RE: Lamborghini Murcielago
RE: Lamborghini Murcielago
Tuesday 29th July 2003

Lamborghini Murcielago

Our Canadian correspondent has been enjoying himself a little too much! Nauman Farooq drives the awesome Murcielago


It was a beautiful, sunny day, the sort of day that makes people say "God must be smiling". I can't say how much of a grin God had on his face, but I had the biggest smile on mine as I floored the mighty V12 of the Lamborghini Murcielago in second gear.

You smile not only because of the sound of the engine. Not only because you are driving one of the most exclusive cars on the planet. You smile because the G-forces produced by the acceleration stretches out the muscles on your face. Yep, it truly feels face distortingly fast!

Background

As you well know, Lamborghini has been producing beautiful, fast cars for the last 40 years. The Miura was probably their first real hit car - and one of the most beautiful ever - but the car that made Lamborghini the stuff of every schoolboy's dreams was the wildly styled Countach.

The Countach stayed in production from 1974 to 1990 and then bowed out to make way for the awesome Diablo. The Diablo saw many variations, everything from luxo Roadster models to stripped out SV models, ending life with the 6.0.

In 2002, the Diablo seized production, and the workers at the San't Agata factory started production on the Murcielago. Murcielago, named after a courageous bull is certainly one amazing car. Just look at the figures.

V12

It has a 6.2 litre, 48 valve, V12, that produces 580 hp, and 479 lb/ft of torque. That power is tunneled through a six-speed manual gearbox, and then finds its way to the tarmac via a sophisticated four-wheel drive system. All this equates to some pretty amazing performance stats. The famed 0-60mph run takes just 3.8 seconds (Motor Trend recently recorded one at 3.51) and it will max out at 205 mph, guaranteed. The figures are one thing, the experience is another - it's fast, bloody hell fast!

Designed by Luc Donkerwolke, the Murcielago shares none of the fussiness of the Countach, instead opting for beauty through simplicity. Every detail, every angle looks perfect.

The design is clean, absent of any gaudy wings and huge air ducts. It does have air ducts ofcourse, but even they are discreet. When shut off or sitting cool, the air ducts remain inline with the body, but if the ambient temperature goes above 32 Celsius, then air ducts extend out of the side of the car, just behind the cabin. As for huge wings producing downforce, you won't find it here, just a small lip spoiler, that stands up at speed.

The underside of the car and that lip spoiler produce enough downforce to keep this from becoming a flying object. Not only do these features provide function, they also look great.

Doors

A famous design feature for any top-line Lamborghini, are the scissor doors. Swing them open and you are greeted to a surprisingly spacious interior. Watch yourself while entering the car, as it's not very hard to bang your head on the roof or the door. Once inside, you find the seats to be very supportive, with massive shoulder embracing bolsters - which also cut out on your three-quarter vision.

The seat to steering relationship is very easy to set, as the steering both tilts and telescopes. The pedal box however is quite tight. It's not as bad as things used to be in the days of the Countach, but its still not very spacious, thanks to the front wheel wells and the fat transmission tunnel. Best then to wear slim shoes.

Once seated, you find that you do sit very much in the middle of the car. You are far from the door, and the dash seems very big and distant. That makes aiming the car a little hard when you first set out, but you get used to it very easily.

Easy

It is also very easy to use the clutch and gearbox. The clutch is light, and the gear change is very easy too. It is not the sort of transmission that would allow fast gear changes, but that doesn't matter, because any time you lose in changing the gear gets eclipsed when you pull the clutch out and jam the throttle!

Once I got used to the feel and the dimensions of the car, I started tapping into its power reserve. The very instant you tap the throttle, the engine bursts into action and flings you forward like someone has hit the hyperspace button. It's reassuring then that the brakes are also good enough to bring you back down to legal speeds in a hurry.

The sound that this engine and exhaust makes is addictive. I can't remember the last time an engine sound putting such a huge smile on my face. It's no engine bay behind the cabin - it's the devil's workshop!

