RE: How to survive a pandemic - and save a V12

RE: How to survive a pandemic - and save a V12

Friday 10th July 2020

How to survive a pandemic - and save a V12

Lamborghini reports a remarkable return to health as it ponders the new normal



If history is anything to go by, supercar-makers don’t generally do well in tough times.  And nobody, save perhaps for hand sanitiser producers, PPE specialists and Amazon, gets through a global pandemic unscathed. So you’d imagine Lamborghini to be on the apprehensive side of cautious, if not downcast in their appraisal of the situation. But apparently not: the firm’s bigwigs last night reported that orders for its cars were almost back up to where they should be, everyone’s job is secure and optimism high. The contrast with most rivals is stark. 

“All our biggest markets have begun to recover,” noted Giovanni Perosino, Lamborghini’s head of commercial, before showing the virtual roundtable a series of line graphs depicting downward trends for sales in winter and spring, and a steep recovery from May. “The US, Germany, Japan and UK have grown in this way,” he continued, highlighting the manufacturer’s strength in its established markets. China, normally the second biggest, did suffer the longest period of slowdown - but order numbers have almost completely recovered from May. And that’s what matters.

Have a guess what’s driving the return to health? Certainly the just-announced Sian Roadster will have done it no harm, but at just 19 examples, it’s small fry next to Lamborghini’s undisputed sales champion. Last year the Urus was responsible for shooting the manufacturer’s production output up to 8,205 units, a 30 per cent boost. And it’s showed no signs of slowing as we enter a new decade. Were the factory able to run at full, pre-pandemic capacity pace, the Urus would probably be setting additional records through the middle part of 2020.


Admittedly not even Lamborghini expected such a strong performance; the firm was “surprised” to see such resilience in the face of wider industry trends - especially when that resilience is founded on a £165k SUV. Its success begs the obvious question: would the brand consider the production of a second SUV variant, as Porsche did with the Macan?

“I would not recommend this route for Lamborghini,” 56-year-old Perosino replied. “If I have to dream of something [to follow up the success of the Urus], I would dream of a fourth leg model, not just a downscale of the other car.” An additional non-SUV based revenue stream had us daydreaming, too - probably it’s too much to hope that the four-door Estoque concept be revived. Although the VW Group has the perfect platform to underpin such a car…

Elsewhere, Lamborghini has certainly been buoyed by the critical response to its cut-price Huracan Evo RWD, which despite being £40k cheaper than the all-wheel drive model, is arguably better without a front axle to power. A spokesperson told PH that it’s impossible to properly gauge the impact of the two-wheel-drive 610hp V10 supercar, since it launched just as lockdown took hold. But anecdotally the dealers are said to have been “very busy” since its introduction - and the Evo RWD is said to account for about 25 per cent of Huracan orders in Britain. So it's fair to say the model's having an impact.


The Evo RWD’s appeal still centres on its V10, a motor that’s both technically brilliant and exceptionally characterful. Lamborghini has made significant improvements to the Huracan chassis in the Evo generation, but the brand is fully aware that naturally-aspirated engines are a large part of its existing USP. The current 6.5-litre V12, introduced with the Aventador, remains its crowning achievement - a virtual halo in its own right, almost regardless of its setting. 

How long can it realistically remain in production, though? Lamborghini is under no less pressure to improve efficiency than anyone else, and the Sian’s retention of a high-tech hybrid system is notable. Additional electrification might offer Lamborghini’s future product a zero-emission range while remain a V12 at heart. Or might Lambo consider downsizing its twelve-cylinder unit in the hunt for lower fuel consumption? Company chief technical officer Maurizio Reggiani left the door ajar with his response.

“Capacity is an important factor that we need to determine for the future,” he said. “Electric will be fundamental to achieve the performance, and to ensure the CO2.” So all cards are still on the table. But Reggiani’s words suggest that Lamborghini remains committed to securing a future for its V12 - for now at any rate. No doubt that task will become nore difficult in the face of ever-tightening emissions regulations. But with a portfolio that’s clearly driving sales in the right direction, it’s hard to imagine any firm better positioned than Lamborghini to overcome the challenge. Here’s hoping, anyway. Short of a working vaccine, there are few things we’d wish for more in the coming decade. 



Author
Discussion

cobraBLACK

Original Poster:

33 posts

85 months

Friday 10th July 2020
quotequote all
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?

Weekendrebuild

1,004 posts

63 months

Friday 10th July 2020
quotequote all
Not really, if you have worked hard and purchased it yourself you deserve it . To many lazy people in this world.

cobraBLACK

Original Poster:

33 posts

85 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Weekendrebuild said:
Not really, if you have worked hard and purchased it yourself you deserve it . To many lazy people in this world.
It would be nice if life was that simple - you get what you deserve - but people are born into poverty (or money - one of the useless idiots is POTUS) and struggle to get out without resorting to crime or suffer from mental illness. But we're happy for this to continue? The majority of people spend most of their income on mortgage/rent and food with little else to save so finance is a constant worry. Yet capitalism unchecked lets so many around the world have ludicrous amounts of money that they may or may not have earned - and that's okay?

