Author Topic: how many lambo do you see?  (Read 4771 times)

Offline Cobra

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how many lambo do you see?
« on: May 10, 2007, 01:57:15 PM »
Lambo launched its S$918K (w/coe) , super light , Gallardo Superleggera in S'pore today.

530 horses and fully carbon fibre. Not wonder it can "fly".


Specs:

(1) 523-hp V10
(2) 154 pounds lighter than standard Gallardo
(3) Six-speed, sequential automated manual transmission




First Drive report:
One hundred fifty-four pounds is a lot of dead weight. Think about it. It's the same as three-and-a-half full-size spare tires, or 23 gallons of gasoline. Or it's the mass equivalent of that deadbeat girlfriend you dumped after college. It's also the same amount of weight that the engineers eliminated in the design of the 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera.

In Italian, "superleggera" means "super light," so it's an appropriate name for a car that's had its fat trimmed away. Lamborghini has been telling us for some time that it would get serious about high performance, so it has done the racetrack thing and made the Gallardo as light as possible.

Lamborghini claims the Gallardo Superleggera weighs in at 2,998 pounds when the fuel tank is dry. Of course, fill the gas tank and the lightweight Gallardo weighs nearly the same as a Ferrari F430 F1 .

Fat burner
So how do you cut the weight of a rotund coed from a tightly packaged supercar? With cubic megadollars, of course. And carbon fiber, lots of carbon fiber. The stuff is literally everywhere in the Gallardo Superleggera. From the door panels to the rocker panels, in fact.

Plus the Superleggera has carbon fiber in the rear air diffuser and the wing, as well as the engine cover (which also incorporates lightweight, transparent polycarbonate instead of glass). Hell, even the rearview mirrors and the cover for the center tunnel in the cockpit are made from carbon fiber.

There are also other light parts and some of them aren't even carbon fiber. Lighter front driveshafts and a lighter propeller shaft contribute to 17 percent of the total weight savings. The muffler is lighter and the forged wheels save some weight as well. As for the Gallardo's optional $15,600 carbon-ceramic brakes, well, they have always been light.

Add (a little) power
The lightweight version of any supercar worth its salt should also get a boost in power, and so the Superleggera does. But Lamborghini found very few knobs to twist on the Gallardo's 40-valve, DOHC 5.0-liter V10. More efficient intake and exhaust plumbing plus an aggressive engine calibration add up to 10 more horses for the Gallardo's 513-horsepower stable. We've previously reported the Gallardo's power to be 520 hp, but we should have said it is rated at 520 PS, which converts to 513 hp these days. Either way, the Superleggera's 523 hp is a lot of snort for any bull.

Lamborghini's six-speed, sequential-shift automated manual transmission with its shift paddles on the steering column is standard equipment for the Superleggera, and the six-speed manual is a no-cost option. Lamborghini's all-wheel-drive system with its viscous-type center differential is retained by the Superleggera, and the torque split is 30 percent front/70 percent rear.

Lamborghini claims the combination of more power and less weight trims 0.2 second from the Gallardo's sprint to 62 mph (100 kph), reducing it to 3.8 seconds. With each horsepower yanking around a paltry 5.6 pounds and the advantage of an efficient all-wheel-drive launch at the starting line, this seems like a completely believable number to us. Top speed remains the same at 195 mph.

More exotic inside
The largest portion of weight loss comes from the cockpit.

You see it right away in the door panels. Several yards of suede replace the leather upholstery on many surfaces, including the dash and steering wheel. Meanwhile, a satellite navigation system is optional and Superleggeras without it are fitted with a carbon-fiber plate to block off the hole in the dash. A rearview camera is still available for parking assistance.

Carbon fiber surrounds the gauges, whose instrument faces have revised fonts. Any surface that's meant to be touched (and most that aren't) is in some way treated in exotic materials.

On the track
We drove the new Gallardo on the road course at Phoenix International Raceway, which incorporates part of the 1.0-mile, D-shape oval. Lamborghini's test protocol involved leading us around the track at about 60 percent of the car's capability. This, they hoped, would keep the Gallardo's body panels intact even while in the care of those known for catastrophically attempting to disobey the laws of physics. As far as Lamborghini is concerned, this strategy proved effective, but it kept us from discovering the full extent of the Superleggera's capabilities.

