Lamborghini has celebrated its 50th anniversary at the Geneva motor show with the Lamborghini Veneno, a 740bhp, 221mph road-going racer based on the Aventador.
The Veneno is a production reality, but Lamborghini has said that all three units it will make have already sold for €3 million each plus taxes (around £3.12 million). The Geneva model is a Lamborghini prototype that it will continue to test on road and track.
The fundamental design is based on the Aventador, but there are several key changes to create what Lamborghini calls a “street-legal racing car”.
Its body, like the monocoque chassis, is fashioned entirely from carbonfibre-reinforced polymer. The bodywork is optimised for aerodynamic efficiency, creating downforce, reducing drag and cooling the 6.5-litre V12, which has had a 50bhp hike from its 690bhp state of tune in the Aventador.
The front end works as one large aerodynamic wing. The front wings are separated from the body, as on sports prototype racers.
The car’s underbody is smooth and channels air into a large diffuser, which houses four integrated exhaust pipes. Other features include an adjustable rear wing. The flared wheel arches house 20-inch alloy wheels at the front and 21-inch alloys at the rear.
The carbonfibre tub and aluminium subframes from the Aventador are carried over to the Veneno but adapted for its more extreme performance.
The engine benefits from enlarged air intakes, a higher rev limit and an exhaust system with a lower back pressure. The seven-speed automated manual gearbox, all-wheel drive system and pushrod suspension are also adapted from the Aventador.
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Gobsmacked!
Fabulous - it's a sci-fi extravaganza. A pedestrian meat processing plant - that rear ejects filly filleted flesh in processed 5 kilo cubes.
Guaranteed to stop traffic dead in its tracks!
Transformers ....
.... robots in disguise. Not boring, is it?
Production
I think that at 3 examples, it hardly meets the definition of a production car. I might guess that three loyal Lamborghini customers asked the company for something special, which it appears they have delivered, and at these numbers, I doubt they will care what others think of their new toys.
In twenty years time I wonder what one will fetch at auction?
One can only hope that the 9 million euros they earn will be spent on the Aventador replacement.
What are the chances that that engine appears in the Aventador SV next year..............