Maxxd.com – Modified and Performance Car News

  • 2020 McLaren Speedtail headed to auction

    When the McLaren Speedtail was unveiled two years ago, the entire 106-unit production run had already sold out despite a near-$2 million price. Now one of those supercars is scheduled to cross the block at an RM Sotheby’s auction on Jan. 22.

    That car is Speedtail number 36, which was ordered on July 20, 2020, and delivered to McLaren Philadelphia (despite not being street legal in the U.S.) a few months later, according to the listing. It’s still virtually brand new, with just 30 miles on the odometer.

    The car has over $170,000 worth of options, according to its build documents. It’s painted in MSO Heritage Atlantic Blue, with white stripes and wheels, and a gloss carbon-fiber front wheel cover. The interior features a mix of satin carbon-fiber and Alcantara trim, with vintage tan aniline leather upholstery and contrast stitching. A suitcase designed to fit the front trunk and a gold-colored titanium tool set are included with the sale.

    McLaren Speedtail number 36 (photo by RM Sotheby's)

    McLaren Speedtail number 36 (photo by RM Sotheby’s)

    McLaren envisioned the Speedtail as a successor to the legendary F1, reflected by its three-abreast seating layout and 106-unit production run (matching the F1). Its focus on road rather than track use also echoes the F1, which was designed as a road car first, and only modified for racing after owners requested it.

    The Speedtail has a hybrid powertrain built around a twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V-8, producing a total of 1,055 horsepower and 848 pound-feet of torque. McLaren previously quoted 0-186 mph in 12.8 seconds, and a 250-mph top speed.

    McLaren may not launch a supercar that surpasses the Speedtail for at least a few years. The automaker is reportedly dialing back its range-topping Ultimate Series, with the next model—a successor to the P1 plug-in hybrid—due in 2025.

    Source

  • BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT: BLACK GOLD

    It’s got oil sheikh chic and plutocrat flair in abundance, but this bagged Bentley is thoroughly down-to-earth. With deep roots in the VAG scene, Dan Steele has taken the Continental GT formula and reimagined it for a new generation…