So here's what we know based on the 60 percent experience. First, the Gallardo is loud. Much louder, in fact, than the Murciélago V12. We'll remind you that the Gallardo V10 makes a howl at 8,000 rpm like God's own automotive symphony. Thanks to the e-gear automated gearbox, downshifts are banged out with divine staccato precision.

The Superleggera has a ton of cornering grip thanks to sticky Pirelli P Zero Corsa tires — 235/30ZR19 in the front and wide 295/30ZR19 in the rear. Because of the weight reduction, the springs are fractionally softer and the damping rates less aggressive.

Just like the conventional Gallardo, the Superleggera corners very flat (even compared to other supercars), yet it doesn't encourage midcorner adjustments. Pick your cornering line early, be smooth and the Superleggera will hold its line with relentless determination. But jump on the throttle too aggressively in a tight corner and you'll feel the car break away with plenty of understeer, a reminder that this is an all-wheel driver.

Meanwhile, the Superleggera's carbon-ceramic brakes bite with shocking effectiveness in the first inch or so of pedal travel, and this means they are often quite graceless at first. But once we sensitized to the pedal action, these brakes inspired wonderful confidence. There was noticeable fade after repeated hard laps, but the difference was never enough to slow our progress.

Textbook speed
The Superleggera might advertise itself as a lightweight, but don't plan on throwing it around like a rally car. Drive with textbook technique — brake in a straight line, then pick up the throttle at the apex. If you do, the Superleggera rewards you with textbook dynamics on a supercar level. Get ugly, however, and start dancing on the brakes midcorner or cowboying the throttle like former rally driver Colin McRae, and the Gallardo simply won't hustle. It's powerful and hooked up to the pavement, and it's not meant for sliding from apex to apex.

If the Superleggera lacks anything, it's passion. You know, the hard edge all supercars are supposed to have. All-wheel drive robs it of some of the racecar rawness promised by its carbon-fiber trim, while the R-compound rubber pushes the handling limits so far off the charts that you'll never, ever be tempted to slide it.

When you hear the Gallardo Superleggera coming from a block away — all pissed-off downshifts and roarty throttle jabs — you'll swear it's a track-only special. But once you drive it, you'll soon realize that the Superleggera makes it as easy for a wanker to go quickly as it does for a trained professional. This is a refined, thoroughly modern supercar, and its performance is completely attainable.

Operators are standing by
The Gallardo Superleggera is available in four colors: black, gray, orange and yellow.

Don't get too excited about picking your color just yet, though. Lamborghini is proud of the fact that it will never build as many cars as it could sell. With only 350 Gallardo Superleggeras available this year, Lambo is already sold out, and it already has taken orders for 50 2008 models. If you want one, get on the list. Pronto.

Only some 110 examples of the 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera will be coming to the U.S. and Lamborghini is collecting a healthy $220,300 for each example. This is about a $38,000 premium over the base price of a standard Gallardo, some $246.75 for each pound saved in weight reduction. Still, it's probably less than that deadbeat girlfriend might have cost you in the long run.

Offline 77LostBoy77

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RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2007, 04:11:03 PM »
Cool.. Saw it on news jus now :)

Offline zuoom

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RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #2 on: May 11, 2007, 03:21:10 AM »
what's the diff between this and the recent LP640?

Offline klumpkeTT

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RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #3 on: May 11, 2007, 05:17:34 AM »
whatever it is... way beyond my means.. even if i save up and eat maggii mee for the next twenty years then possibly can... by that time, i might be dead from maggii mee toxicity!

Offline Cobra

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Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #4 on: May 11, 2007, 05:19:07 AM »
LP640  (launch 2006) :

The diff? Obvious ones are the "LP" is 640 horses with a 6.5 litre V12.




First Drive report:

It's a little disquieting to think there are people out there in the community at large who feel that the 6.2-liter Lamborghini Murciélago is a little under-endowed with a mere 570 horsepower at its disposal. Still, it's a fact that upstarts like the Koenigsegg CC8S can deliver more punch, not to mention hypercars like the Porsche Carrera GT, the Ferrari Enzo and the outlandish Bugatti Veyron. Lamborghini, once the exemplar of automotive extremity, found its flagship out-muscled by some prêt-a-porter Mercedes-Benz models. Corrective action was required and the 640-hp 2006 Lamborghini Murciélago LP640 is the result.

