RE: Unique Caterham 'Levante' V6 Superlight for sale

RE: Unique Caterham 'Levante' V6 Superlight for sale

Sunday 4th May

Unique Caterham 'Levante' V6 Superlight for sale

Ever wondered what the ultimate Seven might look like? Wonder no more...


If we can all agree there’s a point where a car transcends mere transportation and becomes something else entirely - a statement of engineering obsession, a manifesto against compromise, a spanner in the laws of physics - then perhaps we can agree that this car might just be all of those things. And then some. It’s called, dramatically, the Caterham RS Performance Levante V6 Superlight, though it isn’t just another super-fast Seven. They have been embarrassing supercars for decades. This is something more than that. 

Devotees will have deduced from the name that there is something out of the ordinary afoot. The story begins with Richard Lee, a name well-known in Caterham circles. After building a carbon-bodied K-series Seven for his wife, Lee set his sights on creating the ultimate expression of the Seven ethos. At Autosport International, he connected with Russell Savory of RS Performance - the chap behind the original V8-powered Levante series - and a new collaboration was born.

Unlike the eight "standard" Levantes built on the larger SV chassis, Lee's vision called for a narrower, stiffer S3 chassis - modified by Arch Motors to house the bespoke powerplant - cloaked in full carbon bodywork. Tragically, Lee passed away in 2009 before seeing his creation completed. The current owner acquired the unfinished project from Lee's widow, commissioning Steve Walshaw of SWR to bring the vision to life with RS Performance's continued involvement.

The resulting machine is nothing short of staggering. At its heart sits a 2.3-litre supercharged V6 producing 570hp - an engine that weighs just 83kg, and revs to a stratospheric 10,000rpm. It could go higher, apparently, but they've capped it to protect the six-speed Sadev sequential gearbox. The numbers don’t get any less eye-popping from there: with a wet weight of just 536kg (including 20 litres of fuel), this Levante achieves a power-to-weight ratio of 1,063hp per tonne. That’s senior superbike territory. 

But crude hot rod this is not. The engineering is said to be exquisite throughout, from the carbon fibre propshaft to the Freestyle extra-wide track front suspension with custom pushrods. Quantum three-way adjustable dampers keep everything planted, while a bespoke De Dion rear assembly ensures power gets to the ground rather than being converted into smoke and YouTube views. Despite the eye-watering performance - it's rumoured to be capable of lapping Silverstone GP in under two minutes - the car is said to be ‘easy to drive’, which is some claim for a Seven with a good shout of being among the quickest ever made. 

Happily, you won’t be left to figure it out on your own. The sale includes a dedicated test and shakedown track day with Steve Walshaw himself, who's managed the car for years and will obviously be able to appraise you of its quirks. At almost £100,000, it isn't quite as expensive as the Levante was at launch, though it's not far off. Nevertheless, for someone seeking perhaps the most visceral driving experience this side of a Formula car, it’s hard to argue with ‘Levante Superlight’ as a singular vision - and well worth the asking price on that basis. 


See the full ad

Author
Discussion

Motormouth88

Original Poster:

524 posts

73 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
I think this would be the most insane driving experience possible, for those who can fit in it

Andy665

3,904 posts

241 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Crazy money.

I had the pleasure of owning a beautifully built Westfield with a 5.1 litre dry sumped, Jersey throttle bodied Rover V8 tgat cost the owner £26k to build back in 2006.

Was astonishingly quick and capable and bought by me for £12k

Arsecati

2,583 posts

130 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Mother of jaysus! Probably one of most desirable cars I've seen on here in ages - oooohhh, the thought of taking that out for a proper blast has literally given me tingles!

Robertb

2,576 posts

251 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
It’s less money than I expected, evidently very thorough engineering. Hard to imagine a more thrilling car.

Would love to see a proper review of it.

el romeral

1,465 posts

150 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
I think this would completely blow my mind, as I still think 6 seconds to 60 is not bad going!rofl

cerb4.5lee

36,175 posts

193 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
I'd love a go in this to see what it is like for sure, I'm a fan of Caterham, and I'm a fan of V6's. So a win win really. driving

Water Fairy

6,057 posts

168 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Imagine turning up to a track day in your V8 Atom thinking you're the daddy..........................

TGCOTF-dewey

6,334 posts

68 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
So is this two bike blocks and heads with bespoke crank again, as per the V8 or a totally custom engine?

Griffith4ever

5,427 posts

48 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Water Fairy said:
Imagine turning up to a track day in your V8 Atom thinking you're the daddy..........................
The Atom would probably handle better and put the power down better. Its a much more modern chassis design. This is a guess mind you.

ettore

4,497 posts

265 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Having had a 240bhp Caterham, my mind is boggled by how rapid this must be!

cerb4.5lee

36,175 posts

193 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
ettore said:
Having had a 240bhp Caterham, my mind is boggled by how rapid this must be!
I've just been sat thinking about that as well. My Caterham only has 140bhp, and even that can raise a smile. So goodness knows what this must be like as you say for sure?!

georgeyboy12345

3,825 posts

48 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
I’m interested in this engine - anyone know what it actually is? Is it 2 speed triples on a common crank?

martin12345

735 posts

102 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Cars like this are difficult to fathom as the level of performance is so high it boggles the mind as to how you could ever use anything like all of it (or even approach using it)

I look at the size of the radiator and intercooler and think "that's too small for 500 BHP" and then think that you could only possibly use the 500 BHP for a second or two before having to hit the brakes and then they probably are big enough as normal radiators/intercoolers are sized for continuous use of power which is never going to happen with this car (or similar)

As a reference a friend of mine in the industry told me that whilst car engines are designed and tested to operate for hundreds/thousands of hours at maximum power, motorcross bike engines will fail at less then 10 to 20 hours if you run them at max power on a dyno as they are not designed for continuous operation, but to be as light and small as possible and delivering power for short peaks only

I guess in summary, it's best not to think of this as a car, but as a human guided missile smile

ucb

1,064 posts

225 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
I would imagine that there are a handful of people in the world (probably mostly in the USA this weekend) who might extract anything like the performNcr this car is capable of.

TA14

12,939 posts

271 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
ucb said:
I would imagine that there are a handful of people in the world (probably mostly in the USA this weekend) who might extract anything like the performance this car is capable of.
I was thinking that. Similar (bhp) to ettore above, I have a friend who fitted a Lancia turbo engine in a Westfield and that was incredibly fast 0-60 and a bit more.

Glenn63

3,352 posts

97 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
That must be absolutely ballistic to drive! Those wheels do look to small for over 500bhp to be put down easily bellow 3rd gear though. I wonder how much quicker round a track it is vs say a Caterham 500k at half the price, Id
still like a go though.

wolfie28

863 posts

157 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Incredible machine. Would love a go in one just to experience it.

GreatScott2016

1,784 posts

101 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
Wonderful thing, although I might be able to “slump” into it, getting out of it may just prove to be a challenge too far smile

Robertb

2,576 posts

251 months

Sunday 4th May
quotequote all
This looks like a thread on the car, from 2013. Goes into more detail on the engine build.

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...