    Feature taken from Fast Car. Words Dan Bevis Photography Si Gray

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    There are few automotive brands with quite the majesty and effortless class of Bentley, let alone the heritage. With the company enjoying its centenary year, 2019 was awash with Bentley-themed events, celebrations, hooplas and extravaganzas. From Blue Train hijinks to Le Mans blowers, all eyes have been on the iconic winged badge… and it’s not just a party for fans of vintage racers; no, if you’re more into modern-era motors than what Ettore Bugatti famously damned with faint praise as ‘the world’s fastest lorries’, the 21st-century Bentleys have been enjoying renewed appreciation among enthusiasts and tuners alike.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    Of course, some people were into all this stuff long before the centenary celebrations hit. When you view the recent Bentleys as part of the wider spectrum of the VAG oeuvre, it makes a lot of sense to hold these cars up as the pinnacle of aspiration for people who spent their formative years spannering on Volkswagens. The respect has been readily apparent for some time on the show scene, with more than a few people bolting genuine Bentley wheels onto Golfs, Leons, Octavias and what-have-you, but the super-premium nature of what the brand represents means that they’re still pie-in-the-sky as a buying proposition for most. While it’s true that the evergreen Bentley Continental GT has just about dipped into what some lucky people may view as ‘excellent value’, it’s not exactly the sort of car you can pick up at the age of 21, slam over some shiny rims and roll into your local stance meet. Not unless your dad owns a premiership football team. No, you need to be a proper O.G. to get involved in this sort of caper, and the owner of the flawless Conti that’s glimmering under the studio lights with us today has been a player at this game for longer than many readers would be able to remember. It’s taken a quarter-century of hot rides and deep-seated modding prowess to elevate to this stellar level, and the bagged Bentley you see before you represents a coda to an automotive symphony that’s been swelling for decades.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    “I’ve been modding cars for twenty-five years,” says Dan Steele, the man lucky enough to call this motor his own, “and I’ve always been a VW man.” He’s not kidding; chief among his previous projects were a Corrado G60 in Nugget Yellow, a B5 Passat V6 4Motion, a Mk4 Golf R32, a Mk4 Polo G40 with a turbo conversion, and a Golf Rallye that was fitted with a 1.8T and evolved into a full-on show car. Magazine features abounded for a number of these projects, demonstrating the skill and care which Dan invariably lavishes upon his prized possessions, and so the Bentley was the next logical step. After all, when you’ve been levelling up in the relentless manner that he has, eventually you’re bound to arrive at the boss level. That’s just science.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    “I’ve always wanted a Bentley, although it is basically a glorified Audi S8 long-wheelbase,” he grins, and that’s not a self-deprecating knock, it’s a badge of honour. For a dyed-in-the-wool VAG appreciator, this posh Audi signals the ultimate evolution of a timeworn formula, taking everything Dan knew about project cars and refracting it through a super-premium filter. “I bought the Continental in 2016; it was all completely standard, and it ended up sitting on axle stands for six months with no wheels and no interior while I planned out what to do with it.” With so much experience honed over so many years, you can be damn sure that this guy had a clear picture in his head of what he hoped to achieve, and there was no need to rush. This was something that needed to be done right rather than simply done fast. The model Dan chose for this project was a Triple Black Edition, the uber-shadowy spec essential to the effect he wanted to achieve, as the plan was to retrim the interior in bright jaffa orange to act as a searing counterpoint to the gloss black interior trims and, naturally, that gleaming midnight-chic exterior. The reason for this was that his Golf Rallye had also sported the same colour scheme, so this represented a beautiful sense of progression and evolution from one build to the next.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    The task of retrimming the interior was handed to Optimus Trimmers in Glasgow, who painstakingly recovered the seats, headlining, door cards, dash and armrest to rework the innards in a glorious riot of citrus-hued extravagance. The custom interior work extends to the boot build, which has also been trimmed in sumptuous jaffa leather and carbon fibre trim, to artfully accentuate the Champagne bottles and crown-shaped ice bucket in fine style.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    There’s another dimension to this colour scheme, something that conceptually stretches far deeper. You see, while Dan’s bread-and-butter today is as a marine engineer on super-yachts, he spent many years working on ultra-deepwater offshore drilling rigs, drilling for oil; it’s for this reason that the Bentley is affectionately referred to as ‘Project Black Gold’ – it’s a sense of all-pervading premium and high-end luxury, underpinned by the biological necessity of the slippery dino-juice that keeps everything churning behind the scenes. Which acts as a decent metaphor for the Continental GT as a whole really; while it’s a fabulously appointed luxury grand tourer, it’s easy to forget that all that effortless power comes from a sodding great 6.0-litre twin-turbo W12 grafting away beneath the bonnet. The fact that Dan’s had his W12 remapped to a brawny 680bhp serves to neatly underline this point.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    So with the innards looking appropriately premium, it was essential to get the big Bentley sitting pretty over just the right rolling stock. The altitude angle was taken care of by the application of a bespoke air-ride system with custom bags and struts, expertly engineered by the maestros at Intermotiv; Dan opted to retain the factory air management system and re-program the VAG-COM, then design his own ‘Dump It’ control box to allow the system to be aired out and lay the car on the ground. And you can’t really miss the wheels that it’s dramatically airing out over, being as they are a fully custom creation to his own exacting specifications. The starting point was a staggered set of 21-inch Rotiform BLQ-T, with delicious rose gold centres and polished lips, which have been cunningly rebuilt into a four-piece construction with the centres spaced out 40mm to create an effect Dan refers to as ‘Boudicea’s chariot’. (You’ll remember from your history GCSE that the scythed chariots of ancient Rome had gleaming weaponry poking out from their wheels; the difference here is that Dan’s instead weaponised your sense of intrigue.)

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    With the desired effect magnificently achieved, the final flourish was to gently clean up the exterior lines, smoothing the bumpers and de-chroming the front grilles to further amp up the black/orange/black malevolence, like some sleek but enraged tiger.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    When the Conti debuted in its initial guise at the Let’s Stance show in 2017, it immediately won ‘Best in Show’ as well as ‘Best Wheels’, and it’s been raking in the silverware ever since. With the custom coilover/air-ride setup and four-piece wheel rebuild in 2018, attention elevated to unprecedented levels, and the jaw-dropped crowds circulating around this ultra-swank build have been growing ever since, as Dan gently tweaks and refines the GT into the best possible version of itself.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    So while the purists, collectors, tycoons and concours buffers have been busying themselves tremendously throughout 2019, flicking specks of dust from their 1920s racers and luxuriating in the glow of a brand well lived, Dan’s had the jump on all of them. With an extensive history of refining and perfecting VAG builds, this Conti GT is the ultimate interpretation of a game he’s been playing for years. The elemental purity of black gold, reimagined for a 21st-century audience. WO Bentley’s original mission statement was ‘to build a fast car, a good car, the best in its class’, and Dan’s following that timeworn sentiment to the letter.

