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Blancpain

Comment on earlier Lambos

 

Hi Thomas:

It is interesting that my comment was re-affirmed just yesterday when I received this month's issue of Car and Driver.  Reviewing the simply dazzlingly excellent Lambo Gallardo LP-560-4 Spyder, they noted "Perhaps you've noticed that Audi's ascension to the front office at Sant'Agata has transformed the maker of the volatile '60's Miura into something dependable....Firing up the engine does not set off flames in some surprising location."  There was more, however, to say about the earlier generations.  They simply did not perform at the top level--cornering, gearbox etc--and  were not a match for Ferrari, or for that matter top level Porsches.  Not bad mind you, just not up the level that their good looks would have suggested.  That simply is not true any more.  Many would say now that Lamborghini has passed Ferrari in performance and to boot has brought along German reliability. 

I have been to the factory in Sant'Agata.  It is no secret that the engine components are made by Audi as well as the body shells.  This is a German car with an Italian soul.  I have now driven a Gallardo, street version, been dazzled by what the same car can do in the hands of a factory test driver and been treated to a couple of laps on the track in the Super Trofeo (which is the souped up Gallardo which races in the Lamborghini Blancpain six race series) piloted by, again, one of the factory test drivers.  I have driven many high performance cars and always owned them.  I have not only tracked my Porsche, but have done so in a driving school trading seats back and forth with Derek Bell, who won Le Mans.  None of these experiences come close to what the new generation of Lamborghini's can achieve. 

So there has been a change--all for the good.  No, rephrase that.  A change, all for the great.

Jeff

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