BoRINg Posted February 10, 2016 Posted February 10, 2016 2016 Lamborghini Aventador SV Spied: The Wildest Lambo Gets Wilder What It Is: The inevitable super-faster version of Lamborghini’s super-fast Aventador, the Aventador SV (which stands for “SuperVeloce,” or “super fast” in Italian). Caught while prancing for a photo shoot in Europe, this prototype’s radical bodywork and assorted wings and things caught our photographer’s eye, and the prominent “SV” stickers on the car’s rocker panels gave away its identity. Why It Matters: Lamborghini’s SuperVeloce treatment has graced the brand’s top-dog sports cars since the days of the Miura (the Countach being the only glaring exception), and the appearance of an Aventador SV means the lineage isn’t being cut any time soon. Besides pushing the $400,000-plus Aventador into the blank space that exists between its price point and million-dollar rides like the Porsche 918 Spyder and Ferrari LaFerrari, the SV also gives Lamborghini a more powerful fighting bull to toss in the ring with Ferrari’s exquisite F12berlinetta and the upcoming McLaren 675LT. Platform: While this Aventador SV walks and likely talks like a regular Aventador, it surely weighs less and screams louder. When Lamborghini introduced the Murciélago LP670-4 SV for 2010, the car dropped 220 pounds while adding about five percent more horsepower. Expect a similar program for the Aventador SV, combined with some chassis modifications to accommodate the extra power and raise the handling limits a touch. The aerodynamics certainly have received attention, as the SV pictured here brandishes a new front splitter, widened body-side air intakes, scoops above scoops and inside scoops, and new air extractors where the workaday Aventador has none. The rear fascia has basically shed all semblances of bumper to become one huge grille, with deep rear diffuser vanes flanking quad exhaust pipes below. Finally, a full-width rear wing caps the rear end. Most of the mods look to be rendered in carbon fiber, and we’re pretty stoked about those lacy, center-lock wheels with red bolts. While we can’t see the interior, it’ll be awash in faux suede and exposed carbon fiber. And don’t expect too many creature comforts, since this car is built to be hard-core, not pampering. Powertrain: One thing is certain about the V-12 that certainly resides under the Aventador SV’s louvered engine cover: It will make more than the base Aventador’s 691 horsepower and 508 lb-ft of torque. If Lamborghini wanted to truly deliver some crazy, it would install the 710-hp V-12 used in the 50th Anniversary Aventador, but either way, the SV is going to be fast—super fast. Plan on a zero-to-60-mph time in the high-two-second range and a top speed in excess of the Anniversary model’s 217 mph. Lamborghini won’t say it, but restoring accelerative hierarchy to the Aventador and the entry-level Huracán (which outperformed its big brother in our testing) is a priority here. 1
Recommended Posts