RE: Lamborghini preps 'few-off' hypercar for Monterey

RE: Lamborghini preps 'few-off' hypercar for Monterey

Friday 27th June

Lamborghini preps 'few-off' hypercar for Monterey

From Reventon to Sian, the special edition Lambos often preview the future - and now the Fenomeno is coming


Lamborghini can always be relied upon to come up with an incredible limited edition supercar. Even the Sterratos and SVJs of this world are pretty special to begin with, but when it moves to the ultra-rare stuff - fewer than 100 units, sometimes just 50 or less - Lambo throws everything it has at them. Supercapacitors, CarbonSkin interiors, Pyrosic exhausts, 3D-printed vents - proper Wayne Enterprises level stuff. Very Lamborghini, basically. 

Lots of it makes its way to volume production Sant’Agata supercars as well, which makes the confirmation of a new ‘few-off’ hypercar for Monterey in August all the more interesting. The model, thought to be called Fenomeno - ‘phenomenon’ in quite a few European languages, with the name trademarked by Lambo earlier this year - is described as the ‘latest breathtaking display of Lamborghini design that celebrates its brand values.’ 

We’ve been here before, of course. According to the manufacturer, the ‘few-off’ run began with the Reventon, that outrageous creation from 2007 that previewed a lot of what was to come with the Aventador: carbon composite panels and LCD instruments, most notably. The chassis for the 20 coupes and 15 roadsters was a mix of steel with carbon reinforcements, and unsurprisingly, they remain very collectible indeed: this hardtop is £1.65m

The Sesto Elemento followed in 2010, a very clear precursor to the Huracán as it turned out. Carbon fibre was its USP, including the forged composite that would go on to mark out the Performante; it weighed in at just 999kg, and still with the mighty V10 providing the power. Only 20 were ever made, a fascinating insight into what might have been had hybridisation not been the required path. The Sesto Elemento is about half the weight of a Revuelto

Well done to anyone who remembered the Veneno, next in the canon of top-tier Lamborghinis. ‘A track car built for the road’, its contribution to the future was the manual rear wing load adjustment system, a first for Lambo and a feature that went on to the SVJ and STO. It seems very likely, then, that the Fenomeno will debut some kind of upcoming technology. Because the trend continues throughout the few-offs; the Centenario, which in 2016 marked 100 years since Ferruccio’s birth, featured rear-wheel steering and the central infotainment touchscreen. Imagine a new Lamborghini today without those. 40 were made across two body styles, and today a Centenario is one of the most valuable Sant’Agata supercars on the planet - set aside a couple of million

By contrast, the Sián FKP 37 was almost commonplace, with 63 units made— more than 50 per cent extra. Just two were allocated to the UK, and amazingly enough one is in the PH classifieds; it might require even more than two million. Its significance was introducing electrification to the V12 Lamborghini through supercapacitors. There was more than a bit of Revuelto to the way it looked, too. Finally, the most recent few-off was the Countach, wrapping the Sian’s hybrid architecture in a more classic suit.

There were 112 produced (because the original was known as LP 112 in development), and one of its notable innovations was a photochromic roof. Not exactly supercapacitors, but you can bet on it being a very popular Urus option when it makes the extras list. Lamborghini Edinburgh has a gorgeous red one with 6,000 miles under its white wheels for— you’ve guessed it— a couple of million quid. 

It's some back catalogue for the Fenomeno to follow, then. Lamborghini isn’t saying much for the moment about what’s coming in August, though it does suggest that the new car ‘will map out the future of Lamborghini super sports cars, celebrating the identity and vision of the company.’ Which is certainly interesting given the calibre and influence of the previous specials. Stephan Winkelmann added: “Produced in extremely limited runs, these models are milestones in Lamborghini history in terms of performance, customization, and uniqueness. They present an opportunity to unlock our full design potential and break new ground with innovative technical solutions, taking a vision of the future and making it available today.” Monterey Car Week can’t come soon enough.  


Author
Discussion

LotusOmega375D

Original Poster:

8,673 posts

168 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
I wonder if it will have a dash plaque announcing “One of a few”?

MDL111

7,727 posts

192 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
maybe you can negotiate the price - can I get a few (insert currency) off if I pay cash right now

phil4

1,472 posts

253 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?