    BAGGED BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    TECH SPEC: BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT

    Styling:
    Front and rear bumpers smoothed, de-chromed front grilles

    Tuning:
    6.0-litre W12 twin-turbo, carbon hydro-dipped engine covers, remapped, 6-speed Tiptronic auto
    Power: 680bhp

    Chassis:
    9.5x21in (front) and 10.5x21in (rear) Rotiform BLQ-T with rose gold centres and polished lips – custom-built into 4-piece split-rims with additional rim spacer rings, Stance 35mm spacers, stretched Pirelli tyres, bespoke Intermotiv air-ride system with custom bags and struts, custom air tanks, Viair compressor, Airmatics drop links, with OEM Bentley management and custom-developed Dump It control unit

    Interior:
    Full retrim by Optimus Trimmers in jaffa orange leather – including seats, headlining, door cards, dash and armrest, custom boot build with Champagne bottles, glowing crown ice cooler and ice, carbon boot trim and jaffa orange leather trim, Bentley infotainment unit, Audison Bit One processor, Alpine PDX V9 1400w RMS amplifier, Rockford Fosgate Punch 12in sub, 2x Focal PS 165 FS 3-way components front and rear, iPhone/iPod integration

    Source

  • SSC Tuatara falls short in new land-speed record attempt, will run again

    SSC claimed to set a new land-speed record for a production car in October with its Tuatara supercar hitting a two-way average of 316.11 mph. Issues with the run and how it was measured prompted company CEO Jerod Shelby to abandon that claim soon thereafter, but he promised to make the run again. Now, that’s happened, but it didn’t go as planned, and no land-speed record was set.

    Last Wednesday, Nürburgring taxi driver Robert Mitchell posted a video to YouTube detailing the SSC Tuatara’s Dec. 12-13 record attempt.

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    The SSC team ran the new record attempt at the NASA runway in Florida, the same runway where Hennessey Performance Engineering set its record in the Venom GT Spyder.

    During the first attempt in October, the SSC team used a Dewetron TRIONet chassis with a GPS card and a laptop computer to process the satellite tracking data. For this new record attempt, the SSC team put redundancies in place for satellite tracking with two Racelogic systems including a VBox and an OEM system, a Life Racing tracking system, and three Garmin systems all installed in the Tuatara. Some were installed on the roof of the car and some were placed in the frunk. The latter posed an issue due to wires running out of the hood into the car, which caused the hood to keep popping open during high-speed runs at over 200 mph, according to Mitchell.

    The first record attempt placed professional race car driver Oliver Webb behind the wheel, but for the second attempt the owner, Larry Caplin, raised his hand and said, “I’m driving, I’m the owner of the car, this is my car,” according to Mitchell.

    Since Caplin had minimal seat time in the car, SSC decided to reduce turbo boost and slow down the engine timing, then build things back as Caplin became more comfortable.

    SSC Tuatara record run

    SSC Tuatara record run

    During Caplin’s second-to-last run, the Tuatara hit 244 mph in 6th gear at the runway’s halfway point. At that point, the car became so hot that the engine software began to pull the timing to save the engine. The issue affected two spark plugs, though nobody checked the plugs and didn’t realize the issue existed.

    A chill box was installed to cool the intercooler and the entire engine for nearly two hours to restore a proper temperature. The boost was increased to within 3 pounds of full power, and Caplin went out for one more run.

    This time the Tuatara hit 251.2 mph before the halfway point when Caplin aborted as he felt the car wasn’t building speed as it should. At this point, the SSC team realized two cylinders had lost power, and the record attempt was over. The 251.2 mph run was done with two cylinders not firing properly.

    Motor Authority reached out to Shelby to confirm Mitchell’s story on the record attempt and has not heard back as of the time of publication.

    SSC plans to run the record attempt again at the NASA runway in January, according to Mitchell. Click on the video above for a deeper explanation of the run.

    Source