Your local news source ::
      Select a community or newspaper »

Lance and the Lamborghini - The News Swami

Lance and the Lamborghini

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

Headline from Swami: Lance Briggs' 2007 Lamborghini found crashed on Edens Expressway at dawn
Headline 2 from Swami: No dogs reported killed in accident
Headline 3 from Swami: Bears' $7 million linebacker not in car when police find it.
Headline 4 from Swami: Police not sure who was driving, but guess Lance didn't loan out his $350,000 car to the butler or Rex Grossman. And now, the real story....

Swami sez: Who cares about a linebacker, when it's the car we really want to know about?
So, here's what "Car & Driver" Mag said last month about Lance's ride:

2007 Lamborghini Murcielago LP640 Roadster - Short Take Road Tests

Options are a mere $52,710.
2007 Lamborghini Murciélago LP640 Roadster

The Highs: Zero to 60 in 3.5, that 150-mph wind in your hair, a fine way to meet your neighbors.

The Lows: Tinkertoy top, inordinate cost, extroverts only.


Nabbing a Lamborghini for testing involves trying to chisel into a press-car calendar thick with celebrity-studded red-carpet parties hosted by the likes of Donatella Versace. It isn’t easy getting on the schedule. Lamborghini’s silk-suited brand managers are hyping a fantasy lifestyle, and we in the grubby Fourth Estate have nothing to offer against a Donatella photo op except burned-up clutches and chunked tires.

So when our single day finally arrived to snap into the Fritos-shaped buckets of a 632-hp Lamborghini Murciélago LP640 roadster—a car with $52,710 in options—it was tempting to dismiss it as just a cartoon commentary on the excesses of the filthy famous. Tempting, that is, until we arrived at the test track.. Introduced last year as a face-lifted Murciélago, the LP640 smoked 60 mph in 3.5 seconds and went wild whooping through the quarter-mile in 11.8 seconds at 126 mph. It brought its 4100-pound girth to a halt from 70 mph in just 150 feet and pulled more than 1.00 g on the skidpad. Ferrari Enzos move only slightly quicker and sell for more than a million. The base $351,700 LP640 roadster has some engineering cred that true car people can appreciate, even if Donatella hasn't a clue.
As with the previous Murciélago, the LP640 roadster looks like an LP640 coupe that lost its roof panel to a passing tornado. Jagged edges and some unfinished lines are the result. The roadster's roof-toupee is a better description-is a flimsy canvas sheet with a few snap-in poles and fold-out ribs to hold its shape. Practiced hands take about five minutes to insert tabs A into slots B. A plaque warns against exceeding 100 mph with the roof on, something the roadster can accomplish in second gear. When not threatening to shear off, the roof stows-just barely-in the front cargo bin.

The 487 pound-feet of torque arrive more evenly, the revs are more linear, and the big Lambo is more everyday streetable than before, especially with the optional $10,000 e-gear paddle-shift six-speed transmission that blurs its shifts under light throttle. Under full throttle, the engine bellows the big roar and the shifts crack like home-run bats. The Lambo is happiest blasting in straight lines, the result of all those pounds and a wheel beset with understeer.
Only those happy to suck up the constant attention and public palaver that inevitably accrue to a Lamborghini driver should even consider one. You know who you are. You’ve got Donatella on speed dial.

At 81.0 inches wide, this Italian muscle car feels like a chopped and channeled Hummer in traffic. The visibility from this carbon-fiber foxhole is limited, especially to the rear, and you'll want to keep the windows up to hold back the Katrina-like wind lash at speed. An alarm sounds if the rear-hinged engine hatch is not latched securely, lest it rip off on the freeway. Underneath the engine cover and a latticework of carbon-fiber braces that reinforce the roadster's structure lives the DOHC 48-valve 6.5-liter dry-sump V-12, the product of an extensive freshening of the previous 6.2-liter unit.

VEHICLE TYPE: mid-engine, 4-wheel-drive, 2-passenger, 2-door roadster
PRICE AS TESTED: $404,410 (base price: $351,700)
ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 48-valve V-12, aluminum block and heads, port fuel injection
Displacement: 396 cu in, 6496cc
Power (SAE net): 632 bhp @ 8000 rpm
Torque (SAE net): 487 lb-ft @ 6000 rpm
TRANSMISSION: 6-speed manual with automated shifting and clutch
DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 104.9 in
Length: 181.5 in
Width: 81.0 in
Height: 44.7 in
Curb weight: 4100 lb
C/D TEST RESULTS:
Zero to 60 mph: 3.5 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 8.1 sec
Zero to 150 mph: 16.1 sec
Street start, 5–60 mph: 4.1 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 11.8 sec @ 126 mph
Top speed (drag ltd, mfr’s claim): 205 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 150 ft
Roadholding, 200-ft-dia skidpad: 1.01 g
FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city driving: 10 mpg
C/D-observed: 14 mpg

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Lance and the Lamborghini.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blogs.suburbanchicagonews.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/992

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

The News Swami

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Swami published on August 27, 2007 12:44 PM.

Jokes to start the week was the previous entry in this blog.

Lamborghini Part Deux is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Pages