RE: Lanzante-converted Senna GTR for sale

RE: Lanzante-converted Senna GTR for sale

Tuesday 6th May

Lanzante-converted Senna GTR for sale

Road-legal GTR keeps everything that made McLaren's track car special - but adds indicators and reversing lights


It takes stones the size of boulders to convert a race car into something that can - legally - be used on the public road. Racing cars are, by their very nature, as uncompromising as they get, and getting one prepared for road use isn’t as easy as jacking up the ride height and calling it a day. Extreme modifications have to be made, from fitting a quieter exhaust system to sanding down all the pointy carbon fibre bits, plus all the rigmarole of getting a V5 and MOT for the thing. 

Hats off to those who’ve been brave enough to go through the procedure, because nothing turns heads quite like a fully-fledged racing machine mixing it with family hatchbacks and crossovers. You may recall a couple of years ago when a brilliantly barmy individual decided to convert their 1998 Mercedes CLK LM, the very car that started that year’s Le Mans 24 Hours from pile, to use on public roads. So the sky really is the limit with these things, and it wouldn’t be a surprise if some of the current Le Mans Hypercars break from the confines of a circuit in the near future (rumour has it that Porsche’s working on a road-going 963 as we speak). But if you don’t fancy the hassle of chopping up a racing car with a storied past to use in public, then you may want to have a look at this road-legal McLaren Senna GTR.

Let’s clear something up straight off the bat. No, the Senna GTR isn’t technically a racing car, but rather a track-only toy for McLaren’s most affluent of customers. That said, it’s believed that the Senna GTR was conceived as a racing car, the intention being to enter it in the then-booming GTE Pro class at Le Mans to battle it out with the Porsche 911, Ferrari 488, Chevrolet Corvette and Aston Martin Vantage. And if you take a closer look at the launch car that appeared at the 2018 Geneva Motor Show, you’ll notice the FIA-grade position lights behind the doors and a humungous, GTE-style diffuser. But with a Formula 1 team in shambles (how things have changed!), the project was apparently shelved and the Senna GTR adapted for customer use. 

On the bright side, without balance of performance and regulations getting in the way, McLaren could run the GTR at maximum power and could bolt on even bigger, more complicated wings. The 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 was carried over from the standard Senna, albeit turned up to 814hp, and came bolted to a quicker seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. Then there’s the suspension, which came straight from the 720S GT3 car, while bigger dive planes up front and a much larger rear spoiler helped generate 1,000kg at 155mph. Had McLaren been able to run the car in that configuration at Le Mans, it would have lapped the field within the first hour. Probably. 

So Lanzante had its work cut out when Senna GTR customers came asking for road-legal conversions. The work, which came to the tune of £230k according to the seller, included additional catalytic converters, the standard Senna’s fuel system and seats, and even an alarm system. Of course, you also get the necessities like reversing lights, indicators and a handbrake, but Petersfield's finest also did its best to make the GTR a little easier to live with by fitting a nose-lift system and adjusting the suspension to better handle the public highway.

Incredibly, it looks no less savage than the track version, still retaining its towering wing and colourful livery which is reportedly inspired by the RX-78-2 Gundam suit from the Japanese anime series Gundam Warriors. Don’t see that every day, do you? Give the seller a bell if you’d like to find out how much it costs. It obviously won’t be cheap, with GTRs usually changing hands for well over a million. As for the standard Senna, those can be had for considerably less, with this 2018 car costing £749,950. It’ll be easier to live with and is still very dramatic to look at, but if it’s a showstopper you’re after, this GTR has you well and truly covered. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Benzinaio

Original Poster:

272 posts

15 months

Tuesday
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As garish as you like and yet still has black wheels.
Certainly not boring at least, and there's something to be said for that these days.

Motormouth88

522 posts

73 months

Tuesday
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Just when I thought I’d seen the ugliest Senna…another one pops up.

georgeyboy12345

3,825 posts

48 months

Tuesday
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I’d feel like a right tit driving that, either on the road or on track

darreni

4,139 posts

283 months

Tuesday
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Very nice, but wtf are you going to do with it on the road?
Surely it would have remained better as a track/ race car.

