Those who can drive a McLaren around the block and decide on such slender evidence that this is the right car on which to drop a six-figure sum of hard-earned currency, I salute you.
Were I to do such a thing – or rather, were I possessed of the means to do such a thing – I’d conclude simply that this was a spectacularly wonderful car for someone else and adjust my thinking in a more appropriately Italianate direction.
Two thousand miles, from a one-pub hamlet in the Welsh borders to Geneva via Spa and the Nürburgring and back again, provides a different perspective. And plenty of time in which to wonder how McLaren got from that place to this, from the botched launch of the tortuously entitled MP4-12C to the reveal of the all-new 720S, the hottest ticket at the most important motor show on earth.
McLaren has never replaced a car before. Its first road cars, the iconic F1, the SLR project with Mercedes, even the original M6GT, stood alone, as has the P1, the only McLaren from the current era to cease production. So when I put it to one senior member of McLaren management that the replacement of what they call P11 (the code that covers the entire Super Series cars, from 12C, past 650S to 675LT) was the single most important moment in the modern history of McLaren Automotive since the launch of the 12C, I didn’t expect the words to be batted back at head height. “Oh no,” he said. “It’s far more important than that.”
You've probably heard about the new 720S, so for now join me in its predecessor, the humble, 641bhp 650S. We’re doing a steady 150mph along a southbound stretch of autobahn and it has just started to rain. The question is, what should be done about it? The information that adds up to an answer has been both two days and six years in the accumulation.
Six years. Is that all it has been since Antony Sheriff delivered the first 21st century McLaren? He didn’t last long at the company, but his vision was for a state-of-the-art, F1-inspired, carbonfibre-tubbed supercar that would be lighter, stiffer, stronger and faster than anything else similar money would buy. And he delivered, in spades: the MP4-12C hit all its pre-designated marks with the certainly of Gielgud treading the boards at the Old Vic.
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MP4-12C.
@6R4
jer wrote:
Yes really. After all, isn't the sentence you pick out exactly what McLaren themselves would say? Paraphrasing to how they might have put it, "we think our 650S remains great, but we've found we can do something even better". Still heaping praise on the old car, but claiming massive improvements for its replacement.
It's always the same with Autocar, their sacred trinity of McLaren, JLR and Ford can do no wrong. This is just one more instance of the blatant promotion of those brands on this site.
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