Don't bother fronting up at a Lamborghini dealer with a billfold the size of a wrestler's neck. Every LP640 produced has already been snapped up, but Sant'Agata didn't invest millions in a car that would only be enjoyed by a privileged few. Virtually every aspect of this car will filter down into the 2007 model-year Murciélago. The 6.5-liter V12, the carbon-ceramic brakes and the Enzo-humbling acceleration courtesy of Lamborghini's "Thrust" launch control will make next year's Murci that rarest of things — a supercar bargain.

Symphony for the devil
Figuring that it would represent a slightly easier baptism on Tuscany's Mugello race circuit, I opted for an LP640 with the six-speed e-gear sequential manual (paddle-shift) transmission. One of Lamborghini's senior suits reckoned only around 30 percent of customers opted for e-gear, a figure no doubt helped by the system's reputed appetite for clutch plates. Stephen Winkelmann, president and CEO of Lamborghini, sits alongside. I ponder my place in Lamborghini folklore if I wrap the car around the Armco with Lambo's head as my co-pilot.

The Murciélago's trucklike amble at low revs gives little clue as to the apocalyptic power delivery that awaits. Snick 3rd with a small lift of the long-travel accelerator and reacquaint it with the bulkhead, however, and there's a properly quick surge at 3,000 rpm, which gathers at 4,500 as the exhaust clears its throat followed by the all-wheel-drive system shuttling torque to the rear and the most magnificent feral yowl up to redline that's now pegged at 8,000 rpm. Grab for the next gear and you can feel the accelerative Gs weighting your very fingertips, the scenery exploding through the widescreen windshield. No lift this time. Winkelmann grins.

The first corner of Mugello approaches, and with a glorious brap-brap we drop two gears while giving the ceramic brakes something to consider. With substantial 15-inch-diameter discs at the front, it takes awhile to tune your braking efforts in; the first few corners seeing the Murciélago pull up with yards in hand. Getting back on the gate after trail braking brings the massive slug of V12 aluminum behind your right shoulder back to life. With no stability control system, it's down to you to keep it tidy. After two laps, I'm utterly wrung out, my eyeballs gritty, prickly heat rising up my back, and a massive surge of adrenaline leaving me a little juiced and shaky. This thing is Colonel Kurtz-made metal.

Got Götterdämmerung?
The Audi influence is never that far from the latest Murciélago. Nothing falls off and the "dynamic press launch" is run with Teutonic efficiency. The days of turning up at Sant'Agata to be kept waiting for hours for a car in a nicotine-stained waiting room while apologetic secretaries mother you with endless thimblefuls of syrupy espresso are long gone. The LP640 interior is treated to quality switchgear and cowhide with lozenge-shaped stitching, and a hefty Kenwood stereo/sat-nav screen. Carbon-fiber detailing is an expensive option.

A single exhaust so large you'd need to check it for bums in the morning is the most arresting exterior change, but there are also new Hermera alloy wheels that resemble shurikens, a sharper and more Gallardo front spoiler, and taillamps that glow like incandescent biohazard signals. The flanks are now asymmetrical, with a vented slash on the right-hand side and a dark maw hiding the oil cooler on the left. Underneath, there are uprated springs, stabilizers and shocks.

One of the most difficult jobs at Lamborghini must be deciding when aspects of the cars become clichés or parodies of themselves. The scissor doors remain and the firing order of the 12 cylinders is still etched into the cam cover. Originality buys a lot of goodwill and Lamborghini gets away with features that come off as hokey when others imitate. The numbers (1-7-4-10-2-8-6-12-3-9-5-11) are now a little more prominent, housed under a clear glass engine louver.

That wrecking ball of a V12 likes to give off a traditionally agricultural vibe, but in truth it's now an unremitting tech fest. Fully 90 percent of this power plant has been revised from the cylinder head and intake system to the crankshaft, camshafts and exhaust. In uprating the 6.2-liter engine, torque and driveability were key targets for improvement, and a continuously variable timing system on both the intake and exhaust sides coupled with a drive-by-wire engine-management system softens the initial throttle tip-in, but then deals a better hand every time, the redline rising by 500 crushingly exploitable rpm.