Kipsrs

568 posts

62 months

Tuesday
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georgeyboy12345 said:
I’d feel like a right tit driving that, either on the road or on track
Bet you’d still like to drive it nonetheless though?
I too think it’s a tad ott and also my first thought was similar to the last poster, why would you drive it on the road, surely it would be far more at home on the track?

ntiz

2,515 posts

149 months

Tuesday
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darreni said:
Very nice, but wtf are you going to do with it on the road?
Surely it would have remained better as a track/ race car.
Do what it has been doing for at least the last 6 months driving around central London as all the spotters faint.

VladD

8,095 posts

278 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Kipsrs said:
georgeyboy12345 said:
I’d feel like a right tit driving that, either on the road or on track
Bet you’d still like to drive it nonetheless though?
I too think it’s a tad ott and also my first thought was similar to the last poster, why would you drive it on the road, surely it would be far more at home on the track?
I don't think making it road legal prevents you from still using it on track.

smilo996

3,276 posts

183 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Seems to be in its natural environment here - to be seen. Surrounded by hormonal teens, faces behind phones, recording and uploading it to the socials.
Cannot imagine how unpleasant it would be on British roads as pictured.
PR trip, like the fade for making sports cars into bad rally cars a few years ago.
But good money into the back pocket of Lanzante....

thegreenhell

18,935 posts

232 months

Tuesday
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IMI A

9,806 posts

214 months

Tuesday
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rofl

Jon_S_Rally

3,883 posts

101 months

Tuesday
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smilo996 said:
Seems to be in its natural environment here - to be seen. Surrounded by hormonal teens, faces behind phones, recording and uploading it to the socials.
Cannot imagine how unpleasant it would be on British roads as pictured.
PR trip, like the fade for making sports cars into bad rally cars a few years ago.
But good money into the back pocket of Lanzante....
Do you like anything? laugh I'm not sure I've ever seen a positive response from you to a news story on this site...

If someone is driving this car around and other people are enjoying taking and sharing pictures of it, what's the problem?

WPA

11,543 posts

127 months

Tuesday
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Surely a standard Senna is more than good enough as a road / track car.

Amanitin

460 posts

150 months

Tuesday
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somebody should take this and convert it to a track only special for say 300k
then it would finally make sense

The Pistonsdead

5,027 posts

220 months

Tuesday
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Motormouth88 said:
Just when I thought I’d seen the ugliest Senna…another one pops up.
Subjectively look wise I think it's ok

ImFeelingSaucy

233 posts

37 months

Tuesday
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Jeez - so many grumpy old f@rts on here today.

Yes, it's kind of pointless making it road legal but if you have the money and fancy it then why not?

It would certainly cheer me up if I saw it on the road.


RSbandit

2,870 posts

145 months

Tuesday
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Saw one of these ripping around Brands Hatch on Sunday (doing some demo laps)...what a thing!

big_rob_sydney

3,599 posts

207 months

Wednesday
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I genuinely dont get the whole "race car for the road" thing. Yes, its quick. But there are plenty of quick cars. There are too many compromises. Most people have to do things like shopping, and how popular is a tip run in the UK?

I would love to see this in a racing series, for sure, but think its just wasted on the road.

Jon_S_Rally

3,883 posts

101 months

Wednesday
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big_rob_sydney said:
I genuinely dont get the whole "race car for the road" thing. Yes, its quick. But there are plenty of quick cars. There are too many compromises. Most people have to do things like shopping, and how popular is a tip run in the UK?

I would love to see this in a racing series, for sure, but think its just wasted on the road.
But no one who owns this is going to go shopping in it, or use it for tip runs. They'll have other cars for that. You buy this as a plaything; something to drive when you just want to experience something wild. For that purpose, the compromises don't matter. If anything, they're part of the experience.

I would go as far as to argue that, by making this car road legal, it's less wasted. Track only cars spend most of their time in the garage, because trailering them around requires time and effort. By making it road legal, it can be driven - and therefore enjoyed - more often.

mikebradford

2,838 posts

158 months

Wednesday
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Looks brilliant.
Not sure how comfortable it would be commuting in it, however plenty of people's day would be brightened up seeing this drive by.

quitequiet

1 posts

Wednesday
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The original Senna was too subtle, so this fills that niche nicely