RE: The mad and the bad - Geneva 2015

RE: The mad and the bad - Geneva 2015

Thursday 5th March 2015

The mad and the bad - Geneva 2015

Extreme, leftfield, outrageous and just plain bizarre - the essential round-up of Geneva's maddest cars



Where to begin in a Geneva odyssey of oddness that out-bizarred itself this year? Let's start with the hypercar battle that's reaching new heights in 2015 - so much so that the Bugatti Veyron La Finale edition feels just so passe (literally so: it's now out of production). A mere 1,183hp? Pah!

Don't forget the other Koenigsegg...
Don't forget the other Koenigsegg...
Sweden's torch-bearer, Koenigsegg, has gone and invented a new genre for its Regera - it's apparently a "megacar". This new plush-lux model justifies Koenigsegg's description of it as "bipolar" by having a truly mental power output. Combining a twin-turbo 5.0-litre V8 with electric power, the power is "way over 1,500hp" and there's more than 1,475lb ft of torque - gulp. Makes the Agera RS also announced at the show seem a pansy with its mere 1,160hp, although as a stripped-out hardcore thing, it's actually quicker.

Following its divine P4/5 of 2006, Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus launched the new SCG003 in a real carbonfibre fest of a display. This rather fabulous animal is powered by an HPD Honda-derived 3.5-litre V6 twin-turbo developed by Autotecnica Motori. Other powertrains are mooted, as the whole rear frame is designed to be exchangeable. Price? £1.6 million for the SCG003S (Stradale) road version, and a whopping £2.35 million for the SCG003C racer.

This is a Zenvo. It has 1,100hp
This is a Zenvo. It has 1,100hp
With the new Aston Martin Vulcan retailing for £1.8m, galactic prices were a real talking point of the show. My most jaw-dropping moment came on the Brabus stand, when I discovered the price of its restored Merc 300SL - £1.37m!

Minnow countries played big this year. Danish hypercar maker Zenvo turned up with two 1,104hp ST1s. Updates include a new seven-speed gearbox, claimed to be fastest-shifting single-clutch transmission in the world at 35 milliseconds between changes. Spain's Spania GTA Spano (got that?) has been tweaked, too. This titanium-and-carbon-fibre twin-turbo V10 hypercar has 925hp and a claimed V-max of 230mph.

Even Liechtenstein was represented by its very own electric hypercar. The Quant F is a battery car like no other, a huge - 5.26-metre long - four-seater. With 1,090hp to draw on, it can allegedly travel up to 500 miles on a single charge at speeds up to 190mph, and do 0-62 in 2.8 seconds. Eat my electric dust, Tesla P85D.

An autonomous racing car you say? Right...
An autonomous racing car you say? Right...
The outer limits
Daftest car of the show by some margin was the ED Torq, whose unveiling was swamped by middle-aged men gawping at the implausibly long legs of a white jump-suited Italian model. As for the Torq, its odd windowless design is down to the fact that it drives itself... in competitive racing. Er, you what? Its electric powertrain punches out fully 1,328lb ft of torque (hence the name).

Every year, my favourite Swiss loon Franco Sbarro exhibits show cars created by his 'Espera Sbarro' design school students, with wildly varying degrees of artistic success. This year's effort, the Aria, is more attractive than normal, and being based on an Impreza it should actually perform, too. At the other extreme is the Triple, an aesthetically bereft three-seater designed to give two passengers a thrill ride around a track. Shame the thrill is tempered by the fact you look like you're stuck in an episode of Wacky Races. And as for Sbarro's execrable Maserati-based Grand Prix, I've posted a pic of the driver's seat, as I simply can't figure out how you could possibly sit in it.

Want your passenger to steer? Get a Rinspeed!
Want your passenger to steer? Get a Rinspeed!
The Rinspeed Budii was one of the seemingly hundreds of self-driving cars at the show. Intriguingly, it has a swivelling steering wheel so that either passenger can steer - although not, curiously, use the pedals, which remain fixed. Ahem.

