600 | PH Auction Block
RE: Noble M600 | PH Auction Block
Friday 11th August 2023

Noble M600 | PH Auction Block

The electric era is nigh. A manual V8 supercar from Leicester is just the remedy we need


You don’t need me to tell you there’s an awful lot of hype around the manual supercar at the moment. Admittedly there aren’t many of them, but the likes of the GMA T.50, Pagani Utopia and the bonkers ‘hybrid gearbox’ in the Koenigsegg CC850 prove there’s still an appetite for DIY cog switching on the eve of the electric age.

There’s just one massive problem: they’re all frightfully expensive. Gordon Murray’s T.50 lives rent-free in my head, which is where it will remain because there’s precious little chance I’ll come close to considering the £2.8m entry fee. Even the baby T.33 will set you back close to £1.9m, and that’s before you’ve had a glance at the options list. What does that leave us with then, a manual Porsche 911 GT3? I’ll let you decide whether that’s a supercar or not, but I’m thinking of something with arresting looks, an engine preferably in the middle and more power than you know what to do with.

This Noble M600 should do the trick. One rocked up at our Sunday Service at BMW last month, leaving myself and many other PHers slack-jawed as it rumbled past in all its homegrown glory. Truth is, you just don’t see them very often. Noble doesn’t divulge production numbers, but a bit of digging suggests around 30 cars rolled off the line. And although I’d bite your arm off for a go in an M600, let alone own one, charging McLaren MP4-12C and Ferrari 458 money for a Noble was never going to be an easy sell.

That was back in the early 2010s, though. In a world where the supercar has become so advanced and freakishly capable, the M600’s analogue nature is probably more appealing now than it has ever been. Peel back the carbon fibre body and interior trim and you actually find a very-Noble tubular space frame chassis built around a sheet steel tub. The dampers? Passive. Steering? Hydraulic, none of that electrically-assisted rubbish, and the only semblance of driver tech was a traction control system that, apparently, rarely rose to the occasion. So the only hope of keeping your 650hp, 4.4-litre V8-powered supercar pointing in the right direction was to either dial the engine back to a lower output or treat the accelerator with a healthy dose of respect. Marvellous.

Even though the car debuted all the way back in 2010, M600 production has continued all the way through to the present day – and this nearly-new example serves as proof. Chassis number 29 was registered in 2022 and has covered 2,910 miles since, which is quite impressive for a car that’s not exactly built for grand touring. It’s had two services in that time at thousand-mile intervals, and naturally features all the original paperwork including build sheets with handwritten notes from the factory. The spec is sublime, too, with Noble’s signature metallic blue paintwork contrasting nicely with a tan leather interior.

So, the power-to-weight ratio of a Bugatti Veyron, a six-speed manual gearbox and enough carbon, leather and Alcantara for the full supercar experience. I wonder if the M600 would have been more popular had it arrived a decade later, but it’s still the same car that had journalists raving about ten years ago. So if today’s supercars are a bit too digital for your liking, and you fancy something that’ll stand out from the Ferraris, McLarens and Lamborghinis of this world, look no further.


SPECIFICATION | NOBLE M600

Engine: 4,439cc V8, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: six-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 650@6,800rpm
Torque (lb ft): 604@3,800rpm
MPG: 20.2
CO2: 333g/km
Year registered: 2022
Recorded mileage: 2,910

 See the full advert here

Author
Discussion

TerryFarquit

Original Poster:

111 posts

153 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
reading the documentation it has a 9 carrot badge.
That must be worth a close up.

ChrisCh86

1,100 posts

70 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Yes please.

What a wonderful creation. Given the Yamaha v8, it should be relatively reliable you would hope...

Vee12V

1,407 posts

186 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
An affordable F40, hell yeah.

C5_Steve

8,134 posts

129 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Love these, the fact there are less than 30 it would seem would explain why I've never seen one on the road.

Matt_T

1,219 posts

100 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
So presumably if these are still made today, the value of this is capped at below £200k?
So, what... about £175k?

Robertb

3,639 posts

264 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Wow that is something. The side profile is particularly handsome, and the technical specification and build looks fascinating. I know £200k is a huge sum, but when you compare this to the asking price of the current crop of restomodded cars it looks good value, let alone Pagani etc.

I suddenly want an M600 very much.

Water Fairy

6,492 posts

181 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Big fat yes from me. Some of the trim finishing looks a little suspect and I think I would need to change the steering wheel.

Alas, all academic lol

romac

608 posts

172 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Looks brilliant. Always had a soft spot for Noble's cars. Sadly, despite all the self-help sites telling me that I'm awesome, being awesome hasn't made me rich cry. Shame. Would love this!

Julian Thompson

2,677 posts

264 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
I went to see the beautiful motor show car (the green one) when DK had it for sale a year or two back. It was up for £280k I seem to recall but had only a three digit mileage. It looked incredible in the pictures but when I sat in it I was slightly disappointed. Super cool car but not at that price. I think it went to the USA that one.

noble3r

295 posts

233 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Matt_T said:
So presumably if these are still made today, the value of this is capped at below £200k?
So, what... about £175k?
They were £207k plus VAT £250k 7 years ago. I think if Noble were to be persuaded to make another it would be £350k+.

bobtail4x4

4,353 posts

135 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
arrggh been hanging my nose over a noble for the past year,
this one even has a nice interior

I may be bidding

Augustus Windsock

3,750 posts

181 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
Yes please.

What a wonderful creation. Given the Yamaha v8, it should be relatively reliable you would hope...
I suppose an under-endowed new owner could legitimately say “I’ve got a hell of an organ back there…”
Not my best attempt at humour…

myhandle

1,293 posts

200 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
That must be the nicest looking one I have seen in person or in a photo. The colours are great and the body coloured light surrounds work well. Cool car.

Pflanzgarten

7,176 posts

51 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
I don't care how amazing it is to drive, there are too many other amazing cars to spend life looking at that interior (yes I hate to be that guy).

RSstuff

1,035 posts

41 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Did Lee Noble design the M600?

Sandpit Steve

14,053 posts

100 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
These look totally nuts in the flesh, I saw one at a dealer in Dubai a few years back, with bare carbon panels. In a showroom full of Bugattis and Lambos, it was parked front and centre next to the door. Much want for something totally different, British, and off-the-wall bonkers.

5lab

1,870 posts

222 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
if this is chassis #29 after 10 years of production that's gotta be really disappointing for Noble. Surely its tough to keep a car manufacturing business on the go with less than £500k/year (post vat) coming in?

MyFingerSlipped

17 posts

40 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Saw this exact car out in the wild twice last year. I get a variety of supercars and classics where I live but it really stood out as something special.
Hadn't realized they had made so few of them and over such a long period of time - if only I'd won the EuroMillions I'd have helped them out.

Twinair

1,001 posts

168 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Nearly right:

ISO - nigh

It should be:

Nay

Electric cars, what tripe

Glenn63

3,805 posts

110 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Dream car for me if my numbers came up, brute of a machine! Supercar driver did a good video of one a few months back.