RE: Original Lambo Diablo VT 6.0 press car for sale

RE: Original Lambo Diablo VT 6.0 press car for sale

Tuesday 12th September 2023

Original Lambo Diablo VT 6.0 press car for sale

Many feared Lamborghini would go all soft under Audi ownership - this is the car that proved them wrong


Anticipation must've been sky-high when the first drives of the Lamborghini Diablo VT 6.0 took place. This was the first release under Audi ownership, and while there’s only so much the German car giant could do with existing models, the company was keen to prove that it’d be taking a hands-on approach. How could Audi, a company synonymous with sensible saloons, improve on a car as unhinged as the Diablo without watering down the silliness?

As we now know, Audi came out of the gate swinging. The fastest way to a Lamborghini owner’s heart is to always offer more power, preferably with twelve cylinders arranged in a V. So Audi decided to lump in the 6.0-litre V12 from the ultra-rare Diablo GT, albeit with tweaks to the variable valve timing and ECU, as well as a new exhaust and intake, resulting in a 558hp output just shy of the 7,500rpm redline. Audi stuck with the Diablo’s five-speed manual, too, saving the more ‘accessible’ automated transmission for the Murcielago – and even then it arrived a couple of years down the road.

Meanwhile, the styling was given a refresh to bring the very-'90s design into the Millennium. The last time Lamborghini gave one of its models a significant mid-life facelift it was the Countach 25th Anniversary, styled by Horacio Pagani no less, which didn’t quite live up to the reputation he enjoys now. The Diablo refresh, however, would be far more successful. Audi-appointed Luc Donckerwolke was tasked with restyling the VT 6.0, smoothing off some of the Diablo’s edges for a look that – very loosely – previews the design language Lamborghini would carry for over a decade. Perhaps not quite as intimidating as earlier models, but it was still more ludicrous than anything else on the market at the time.

The interior was given a major overhaul, too. While a refreshed cabin design had been introduced on the 1998 facelift, further changes were brought in for the VT 6.0 – namely a better seat position to open up more legroom, plus a repositioning of the pedals so they were no longer comically off-centre. Of course, there’s an appeal to an Italian supercar with wonky ergonomics, but Audi tried to prove a point with the VT 6.0 that driving a performance car doesn’t have to be a chore.

Being an embryo at the time, PH didn’t get around to driving the VT 6.0 back in the day, but, if we had, there’s a good chance we’d have driven this very car. It’s the old Lamborghini demonstrator, the very machine that showed journalists first-hand that the company’s future was in safe hands under Audi ownership. It doesn’t hurt that it spent its early life being thrashed by legendary Lamborghini test driver, Valentino Balboni, who was reacquainted with chassis 12408 in 2020 and gave it an ‘inspection’. Who knows what that entailed, although here’s hoping it was a good hammering through the hills of Sant’Agata.

Naturally, a Lamborghini with this sort of heritage commands a value of such magnitude it can only be displayed with a trio of letters: POA. If, however, you’d prefer to forfeit a little prestige for one with a steering wheel on the correct side, then there’s this 22,000-mile example for £349,990. That’s a hefty premium for a Diablo, and a good chunk more than most of its successors. But the VT 6.0 was something special; turning apprehension into excitement as Lamborghini moved into a new era that it has never looked back from.


See the full advert here

Author
Discussion

asci.white

Original Poster:

473 posts

88 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
I used to go past an SV in a drive in Richmond every morning and could never take my eyes off it.

To be fair this was Richmond Hill so not the most expensive car in the area but it always blew me away.

hermes

226 posts

216 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
I messaged that dealer about one of their cars. Never heard back.

SimonTheSailor

12,774 posts

243 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
If you took it to a body shop - could you get the rear arches symmetrical ? Would it look better scratchchin

Gecko1978

11,357 posts

172 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
After paddy crashed one on top gear this was a big no for me

4000 posts

4,792 posts

94 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
"The hills of Sant Agata " .

I don't think there are any hills ,Emilia Romagna is very flat landed around there .

I don't remember seeing any tumbleweed

CKY

2,257 posts

30 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
After paddy crashed one on top gear this was a big no for me
Because a TV gameshow host can't drive properly, you now hate Lamborghini Diablos...?? rofl

Amanitin

467 posts

152 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
article said:
this sort of heritage
I don't see how being a press car is heritage

LotusOmega375D

8,673 posts

168 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.

Red6

546 posts

71 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
The VT 6.0 is the perfect Diablo in my eyes. Simple design yet still eye catching to be the star of the show. I'm surprised that it never came with a 6 speed, but with so much torque on offer... 5 is enough. When my numbers come up, this is first on my list.

Mark-C

6,570 posts

220 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.
I've always thought the 968 was the exception to that otherwise sound rule ...

Water Fairy

6,129 posts

170 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
CKY said:
Gecko1978 said:
After paddy crashed one on top gear this was a big no for me
Because a TV gameshow host can't drive properly, you now hate Lamborghini Diablos...?? rofl
Guess what? Your opinion stinks of st. rofl

biggbn

27,172 posts

235 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.
All look better without pop up lights in my opinion.

howardhughes

1,231 posts

219 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.
Totally agree. This looks so wrong without the pop-ups.

evojam

703 posts

175 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
Those headlights look strangely familiar,I'm sure I had a set on my old 300ZX..

fph

64 posts

132 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
howardhughes said:
LotusOmega375D said:
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.
Totally agree. This looks so wrong without the pop-ups.
The Porsche 968 did not have fixed headlights, it adopted the 928 style of pop-up headlights for a family look.

Marc H

246 posts

169 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
I would say that Audi, like Volvo, were really more known back then for sensible estates rather than saloons?

honda_exige

7,100 posts

221 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
Mark-C said:
LotusOmega375D said:
Why do road cars originally designed with pop-up headlamps invariably look worse when face-lifted later on to fixed headlamps? Take the Diablo, the NSX, the 944/968.
I've always thought the 968 was the exception to that otherwise sound rule ...
See I think the Diablo and NSX without pop ups look fantastic and the 960 looks awful.

zsdom

1,503 posts

135 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
A true lottery win car for me, I love it but POA can get in the bin though

Matt_T

831 posts

89 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
So were these in production before Audi, but Audi fettled the later ones?

skylarking808

931 posts

101 months

Tuesday 12th September 2023
quotequote all
Funny, I just watched Sam from STG drive an early and late Diablo on his You Tube channel. He comes to an interesting although slightly predictable conclusion on the later cars...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bW66Wj4g4E