Triple figures are reached very quickly and it continues to pull like a train. Up until now, I thought a Porsche 911 Twin Turbo was fast - which of course it is - but the Murcielago feels like its in a different league. It is stable too, very stable, which makes it all the easier to go ballistically fast. This is truly a supercar.

Skilled through the Bends

Years ago supercars were fast in a straight line, but some lacked finesse through the twisties. Not anymore. This massive beast is surprisingly easy to toss around twists and turns. The steering might not give the greatest feel of what the front wheels are doing, but still, the grip is amazing, and now you can carve through corners as if in a small roadster. In fact, it does remind me a lot of the Audi TT. Audi owned Lamborghini may not be comfortable with the analogy, but if you can imagine an Audi TT with nearly 600 hp you'll be getting closer to what this car feels like!

Whilst the Murcielago may be one step down from the likes of the Carrera GT and Enzo, it's an important step. This is a supercar that you could live with.  The Murcielago is much more user friendly. Throw in a couple of bags and it's no problem going away for the weekend, knowing the the journey will be comfortable and fun. It even has computer controlled suspension so you can choose the ride firmness from four different settings depending on your mood.

Your Time is Up

I could do this all day, but my time was soon up and I returned to Lamborghini Canada's head office. Michel Camilleri, the Sales Manager is confident that selling 12 cars a year at a price tag of CAN$410,000 will be a doddle. It's not hard to see why, once you have driven this car.

This raging bull is one of the best of the supercar breed. I want one, very badly indeed.

Author
Discussion

rambofanso

Original Poster:

80 posts

274 months

Tuesday 29th July 2003
quotequote all
Nice Murkie, but I still think that my Metalic black Diablo VT
would stop a speeding train far quicker, as Quentin 'quotes'. I just think its more of an awesome handfull & what a supercar should be,Agressive,Stunning,....Italian...., built from the heart & not by Germans! Rob Menghini

smele

1,284 posts

309 months

Wednesday 30th July 2003
quotequote all
Why are the doors open in nearly every picture?

It almost looks a bit bland to me. I mean not that it is or anything, but maybe just a bit too much German influence in the design.

robert farago

108 posts

295 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Are you 100% sure that the Diablo "seized production" in 2002? Given the marque's history of producing cars so poorly constructed that those in-the-know considered them "the playboy's paperweight", it seems plausible enough.

And yet, I can't help but wonder if Laborghini's German masters have maintained Italian supercar charactersitics: drop dead goreous looks, crude chassis, torture chamber ergonomics, 12 cylinders of unrestrained fury, dubious (not to say lethal) handling and less visibility than an Al Queda terrorist cell.

Just wondering...

Alex

9,978 posts

309 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
"seized production", LOL!

These types of mistake must CEASE!

whitkenight_t

4 posts

274 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Very nicely written mate. I wanted one anyway but you just made it worse. One thing i cant stand is very length blow by blow reviews, i want more of these concise interesting and engaging ones.

PetrolTed

34,466 posts

328 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Another one here coutesy of one of our Australian readers: www.pistonheads.com/reviews/reviews.asp?c=61&id=210

murcielago

952 posts

277 months

Sunday 31st August 2003
quotequote all
I think it looks just a bit....blnd aswell and yes there is to much German design in it with the leather and what not.

tj.sauter

1 posts

229 months

Wednesday 4th April 2007
quotequote all
you guys are nuckin futs. i think the murcielago is one of the most beautiful pieces of italian automotive engineering i've ever seen. Although i have to agree about it not being completely outrageous (as most italian cars) and it does have alot of German influence, but german influences keep this car from becoming another crazy lookin' italian car. the influences keep it discreet and beautiful.

abarthchris

2,259 posts

240 months

Wednesday 4th April 2007
quotequote all
tj.sauter said:
you guys are nuckin futs. i think the murcielago is one of the most beautiful pieces of italian automotive engineering i've ever seen. Although i have to agree about it not being completely outrageous (as most italian cars) and it does have alot of German influence, but german influences keep this car from becoming another crazy lookin' italian car. the influences keep it discreet and beautiful.


Wow, whats with all the really old thread resurrections recently?

by the way, welcome to PH