RE: Lamborghini Huracan Evo: Driven

RE: Lamborghini Huracan Evo: Driven

Thursday 24th January 2019

2020 Lamborghini Huracan Evo | PH Review

The Huracan Evo is here. Can it live up to its new £200k sticker price?



There are several very interesting but highly unimportant things I can now tell you about the Lamborghini Huracan Evo. For instance, if you're careful not to let the powertrain cool down too much between stints out on track, the exhausts will glow as orange as a setting sun before spraying out bright blue flames under full acceleration, as though the afterburners have been lit. This heavily-revised model will also power slide exquisitely away from tighter corners, but only if you've selected the Sport driving mode. Finally, its carbon-ceramic brakes are good for three very quick laps of a Grand Prix circuit, but much more than that will see them begin to wilt.

What I cannot tell you is how well the suspension does or doesn't deal with bumps in the road surface, or whether the steering has been improved when driving on the public highway over the woeful variable-ratio setup in the original Huracan, or how likely the seats are to give you lasting back problems if you spend any more than 30 minutes in their embrace. The media launch for the Huracan Evo afforded us only a handful of laps of the Bahrain GP circuit, though, with no road driving whatsoever. So this was a first impressions exercise rather than the full deep-dive, which will come later on when the first cars arrive in the UK.

Despite having watched several processional Bahrain Grands Prix over the years, plus one or two that were so exciting they'll live long in the memory, I simply didn't recognise the desert circuit in broad daylight. For the last few seasons the race has been run at dusk, so that by the time the chequered flag is being waved the only ambient light comes from the hundreds of floodlights that trace the circuit's flowing curves and its handful of very long straights. Rather than try to navigate an unfamiliar track layout on my own, however, I was able to follow an identical car driven by a young Dutch racer whose previous view of this circuit was through the windscreen not of a road-biased supercar, but his Porsche Supercup 911 GT3. 'Hanging around' seemed not to be in his vocabulary.


So while his bright orange Huracan Evo grew smaller with every sequence of turns, I switched out of Sport mode and into Corsa. Rather than allowing the car to slip and slide and drift away from tighter turns with the rear wheels spinning manically, Corsa mode locks the car down into the track surface and keeps it tidy, neat and precise. It was in this mode that I was able to refine my driving style and claw back precisely no ground whatsoever on my new Dutch friend. Off he went, disappearing around the next corner.

But in the midst of my humbling at the hands of Ruud van Missileboy there was at least a point being demonstrated, one that was both interesting and important. This new Huracan Evo is so much more rewarding to drive than the original model. It might even prove to be more engaging than the brilliant Huracan Performante.

For all its knockout styling and the soaring magnificence of its 5.2-litre naturally-aspirated V10, the original Huracan was actually a touch underwhelming. There simply wasn't enough poise or balance or malleability in its chassis to make you long to drive one over a McLaren 570S or even an Audi R8 V10+. Criminally, it simply wasn't that thrilling a car. The Performante version put that right two years ago, proving at long last there was indeed a world class supercar hidden within Lamborghini's V10 model.


Clearly, then, the Performante would in some way inform the Huracan's mid-life replacement, the Evo. Rather than simply transplant all of the Performante's upgrades and refinements directly into the new model, however, Lamborghini chose instead to borrow that version's engine (rated at the same 640hp at 8,000rpm and 443lb ft at 6,500rpm, but with specific engine management software) and nothing else. For the Huracan Evo's chassis, Lamborghini's engineers went back to the drawing board.

Rear-wheel steering is new. Torque vectoring is new. Lamborghini Dinamica Veicolo Integrata (LDVI) is new. Just about everything relating to vehicle dynamics has been changed or substantially upgraded. LDVI is the central brain that gathers data from all of the car's major functions - including the rear-wheel steering, torque vectoring, magnetic dampers, four-wheel drive, stability control, dynamic steering and the powertrain - makes a vast number of calculations and within 20 milliseconds is able to issue harmonised commands back to all of those functions. It means the various systems work together to achieve the best results possible, rather than the dampers doing one thing and the traction control something different altogether.

Consequently, the Huracan Evo is Lamborghini's most responsive and agile road car yet. More agile, even, than the Performante (and actually a fraction quicker around the handling circuit at Nardo). The system is so advanced it can predict the driver's intention in real time, so that even before they make a particular input, the car and its relevant systems have been primed to deliver the exact corresponding output. If LDVI estimates wrongly, it simply reverts to feedback (what the sensors and gyroscopes detect the driver has actually done) so that nothing too catastrophic can occur. It's new for Lamborghini, but not quite groundbreaking as far as the supercar sector is concerned.


