RE: Orders open for Ginetta's 600hp Akula supercar

RE: Orders open for Ginetta's 600hp Akula supercar

Saturday 7th September 2024

Orders open for Ginetta's 600hp Akula supercar

Five years after its Geneva debut, Ginetta's V8-powered flagship can now be yours - for £275k plus tax


It’s been quite a while since we’ve heard anything about the Ginetta Akula. The British firm’s first stab at a supercar was revealed at the Geneva Motor Show in 2019, before fading into obscurity as the pandemic set in. A brief update in 2022 suggested that development was still ongoing, with a view to getting it ready for production. Two years later, it seems it has finally got the Akula over the line, with orders for the road-ready version now open. You'll need £275,000 (plus taxes) to get one.

Just like the Geneva car, the production-spec Akula is built around a carbon fibre monocoque, with the front and rear subframes, flat floor and bodywork all made from lightweight composite, resulting in a kerb weight of just 1,190kg. The aggressive aero package is derived from the company’s old LMP1 programme and is brimming with eye-catching details, including fins above the front splitter, turning vanes behind the rear wheels with flicks along the skirts, alongside a predictably ginormous rear diffuser. It’s been toned down a touch since the concept - note a less eye-gouging spoiler, though you can still option the old wing for even more downforce - but it’s far from what you’d call restrained.

Backing up those looks is a suitably throaty engine. Right behind the front axle is a 6.4-litre, naturally aspirated V8 based around the company’s own billet aluminium block and titanium valvetrain, delivering 600hp at 7,200rpm and 494lb ft of toque at 5,100rpm. Side exit exhausts mean it should sound just as good to passersby as it likely does from inside. There’s a limited-slip diff at the rear to help manage all that power, and two transmission options to choose from: a six-speed manual or a seven-speed dual-clutch auto, the latter needed to achieve the claimed 2.9-second 0-62mph time. Top speed, meanwhile, is loosely rated at ‘in excess of 180mph.’

As you might expect, there’s a suite of glitzy race-grade chassis hardware beneath the prickly bodywork. Paired with the billet aluminium double wishbone suspension front and rear are two-way adjustable race dampers, which can be tweaked electronically from inside the car - though the anti-roll bars require a set of spanners to set up to your liking. The steering is electrically assisted with a competition-spec rack, while braking is via 360mm steel discs with four-pot callipers. Opting for the Akula’s Race Pack will get you a set of carbon ceramics along with six-point harnesses and even your own Ginetta-branded race gear. Underwear and all.

Obviously, there’s a focus on-track performance (what else would you expect from Ginetta?), but the firm insists the Akula is ‘a proper long-distance tourer.’ For starters, there’s a 100-litre fuel tank for an estimated 450-mile range between fill-ups and a 473-litre boot, which isn’t far off double that of an Aston Martin DB12. And while the cabin is pretty spartan, the carbon-sculpted seats are well padded for your comfort and there's quite literally an iPad for a centre screen.

“Since the Akula concept was unveiled back in 2019, the car has undergone an intensive test and development programme”, said Ginetta technical chief Clive Seddon. “We have spared neither time nor expense to fine-hone the Akula to deliver the sharpest and most immersive driving experience possible”. One, again, that’ll set you back over a quarter of a million quid before tax, and Ginetta's only building 20 of them. A considerable amount of money no matter how you cut it. But if anyone can pull off a track-inspired British supercar with genuine motorsport influence, it's the team from West Yorkshire...


Author
Discussion

Marc H

Original Poster:

244 posts

168 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
I think that I will replace my Mk2 Q3 with one!

200Plus Club

11,923 posts

292 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
So much better than when TVR announced their car.
Whatever happened to that ponzi scheme out of interest?

Iamnotkloot

1,703 posts

161 months

Friday 6th September 2024
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My initial reaction to the looks is ewchhhh

Doofus

30,476 posts

187 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Blimey

paradigital

1,032 posts

166 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
That’s vile. No coherent design language, just a mess of angles and shapes.

Mr.Chips

1,123 posts

228 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Historically, I have always liked Ginettas, but this one has fallen from the very top of the ugly tree and hit every branch on the way down. Not for me, even if I had the money.

el romeral

1,544 posts

151 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Like an amusement arcade inside and some very awkward styling on the outside. Hats off to them for making it though and what an engine.

WPA

11,791 posts

128 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
paradigital said:
That’s vile. No coherent design language, just a mess of angles and shapes.
^^This

MrHooky

223 posts

156 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Looks like a £300k kit car. And not in a good way.

World seems to have moved on in the 5 years since this was first announced given what £300k would get you elsewhere.

Exterior pretty bad. Interior looks even worse. So bad the majority of the photos are in the dark.

Shame but I fear this is going to be a complete flop.

Sway

31,562 posts

208 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Visually, it appears they started with a G50 then spent a lot of time taking that to the nth degree from an aero perspective. Not the prettiest thing, but purposeful.

Question is, how on earth can this be profitable? Bespoke engine, bespoke chassis (including carbon subframes, which is pretty rare), etc., for a total revenue of £5.5M. Considering how much a billet V8 block costs to machine, the construction cost is going to be a big chunk of that £5.5M, let alone any development costs!

Benzinaio

290 posts

16 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Looks like a transformer that's spent it's life driving around Chernobyl.

edoverheels

469 posts

119 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
I really wish companies like Ginetta well and I love stuff that eschews mainstream thinking but with this, really, what were they thinking?
It might be the best car ever to drive but that is almost irrelevant if it looks like that. I just hope that they haven't spent too much money developing it.
I had the same thoughts about the Ariel electric supercar 'experiment'.
That hasn't reared its head for a while and the company seems to have survived. (Hopefully)

InformationSuperHighway

6,839 posts

198 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Horrendous inside at out.

I couldn't care less about the performance if this is what it looks like.

Also, that price tag? Imagine what else you could get for that money.

Stick Legs

7,165 posts

179 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
The Lister Storm revival that no-one was waiting for.

Clockwork Cupcake

77,715 posts

286 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Oh dear god. My eyes! eek

Clockwork Cupcake

77,715 posts

286 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Stick Legs said:
The Lister Storm revival that no-one was waiting for.
thumbup

Zenzz

99 posts

119 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Two things to say… Specsavers and G56 GTR.

paulwirral

3,593 posts

149 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Atomic batteries to power , turbines to speed , batmans built a kit car . He’s maybe one of few who can afford it ?
I do like it side profile .

king arthur

7,222 posts

275 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
They're brave, I'll give them that.

Wheel Turned Out

1,434 posts

52 months

Friday 6th September 2024
quotequote all
Those press photos are awfully dark. And I can't say I blame them.