Make this user your buddy

Esta función requiere estar registrado en autoviva

Puedes ingresar en tu cuenta o crear una nueva cuenta.
close
tommallett
Remove tommallett from your friends?
Write this user a private message

Esta función requiere estar registrado en autoviva

Puedes ingresar en tu cuenta o crear una nueva cuenta.
close
Make this member your fan

Esta función requiere estar registrado en autoviva

Puedes ingresar en tu cuenta o crear una nueva cuenta.
close
Send this page to a friend!
Fill in the form bellow

your name:
your email:
friend name:
friend email:
your comments:
close
5 cars
tommallett

offlinetommallett

friend
posted in 30.09.11
My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
Presentación
My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
  • My week in cars:Monday to Wednesday
Monday:

This summer has seen a number of fire breathing supercars unleashed on the public. One of the naughtiest has to be Lamborghini’s new Aventador. It comes with a fire breathing V12 and a 0-60 time the right side of 3 seconds. So, I could hardly fail to be excited when thrown the keys to one on Monday morning.

First impressions are overwhelmingly positive. The dashboard is fantastic and the red cover for the start button makes you feel like a fighter pilot. It also feels decently made, certainly a marked improvement over the Murcielago.

While it is certainly fast (it can’t fail to be with nearly 700 bhp) the chassis feels so well sorted that it could actually do with more power. I found myself wondering what it would be like with 850 bhp rather than the paltry 690 bhp that comes as standard. This sounds like a good thing, and it may well be, but it also means the car lacks some of the excitement of an LP670-SV.

There are various issues with the car. All revolve around its use at normal road speeds. It is tuned towards under steer at low speed, which means it lacks the sharpness that most enthusiastic drivers adore. It also has poor low speed ride quality and a gearbox which, despite the promises, is not up there with the very best.

My end conclusion has to be that while it looks fantastic, is built beautifully and offers considerable value at a smidge under £250,000 it doesn’t quite fulfil its statistical promise.

Tuesday:

Another day with Lamborghini provides an interesting perspective on the previous day’s events. A new LP670 Superleggera is the order of the day.

The previous Superleggera was not one of my favourites. I always felt that it lagged behind its Ferrari equivalents and that it lacked the alertness that a light weight version should embrace.

The latest car is markedly different, however, it has 10bhp more than the car upon which it is based, but in the best traditions of light weight Italian Supercars feels transformed by the weight saving. This is coupled with a great noise and a surprisingly comfortable cabin, despite its hard core pretensions.

It is also interesting to discover that it doesn’t feel significantly slower than the Aventador. It may well be less ferocious above 180 mph, but at road speeds it eats up the road plenty quick enough.

Wednesday:

I was knocked off my super car pedestal on Wednesday, but only to drive a car that I revered a few years ago. I hadn’t driven an Alpina Roadster S for 5 years, but it sits on top of the pile as the very best of the first generation Z4’s.

The good news is that it still holds a place in my heart. The first generation Z4 was never particularly well damped, bouncing down the road like a drug addled Jack in the box. However, the Alpina rectified this and added a 300 bhp six cylinder engine. If that wasn’t enough, it adds plenty of appeal stylistically. Good value for money nowadays too.....
cabruce
What's the deal with the pictures of the Ginetta and Radical(?) race? Is that you driving or were they just there at the same time you had your supercars?
30.09.2011 @ 20:10
tommallett
No, I am racing both cars. They are actually some pictures that were sent to me by a photographer friend. The Radical I am racing is no.69 and I am the clear visor. We were doing an endurance race.
30.09.2011 @ 20:45
cabruce
That sounds like a ton of fun. Do you own both? What is the Ginetta like to drive? Which Radical is it?
03.10.2011 @ 14:34
tommallett
I own the Ginetta but not the Radical. The ginetta is ok to drive, but the chassis is slightly unpredictable. The racing is of a high standard though and close so that is very good for me. The champio...
more
03.10.2011 @ 21:57
Anonymous
close