Elsewhere, the bodywork has been revised to improve aerodynamic efficiency and increase downforce seven-fold (which is the same as saying 'from almost none at all to a little'), while the cabin now features a beautifully rendered 8.4-inch touchscreen in the centre console. But whereas Aventador drivers can now - and at long last - choose their own settings for the suspension, stability control, steering, engine and gearbox using the Ego driving mode, the Huracan Evo still does without it. The smaller, lighter, less powerful model doesn't need it, apparently. What that means is that as you cycle through the modes from Strada to Sport and then into Corsa, everything that's switchable gets noisier, sharper, edgier or stiffer. Basically, you still won't go anywhere near Corsa mode on a bumpy road for fear of being boinged over a hedgerow.

The cars we were driving (for three sessions in total) were all fitted with the optional Pirelli P Zero Corsa tyres, which are stickier and more track-focused than the standard P Zeros. On those tyres the new model has a much more obedient front end, which in tighter turns tucks in so immediately because of the rear-wheel steering that you'd swear you were driving the Huracan GT3 racer.

There is still a margin of safety understeer dialled into the chassis in quicker turns and through the very long, rising, fourth-gear right-hander towards the end of the lap you do need to be patient, lest the front end wash right out onto the apron that fringes the circuit itself. But elsewhere you sense a manoeuvrability in the rear axle that's entirely new. The basic chassis balance is much more neutral now, rather than being belligerently nose-led.


The Evo will powerslide as well as any four-wheel drive car if you're so inclined, in Sport mode at least, and you can fling it about and take enormous liberties because it's now so controllable at the limit. Matched with the precision and finesse that you discover in Corsa mode, that gives the new Huracan a much broader operating window than the prescriptive and stubborn original. The Evo is so much more fun for it. There is no longer the option to go without Lamborghini Dynamic Steering, but the variable ratio system is now more intuitive, more consistent and more natural, meaning you can position the car with confidence.

Aside from running out of bite after a few laps the brakes aren't the easiest to modulate on circuit and stability under very heavy braking from high speeds is far from absolute. Overall, however, the Huracan Evo is so much more rewarding to drive at the limit that it feels like an altogether new model, rather than a mid-life overhaul. What's most impressive still is that the new systems and the central brain that tries to predict what you're going to do next manage not to synthesise a thrilling driving experience, but conjure one. You as the driver still feel as though it's your skill that is making the car dance between corners expressively or carve through them neatly.

And the engine? It's still one of the finest performance car power plants on sale today. It's glorious. It doesn't have anything like the mid-range punch of a Ferrari 488 GTB's twin-turbo V8, but its searing top end more than makes up for it. The twin-clutch gearbox, finally, is perfectly suited to track driving. If there is a second question mark hanging over the Huracan Evo - the first being how it actually performs on the road - it is to do with its £206,000 price tag. That means it is no longer a rival for the R8 or the 570S, but for the 488 GTB and the monstrous McLaren 720S. Can it really stand tall in that sort of company? I hereby volunteer my services.


SPECIFICATION - LAMBORGHINI HURACAN EVO
Engine:
5,204cc, V10, normally-aspirated, petrol
Transmission: 7-speed twin-clutch
Power: 640hp @ 8,000rpm
Torque: 443lb ft @ 6,500rpm
0-62mph: 2.9 seconds
Top speed: 202mph
Kerb weight: 1,422kg (dry)
MPG: Fuel consumption and emissions data is in the type approval stage"
CO2: N/A
Price: £206,000













Author
Discussion

Nerdherder

Original Poster:

1,773 posts

97 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
Would love to have seen pictures of those glowing exhausts. What a beast.

Contigo

3,113 posts

209 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
One day hopefully soon. The Huracan (even in Vanilla form) will be mine, oh yes she will.

spanner385

22 posts

101 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
I've loved the shape and size of the Huracan since it's launch, but the lukewarm reviews never made me lust after it. If it now does drive really well, it might just be my new poster car.

_Leg_

2,798 posts

211 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
Where does that leave the three pages of Performante for sale on PH Classified I wonder?

Would you pay £210,000 for a delivery miles Performante or order a £225,000 (I'm guessing) specced brand new Evo? I imagine there'll be an Evo Performante too at some stage.


Gameface

16,565 posts

77 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
When has the R8 ever been a rival to the Huracan?

This looks terrific.

Gibbo205

3,541 posts

207 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
spanner385 said:
I've loved the shape and size of the Huracan since it's launch, but the lukewarm reviews never made me lust after it. If it now does drive really well, it might just be my new poster car.
The reviews of the original Huracan 610-4 are mixed, some complain of understeer, some say its fine and those who own or have owned them say its an awesome car on the road even with the LDS and mag ride.

Don't be put off, I know I am not. smile

Gibbo205

3,541 posts

207 months

Tuesday 22nd January 2019
quotequote all
_Leg_ said:
Where does that leave the three pages of Performante for sale on PH Classified I wonder?

Would you pay £210,000 for a delivery miles Performante or order a £225,000 (I'm guessing) specced brand new Evo? I imagine there'll be an Evo Performante too at some stage.
Huracans already selling from 125k, can see them go a little lower.
Performante already down to 200k, can see those been hit harder, maybe 170-180k soon.
EVO is what 206k base? Maybe discounts from new in a few months?

hondansx

4,566 posts

225 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
_Leg_ said:
Where does that leave the three pages of Performante for sale on PH Classified I wonder?