The hot seat
Fifteen laps in and the groove is forming. Mugello is no longer a staccato lunge toward the next forbidding crest and an embarrassed tiptoe over. Each corner now offers flow and possibilities to explore the 2006 Lamborghini Murciélago LP640's playful side. Get a handle on the sheer physics of this thing and the LP640 is, on occasion, fairly benign, the almost pornographic girth getting lost when the leviathan Pirelli P Zero Rossos are bested by 487 pound-feet of torque and skim into those fleeting moments of neutrality. I return to pit lane wearing a grin wide enough to swallow a wok.

Offline zuoom

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Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #5 on: May 11, 2007, 05:22:58 AM »
woah, blur.

read until siao. heh.

Commender cobra "BRA" power!

Offline Vorsprung durch Technik

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Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #6 on: May 12, 2007, 05:48:45 AM »
check out these photos









more can be found here

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Offline Silver Bullet

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Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #7 on: May 12, 2007, 05:53:02 AM »
:shock:  :shock: POWER!!! :shock:  :shock:


Straights R 4 Fast Cars, Corners R 4 Fast Drivers! 8)

Matthewloh

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Re: RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #8 on: May 13, 2007, 11:24:00 AM »
Quote from: "zuoom"
what's the diff between this and the recent LP640?


LP640 only comes with Murciélago. The Superleggara is a Gallardo.

Gallardo is the fist mass produced Lambo after audi took over.

test drove a Gallardo before .... superb!!!

Offline zuoom

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RE: Re: RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #9 on: May 13, 2007, 02:11:19 PM »
ah i see.

so it's like an audi A4 vs A6. volvo s40 vs s60. saab 93 vs 95. (Gallardo vs Murciélago, V8/10 vs V12)
something like that?

wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamborghini_Murci%C3%A9lago

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamborghini_Gallardo

cool. learn something again today.

//note for self. difference between M n G. M = 12, whereas G =8/10. M = M looking lights, whereas G = slender "long" lights. //end of note.

Offline Vorsprung durch Technik

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RE: Re: RE: Lambo launch Gallardo Superleggara in Sgp today
« Reply #10 on: May 14, 2007, 03:48:13 AM »
:o test drive gallardo... so envy... i will be contented if i can test drive the lotus (matthew's?) :p

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Offline zuoom

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Lamborghini n Lambos
« Reply #11 on: October 19, 2007, 08:00:37 AM »
http://www.sgcarmart.com/main/info-20yDlkiT-1229.html

Lamborghini Gallardo E
 
Price   $758,888
Transmission   Auto
Engine cap   4961 cc
Reg date   29-Apr-2006
Mileage   11,000 km
Features   Full Options, Expensive Engine Glass Cover, Original Reverse Camera, Extra Options Intelligent Vehicle Lifter, Upgraded Sporty Rims.
Accessories   -
Description   Fully Loaded, Beautiful Sporty Colour, Feel and Hear the Roar Of This Ultimate Super Car.
COE   
$13,000   
OMV   
$248,817   
Depreciation   
-   
No. of owners   -
Type of veh   Sports Car
Availability   Available
 
 Company   Benzworld
View printable pricelist of this dealer
 Address   159 Sin Ming Rd #01-02
 Location   Amtech Building
 Office No.   65528800
 Contact Person   Desmond Lee
 Contact No.   91811191
 Email   Send an Email

Offline Silver Bullet

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Re: Lamborghini Gallardo E
« Reply #12 on: October 19, 2007, 08:28:58 AM »
Tis is such a beauty..some more my ideal colour..*faint* 8) 8)


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Offline zuoom

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Re: Lamborghini Gallardo E
« Reply #13 on: October 19, 2007, 08:32:37 AM »
buy lor.

only $758888. .P


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Re: Lamborghini Gallardo E
« Reply #14 on: October 19, 2007, 05:58:00 PM »
i confirm still can bargin some more, cos the selling price is definately lower than this.
taken into the super race depreciation, its should be less than $700k
Newbie here. Pls guide me along.