MDL111

7,727 posts

192 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
I would have thought so but given it is used multiple times incl. the headline, it is a bit of a head scratcher ...

Motormouth88

600 posts

75 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
For me, peak Lambo design came with the Reventon and subsequent Aventador

Peterpetrole

716 posts

12 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
The new Countach has grown on me very slightly, gone up a notch.

Now at notch 1.

br d

8,810 posts

241 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
MDL111 said:
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
I would have thought so but given it is used multiple times incl. the headline, it is a bit of a head scratcher ...
Surely it just means not many, like one off but a few more?

Paul_M3

2,495 posts

200 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
MDL111 said:
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
I would have thought so but given it is used multiple times incl. the headline, it is a bit of a head scratcher ...
In pure English terms you'd be correct. But Engineering (and purchasing) often use 'off' instead of 'of'.

i.e. You'd see something like: M8 x 12 stainless steel bolts. Quantity: 3 off

MDL111

7,727 posts

192 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Paul_M3 said:
MDL111 said:
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
I would have thought so but given it is used multiple times incl. the headline, it is a bit of a head scratcher ...
In pure English terms you'd be correct. But Engineering (and purchasing) often use 'off' instead of 'of'.

i.e. You'd see something like: M8 x 12 stainless steel bolts. Quantity: 3 off
interesting, thank you - I did not know that

fantheman80

1,969 posts

64 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Peterpetrole said:
The new Countach has grown on me very slightly, gone up a notch.

Now at notch 1.
I was just thinking the same- I didnt like it when it came out, not enough true to the original, but that looks stunning and I was a bit wrong

'Few Off us are out tonight' - nah its wrong, its winding me up a bit

Dr G

15,583 posts

257 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Fenomeno...



silly

Fetchez la vache

5,765 posts

229 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Do doo be-do-do

Kobra

12 posts

196 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
That thing does look like something out of mr Wayne's garage. Especially the ass and in matte black / graffiti.

donkmeister

10,263 posts

115 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
No.

When talking in terms of a production quantity it's always off. You want one thing made? It's 1-off. You want ten of those? That's a 10-off.

"Off" is a contraction of "off the line".

donkmeister

10,263 posts

115 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Paul_M3 said:
MDL111 said:
phil4 said:
Few off? Don't they/you mean Few of?
I would have thought so but given it is used multiple times incl. the headline, it is a bit of a head scratcher ...
In pure English terms you'd be correct. But Engineering (and purchasing) often use 'off' instead of 'of'.

i.e. You'd see something like: M8 x 12 stainless steel bolts. Quantity: 3 off
Certainly seen in trades, engineering and procurement, but catering also.
During my undergraduate days I worked in a restaurant and saw this usage both with suppliers and orders for functions.

Slowlygettingit

785 posts

56 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Dr G said:
Fenomeno...



silly
Any post using that image deserves this
bounce

InductionRoar

2,103 posts

147 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Motormouth88 said:
For me, peak Lambo design came with the Reventon and subsequent Aventador
The Miura has yet to be equalled in my opinion.

Slowlygettingit

785 posts

56 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Seems my other post was deleted….

I don’t like new lambos but would love a Reventon.
Having seen one at the FoS the inner child hit puberty. TMI?

I’d quite like a new Countach as well.

spikyone

1,740 posts

115 months

Friday 27th June
quotequote all
Kobra said:
That thing does look like something out of mr Wayne's garage. Especially the ass and in matte black / graffiti.
How have you gleaned that from a picture of a car underneath a cover? All of the cars in this article that aren't covered are previous very limited editions; in the order they appear in the article:

Reventon
Centenario
Sian FKP37
Countach LPI 800-4

I saw all of them, along with the Sesto Elemento and Veneno, at the Lamborghini factory museum last year. And they're all wildly spectacular, special things with attention to detail that simply doesn't come across from photos like these - you need to walk around and drink in all of the fine details. Seeing all of them together was spine-tingling.

I have no doubt this new Fenomeno will be equally incredible. Just a pity about the daft name...

Carl_VivaEspana

14,528 posts

277 months

Saturday 28th June
quotequote all
Peterpetrole said:
The new Countach has grown on me very slightly, gone up a notch.

Now at notch 1.
Yes indeed.

Lambo design probably feels the need to follow it up with a monstrosity but I keep an open mind.