Would you pay £210,000 for a delivery miles Performante or order a £225,000 (I'm guessing) specced brand new Evo? I imagine there'll be an Evo Performante too at some stage.
Three pages? Maybe take another look. Then check out how many 458 Speciales there are for sale, not to mention the GT3 RS.

I actually think the Performante is a relative bargain on the second hand market, and Lamborghini have priced the facelift Huracan cleverly in my view - like you say you can pick between the two. For me, there's no way I'd swap my Performante as it is much more dramatic inside and out. And then what happens to depreciation once your 'brand new' facelift has a couple of thousand miles on it? For me, it would be like swapping my 997 GT3 for a new 992 Carrera S on the basis the new one is faster; for me that's not the motivation to swap.

dinkel

26,932 posts

258 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
RE: "I was able to follow an identical car driven by a young Dutch racer whose previous view of this circuit was through the windscreen not of a road-biased supercar, but his Porsche Supercup 911 GT3. 'Hanging around' seemed not to be in his vocabulary."

Max, Jesse or Daan?

wab172uk

2,005 posts

227 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Always looks a heavy car to me.

Never been a fan of the Huracan, but this Evo edition looks good

julian64

14,317 posts

254 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Saw a Huracan and a Gallardo 570 superlegga side by side last week.

I have to say as I'm getting older I think less about the top trumps aspect of the cars performance I would never use and more about what looks better.

To my eyes the Gallardo was better, cleaner and less fussy design. I hope these new cars push the prices of the older cars down cos that's where my money would go.

NicoG

640 posts

208 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Gameface said:
When has the R8 ever been a rival to the Huracan?

This looks terrific.
I would suppose that to many people, the similarities of the powertrain, performance, and electronic architecture of the two cars are too similar to ignore, and thus they are competitors.

The 'gap' in the respective performances figures of the two cars is also artificially maintained - it is simple to mod the ECU of an R8 V10 to make it go like a Huracan, same goes for previous Gen R8 V10 and Facelift Gallardo.

Obviously some would maintain that the different badge, different looks different price, adequately maintain the differentiation, and that they are not therefore competitors, but to me, it is very very hard to ignore the fact that what matters in the two cars is almost identical, and that a used R8V10 Plus is what, 60-70% the cost of its contemporary Huracan?
Same with the First Gen R8 V10 and Gallardo facelift.

Doesn't stop me loving this, the earlier Huracan and the Gallardo facelift.

Edited by NicoG on Wednesday 23 January 09:41


Edited by NicoG on Wednesday 23 January 14:54

mylesmcd

2,532 posts

219 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
  • needs Lambo doors for that price**

Gameface

16,565 posts

77 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
I disagree. One is £140k. One is £200k.

Why would VAG have two similar cars in the same price bracket?

The fact they are stablemates precludes them being rivals.

NordicCrankShaft

1,723 posts

115 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Those wheels are beautiful!

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
NordicCrankShaft said:
Those wheels are beautiful!
They did look go on the Focus ST first.

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Gameface said:
I disagree. One is £140k. One is £200k.

Why would VAG have two similar cars in the same price bracket?

The fact they are stablemates precludes them being rivals.
It's only like the Octavia VRS, Golf GTI & Leon Cupra (but on a more expensive scale) - they are all so closely related, even if they are different in power output etc, they are competitors; even if some people would only consider the premium product because that is what they want & only that will do.

Gameface

16,565 posts

77 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
We'll agree to disagree.

mat205125

17,790 posts

213 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
Lovely car, however who's continuing to sign off these hideous black-painted-with-machined-spoke wheels.

They're on everything these days, and ruin the aesthetics of the design of these cars (Aston Martin's range is plagued by them)

They just look like the disgusting multi-fit crap that gets added to knackered hatches adorned with Ripspeed stickers from a decade ago ..... or more recently the oversized ugliness that gets added by companies like Kahn (whatever happened to Mansory??)

NicoG

640 posts

208 months

Wednesday 23rd January 2019
quotequote all
mat205125 said:
Lovely car, however who's continuing to sign off these hideous black-painted-with-machined-spoke wheels.

They're on everything these days, and ruin the aesthetics of the design of these cars (Aston Martin's range is plagued by them)

They just look like the disgusting multi-fit crap that gets added to knackered hatches adorned with Ripspeed stickers from a decade ago ..... or more recently the oversized ugliness that gets added by companies like Kahn (whatever happened to Mansory??)
Halle -fking- Lujah !!! Someone agrees with me smile

What happened to wheels looking like the beautiful intricate things they are !!

The design of a wheel makes or breaks a car aesthetically for me, and black wheels just guarantee a fail, however beautiful the actual design COULD look.
these part-polished offering are only marginally better.

They just look like aftermarket ste to my eyes, every time