HocusPocus

884 posts

101 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Weekendrebuild said:
Not really, if you have worked hard and purchased it yourself you deserve it . To many lazy people in this world.
Yes, I am self made, worked hard, had bet the farm etc. Even though I should qualify as deserving by your standards, the Lambo thing is not for me.

Sadly this forum is littered with chronically myopic specimens who suffer humanity bypass syndrome. FFS please be kind. People without vast fortunes should not be labelled as 'lazy.

Cold

15,244 posts

90 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Anyone know a reliable supplier of grey smocks and flat caps?

Venturist

3,472 posts

195 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?
Those sales of £165k runarounds support thousands of jobs for ordinary people though, I’d rather that than make them all unemployed.

Buster73

5,060 posts

153 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?
How uncomfortable were you typing that out on a computer/ tablet / phone from the comfort of a centrally heated home that you are able to purchase or rent when so many people live such a terrible life ?

The spinner of plates

17,696 posts

200 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
It would be nice if life was that simple - you get what you deserve - but people are born into poverty (or money - one of the useless idiots is POTUS) and struggle to get out without resorting to crime or suffer from mental illness. But we're happy for this to continue? The majority of people spend most of their income on mortgage/rent and food with little else to save so finance is a constant worry. Yet capitalism unchecked lets so many around the world have ludicrous amounts of money that they may or may not have earned - and that's okay?
You seem to have made this a political ideology thread, but provided nothing more than the ‘waving your hands around in the air’ bit.

If you’ve done any further thinking, which I presume you have, tell me your alternatives and your suggestions and we’ll get into the debate line by line.

It should be a good one smile

Edited by The spinner of plates on Saturday 11th July 08:40

gregf40mark2

74 posts

60 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?
No. Next question?

CDP

7,459 posts

254 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Venturist said:
cobraBLACK said:
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?
Those sales of £165k runarounds support thousands of jobs for ordinary people though, I’d rather that than make them all unemployed.
Where has communism actually worked?

cobraBLACK

Original Poster:

33 posts

85 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
I'm not talking about communism. I'm talking about limiting excessive capitalism. I've got no problem with people earning money and buying what they want - to a limit. I'm talking about the greater sense of humanity. How the top x% have so much wealth but we still have so many people living in poor conditions. The fact that I have central heating is irrelevant and the sort of bs you get in tabloids - the whataboutery that deflects attention from the issue.

CSK1

1,603 posts

124 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Are we on PH? Or an ecologist party forum?
People who have money buy what they actually want. There will always be poor and rich people and fortunately some of the poorer part of the population work themselves up and become rich. So should we all be driving in the same low-budget electric powered car from now on?
They are going this way in Germany, and the energy is coming from coal-powered power stations. How ecological is that?

WilliamWaiver

439 posts

45 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Its a disgrace that government grants to small businesses to save jobs are funding this.
Local lambo dealer told me he has never seen so small businesses come in with £50k deposits.
Shameful

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
I'm not talking about communism. I'm talking about limiting excessive capitalism. I've got no problem with people earning money and buying what they want - to a limit. I'm talking about the greater sense of humanity. How the top x% have so much wealth but we still have so many people living in poor conditions. The fact that I have central heating is irrelevant and the sort of bs you get in tabloids - the whataboutery that deflects attention from the issue.
You seem to assume every homeless person got there through no fault of their own, yet think every rich person has screwed someone over and done it illegally.

The problem is you.

ate one too

2,902 posts

146 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
I'm not talking about communism. I'm talking about limiting excessive capitalism. I've got no problem with people earning money and buying what they want - to a limit. I'm talking about the greater sense of humanity. How the top x% have so much wealth but we still have so many people living in poor conditions. The fact that I have central heating is irrelevant and the sort of bs you get in tabloids - the whataboutery that deflects attention from the issue.
I think you are on the wrong website/forum.

I suggest you go and moan about such things here :- https://peoplesmomentum.com/

Gameface

16,565 posts

77 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
cobraBLACK said:
Is anyone else uncomfortable that a £165k runaround is selling so well whilst homeless people freeze to death and so many people live in poverty and live such a terrible life?
No.

So much so that I bought a new Lamborghini earlier this week.

Captain Smerc

3,020 posts

116 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
And (some) people with vast fortunes should not be labelled as 'lazy.

Twistedheat02

8 posts

51 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Haaaaaa love it. Lambo launched a v12.

Pistonheads forum turns into a politics debate

romac

595 posts

146 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Twistedheat02 said:
Haaaaaa love it. Lambo launched a v12.

Pistonheads forum turns into a politics debate
Haha, yes! Shall we do a reset?

That is a fantastic looking car in a fantastic colour! Great news that Lamborghini are pulling through.

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

254 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
So all it takes is selling out your soul to rebadge an Audi suv?