RE: McLaren 720S GT3 goes on sale

RE: McLaren 720S GT3 goes on sale

Friday 24th August 2018

McLaren 720S GT3 goes on sale

Wealthy racers after a new car, see this: McLaren's 650S GT3 replacement is now on sale, priced from £440,000



So, McLaren Automotive, the firm's road car division - distinct from the racing bit - is launching a new racing car. And while that might sound a bit arse about face, the development of the new 7203S GT3 competition model by the Automotive half of the building actually makes perfect sense. Here’s a clue as to why: “ka-ching”.

You see, the 650S GT3 successor, due to make its debut in 2019, will not be operated directly by McLaren but sold to customer teams and wealthy clients throughout the world who are prepared to pay large sums of money not just to purchase the car - which starts at £440,000 - but also to maintain and support it throughout its racing life. Aside from providing McLaren with great international exposure, it opens a constant revenue stream – because, you know, motorsport is ruddy expensive.


Conforming to FIA GT3 regulations means the 720S racer will be eligible to compete in GT championships in a variety of locations, including illustrious 24-hour endurance events like the ones at Spa and the Nurburgring. McLaren is currently midway through an extensive testing programme to ensure its 720S GT3 is ready for these types of tough races, and so far, its prototypes have covered a combined 30,000km (18641 miles) on tracks both sides of the Atlantic - plenty of time to iron out creases and eliminate gremlins.

The job’s far from done, however, because this isn’t just some stripped-out 720S with a new decal kit – no, the 720S GT3 is 90% new. It shares a MonoCell II carbon fibre structure and twin-turbocharged 4.0-litre V8 engine with its road legal counterpar, but the rest is pure motorsport.


The GT3 model uses a six-speed sequential gearbox and an externally adjustable limited slip differential, for example, and the driveshafts and wheel hubs are different to enable faster change times. Then there are tougher brakes with enhanced cooling capabilities, new suspension using coilover springs and four-way adjustable dampers, as well as a built-in air-jacking system. Plus, new electronics allow the driver to adjust traction control and ABS assistance, and there’s an all-new aerodynamic pack that demonstrates how, when it comes to downforce, bigger is better. Oh, and there are Pirelli racing slicks or wets. So yeah, this is no ramped-up road car.

It joins the 570S GT4 among the division’s customer racing products, and can already point to significant success in GT racing - despite being comparatively new to the scene (compared with the likes of Ferrari and Porsche, at any rate). The 720S GT3’s predecessor, the 650S GT3, has a win at the Bathurst 12 Hours and Blancpain Endurance Series titles to its name, while 570S GT4s were used to win eight titles and 50 races across the world in 2017.


Author
Discussion

spikyone

Original Poster:

1,472 posts

101 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Feels rather like this article is treating us as idiots. Surely most readers understand what a GT3 car is, and this is no different in its purpose (a race car sold to, and operated by, privateer teams) nor the fact that it is a purpose built race car with little carry over from the road going version.

Also, if 30,000km is 5,000km short of a 24-hour race distance then this car laps significantly faster than the 919 Evo. I make that 1,458km/h.

I know bashing the standard of journalism here is something of a hobby for some, and yes, PH is free to access, but this is pretty poor.

thegreenhell

15,427 posts

220 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
article said:
its prototypes have covered a combined 30,000km (18641 miles) on tracks both sides of the Atlantic. That’s just 5000km short of a Nurburgring 24 Hours race distance...
Maths fail?

That would be a very long race. This year's winner managed 135 laps,

135 x 25.378 = 3426km

mylesmcd

2,535 posts

220 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
thegreenhell said:
article said:
its prototypes have covered a combined 30,000km (18641 miles) on tracks both sides of the Atlantic. That’s just 5000km short of a Nurburgring 24 Hours race distance...
Maths fail?

That would be a very long race. This year's winner managed 135 laps,

135 x 25.378 = 3426km
That had my calculator out too. 35k kms in 24 hours.

Krikkit

26,544 posts

182 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
It also doesn't say anything about how many outings it took to do that test mileage - 10 cars which break down every hour would still rack it up fairly quickly...

thegreenhell

15,427 posts

220 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Cheaper and better-looking than the McSenna if you want a McLaren track toy.

spikyone

Original Poster:

1,472 posts

101 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
thegreenhell said:
Cheaper and better-looking than the McSenna if you want a McLaren track toy.
Also likely to be far harder to drive at anything other than 10/10ths, impossible to run unless you employ your own race team, and not road legal. I know we're all driving gods on here, but even if you're rich enough to afford one you'll almost certainly enjoy driving the Senna more, even on a track.

vz-r_dave

3,469 posts

219 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Ah the actual Long tale and not the piss take LT that is offered to the public. Will there be a limitid edition Pebble Beach version maybe the 727SLTSENNA.

robemcdonald

8,813 posts

197 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity

Maldini35

2,913 posts

189 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Didn’t you type this exact reply 48 hours ago on the MSO article?
You must be pretty pleased with it.
My advice would be to check the spelling if you’re going to repeat yourself.



Edited by Maldini35 on Friday 24th August 15:14

kritter86

170 posts

136 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Maldini35 said:
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Didn’t you type this exact reply 48 hours ago on the MSO article?
You must be pretty pleased with it.
mega lolz

WCZ

10,538 posts

195 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
looks rapid.

GroundEffect

13,844 posts

157 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Would be funny if it didn't demonstrate your complete ignorance to racing cars....

robemcdonald

8,813 posts

197 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
GroundEffect said:
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Would be funny if it didn't demonstrate your complete ignorance to racing cars....
I’ll be sure to post it again tomorrow when McLaren launch the next limited edition/homologation special/race car

robemcdonald

8,813 posts

197 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Maldini35 said:
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Didn’t you type this exact reply 48 hours ago on the MSO article?
You must be pretty pleased with it.
My advice would be to check the spelling if you’re going to repeat yourself.



Edited by Maldini35 on Friday 24th August 15:14
Blame apple for that

anonymous-user

55 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
It looks great though!

Futse

183 posts

186 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
Maldini35 said:
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
Didn’t you type this exact reply 48 hours ago on the MSO article?
You must be pretty pleased with it.
My advice would be to check the spelling if you’re going to repeat yourself.



Edited by Maldini35 on Friday 24th August 15:14
Blame apple for that
Blame apple (Apple) for your spelling mistakes?

GranCab

2,902 posts

147 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
Maybe he was eating an apple at the time of writing and it caused him to mix up 'their' and 'there' ...

robemcdonald

8,813 posts

197 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
No that one was my fault.

nyxster

1,452 posts

172 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
robemcdonald said:
In the future will standard Mclarens be worth more than special editions? Due of course to there comparative rarity
They make cars, not investment assets. If your race car is worth more than scrap after you've campaigned it then you probably weren't racing hard enough.

to race team owner 'are you upset he's just written off your million pound supercar'
race team owner 'No, I'm upset he didn't take out the championship leader as well.'



Nerdherder

1,773 posts

98 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
Looks rather tasty. Well done McLaren.