RE: McLaren unveils new MCL-HY racer for 2027
RE: McLaren unveils new MCL-HY racer for 2027
Today

McLaren unveils new MCL-HY racer for 2027

And alongside its new WEC Hypercar, the 730hp track-only GTR customer version you can actually buy...


Just one look through the Hypercar class of the World Endurance Championship is enough to restore any lost faith in motorsport. From Aston Valkyrie to Cadillac V-Series.R, Peugeot 9X8 to Genesis GMR-001, there’s a multitude of fantastic racers recently introduced to the top tier of sportscar racing. Typically the demise of a Porsche factory effort in a series would be the death knell for a championship, yet the WEC remains as compelling as ever. Ferrari is winning successive Le Mans like it’s the '60s again, the Aston Martin is reminding everyone why V12s are the best engines, and now McLaren is back at the highest level once more with this, the MCL-HY. And yes, they are already talking about the F1’s win at La Sarthe in 1995. Hard not to, really. 

Rubbish name aside, the MCL-HY comes equipped with everything you might expect of a competitive Hypercar. The Valkyrie, for example, is an epic spectacle, but hasn’t exactly been romping away from the field. Whereas the Ferrari 499P, with its twin-turbo V6, has been conspicuously successful. So the McLaren has a twin-turbo V6 as well, which delivers up to 707hp to the rear wheels with some hybrid help. Obviously the MCL-HY is carbon chassis’d, with a minimum weight of 1,030kg. McLaren says that the new car has been ‘developed to balance outright performance with endurance racing efficiency, designed to operate at the very highest level of the FIA World Endurance Championship and the demanding 24 Hours of Le Mans.’

While the orange will be the clearest giveaway to the MCL’s identity, there’s definitely a recognisable McLaren face here as well. Apparently there really has been some input from the road car side as well, though it’s surely likely to have been a small contribution; outright performance obviously beats all other considerations when it comes to the look of a competition machine. McLaren reckons that the appearance of its new Hypercar ‘has been shaped by a tightly integrated collaboration applying world-class engineering and aerodynamics capability from McLaren Racing and drawing on the design expertise of McLaren Automotive, to integrate McLaren’s design DNA.’ 

As for the silver car seen here, that’s a slightly different MCL-HY. With another name that looks like it’s come straight from a Boggle board, it’s an MCL-HY GTR. A badge familiar from the F1, and as resurrected more recently with cars like the P1 and Senna, it’s the track-only, customer variant of the race car, promising an even more extreme experience than ever. If Ferrari can make a 499P Modificata, then McLaren can make an MCL-HY GTR. As has become the norm with these track-only motorsport machines, GTR customers will get incredible opportunities to drive their car, with a six-event programme ‘curated across premier international circuits’ already lined up. Each of those will have driver coaches, pit crew engineers in attendance for billionaires to play at racing driver for the weekend. 

Interestingly, the car itself will be a bit different from the actual Hypercar, forfeiting the hybrid system entirely to leave just the V6 in a 730hp tune. McLaren says the decision has been made for a ‘purer driving experience on track days’, perhaps reflecting the general wariness of hybridisation on planet hypercar. It also points to ‘a simpler ownership model that prioritises accessibility above all else’.

For a car that’s only going to be driven occasionally, and knowing how temperamental hybrids can be if left unused, it’s probably a good decision for arriving and driving. McLaren says first deliveries of the MCL-HY GTR are coming towards the end of next year, so expect the first road car conversion project to be announced in 2028. As for the race car, the rest of 2026 will be spent exhaustively testing, ahead of homologation for next season. Le Mans 2027 will be here before you know it...


Author
Discussion

SDK

Original Poster:

3,080 posts

278 months

The car looks awesome !
Interesting to see they went without any hybrid, following the Valkyrie HY.

Looking forward to driving it in Le Mans Ultimate [Official sim game of the FIA World Endurance Championship and 24 Hours of Le Mans]

Edited by SDK on Tuesday 5th May 11:01

Puddenchucker

5,503 posts

243 months

"...there’s definitely a recognisable McLaren face here as well. "

Er, nope. I give up. You'll have to point it out to me.

Oily76

250 posts

136 months

Puddenchucker said:
"...there s definitely a recognisable McLaren face here as well. "

Er, nope. I give up. You'll have to point it out to me.
It's at the front, I believe smile

But no, not seeing much of their road cars in it, but I'm not familiar with their endurance racers so maybe it looks like the other ones did!

Noe

97 posts

308 months

Just look. Open your eyes. The lights

Great to see this and McLaren hopefully moving and surviving in the right direction

Bernt Tuakrisp

283 posts

225 months

You’ll be on McLarens naughty step for calling papaya “orange”. That’s as heinous as not mentioning Affalterbach ten times in an AMG article.

NGK210

4,668 posts

170 months

Puddenchucker said:
"...there s definitely a recognisable McLaren face here as well. "

Er, nope. I give up. You'll have to point it out to me.
Indeed.
Which face?
With the exception of the F1 and 720/750, the front-ends all look half-baked / unresolved. (Nice derrières, mind.)

Red6

617 posts

81 months

This looks awesome! I see shades of Solus around its design.

silva bika

116 posts

152 months

Noe said:
Just look. Open your eyes. The lights

Great to see this and McLaren hopefully moving and surviving in the right direction
Oh yes. They've both got lights

edoverheels

565 posts

130 months

I think that I’d rather have the car in the background in the first picture

LRDefender

501 posts

33 months

That looks fast....

Krikkit

27,854 posts

206 months

SDK said:
Interesting to see they went without any hybrid, following the Valkyrie HY.
The pukka racer carries the hybrid system, the customer version doesn't.

Presumably that's a) cost-saving and b) much easier for the gentlemen drivers to get to grips with. I remember an interview with Ben Keating the other year, he was saying he'd tried a hypercar but couldn't get on with the hybrid system braking etc and it was way too hard to lock up. If he can't cope I can't blame any mortal for wanting one without.