Largest ratio of stand to empty space went to mothballed German brand, Borgward, which turned up with a very large logo, a single 50-year old car and Sir Stirling Moss. I'm not sure anyone knew quite what was going on.

Best name of the show goes to a car called Deirdre. The Deirdre Aventor AW330 is an electric three-wheeled racing car made of recycled plastic (naturally), and has the distinction of being piloted by seven-time sidecar world champion Rolf Biland.

Light fantastic
Lightweight sports cars have not been forgotten. Great to see Radical at Geneva for the first time, showing a Swiss-registered RXC Turbo 500. This is the model in which Radical hopes to blitz its own Nurburgring lap record, currently held by the SR8 LM at 6min 48sec.

Because 6:48 round the 'ring is a bit tardy
Because 6:48 round the 'ring is a bit tardy
Japanese design house Phiaro was another debutant at Geneva, presenting the P75 Cipher, a kind of Ariel Atom in clothing. It may only have a 144hp 1.5-litre engine, but it only weighs 596kg. Sadly, it's a one-off with no production future.

The EDAG Light Cocoon was presented as "bionically optimised" - no, us neither - but the backlit light show playing on its Jack Wolfskin textile skin was kind of mesmeric. And cloth body panelling surely brings a new meaning to lightweight.

One of the most tasteful cars in this round-up is the Magna Mila Plus, a plug-in hybrid sports car with four-wheel drive and a two-seat cabin made of bioplastic (whatever that is). It's more theory than practice, however, as it's a non-running one-off, unless a manufacturer picks it up, which they won't. They never do.

Good taste was also evident in the Touring Superleggera Berlinetta Lusso, a lightly restyled Ferrari F12 that's actually going into production - just five examples will be made.

Are there any words?
Are there any words?
Tuners make you breathe less easily
New vacuums of taste sucked the air from traumatised visitors' lungs this year. Mansory was once again head and shoulders above - er, I mean below - everyone else in this department. Its Bentley GT Race looked ghastly in some kind of Spearmint Rhino paint effect, and not even the prospect of 1,001hp (yup) could tempt me to climb aboard. Mansory's AMG G63-based Sahara Edition was an 828hp camo-wrap of wrong. And its chromed golfing travesty, the Garia Prism, is claimed to be the world's fastest golf buggy (0-25mph in under two seconds) and can be yours for a mere £55,000.

Swiss tuner FAB Design wasn't far behind, with questionable interpretations of the McLaren 650S and Merc G-Wagen. Hamann's five-car display included a BMW M4 boosted to 517hp and wrapped in what appeared to be a layer of vomit. For me, though, it was Rolls-Royce that presented the tackiest car of the show: the Serenity with its beflowered silk interior. Ugh.

[The lead image is the EDAG Light Cocoon. Just thought you would like to know.]

Spania GTA Spano
Spania GTA Spano
Quant-F
Quant-F
Sbarro Triple
Sbarro Triple
Sbarro Aria
Sbarro Aria
Deirdre Aventor AW330
Deirdre Aventor AW330
Phiaro P75 Cipher
Phiaro P75 Cipher
Magna Mila Plus
Magna Mila Plus
Touring Berlinetta Lusso
Touring Berlinetta Lusso
Mansory Garia Prism
Mansory Garia Prism
Hamann M4
Hamann M4
Sbarro GP
Sbarro GP
Borgward
Borgward
Author
Discussion

soad

Original Poster:

32,960 posts

178 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
quotequote all
That Golf car is a bargain. laugh

soad

Original Poster:

32,960 posts

178 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
quotequote all
irocfan said:
I love the fact that all this madness and tastelessness exists - no it's not my cuppa in many cases but it beats the whole beige uniformity of Audi/BMW
Yes, it's enough to make you grin! biggrin

soad

Original Poster:

32,960 posts

178 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
quotequote all
Cotty said:
Wow I really like this but don't know what the hell it is
EDAG Light Cocoon Concept - 2015 Geneva Motor Show
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ht00JqyoTeM