Car Heads: first video of Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4

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Car Heads:Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 Official Release!!

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Innovative concept and phenomenal performance redefine the pinnacle of the super sports car segment
• Entirely new technology package, unique and powerful functional design language
• Innovative carbon-fiber monocoque
• New twelve-cylinder engine with 515 kW / 700 hp
• Super-fast shifting ISR (Independent Shifting Rods) transmission
• Pushrod suspension
• The very finest equipment and trim, extensive individualization

With the Aventador LP 700-4, Automobili Lamborghini is redefining the very pinnacle of the world super sports car market – brutal power, outstanding lightweight engineering and phenomenal handling precision are combined with peerless design and the very finest equipment to deliver an unparalleled driving experience. With the Aventador, Lamborghini is taking a big step into the future – and building on the glorious history of the brand with the next automotive legend. The first customers will take delivery of the new Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 in late summer 2011. The LP700-4 features a curb weight of just 1575 kg (3,472 pounds) due to its carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP)
monocoque structure which tips the scales at only 147.5 kilograms (324.5 lbs). The whole body-in-white weighs but
229.5 kilograms (505 lbs). Power comes from a 6.5 liter V12 with an ouput of 700 PS (690 bhp / 515 kW) and 690 Nm
(509 lb-ft) of torque. Gearbox is a 7-speed independent shift rod transmission (with dual synchronizers) supplied by
Graziano Trasmissioni Group with 50 millisecond shift times. The LP700-4 Aventador also features a Haldex all-wheel
drive system.
All those mechanics are good for a 0 to 100 km/h sprint time of 2.9 seconds and a top speed of 350 km/h (217 mph).
Finish options will include the Arancio Argos orange paint in a pearl effect and bi-color interiors with Alcantara.
The first customers will take delivery of the new Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 in late summer 2011.



Pricing is as follows:
UK: GBP 201.900,00 (suggested retail price taxes excluded)
Europe: € 255.000 (suggested retail price taxes excluded)
USA: 379.700 USD (suggested retail price - GGT included)
China: RMB 6.270.000,00 (suggested retail price taxes included)
Japan: YEN 39.690.000,00 (suggested retail price taxes included)

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from the press release:

Murciélago successor (most likely to be called Aventador) introduces pushrod suspensions in series production for the first time


• New V12 super sports car with pushrod suspension for race-car precision
• Detailed lightweight engineering concept with double wishbone suspension and carbon ceramic brake system
• Unique 'motorsport' feel combined with long-distance comfort

Sant'Agata Bolognese, 24th January 2011 – The new Lamborghini V12 super sports car which will debut at the upcoming Geneva motorshow will feature an innovative and highly sophisticated suspension concept. The pushrod spring and damper concept was inspired by Formula 1 and tuned perfectly to meet the needs of a high-performance road-going vehicle. Together with aluminum double wishbone suspension and a carbon ceramic brake system, this lightweight chassis is another element of the unique technology concept in Lamborghini's new flagship model.

An extremely precise, indeed razor-sharp, driving feel accurately describes the soul of the newest and most powerful super sports car ever to bear the sign of the bull. This includes a steering system that can think its way through a bend adhering to the perfect line, a suspension that masters the ideal balance between race-car feel for the road and plenty of comfort for ramping up the miles, and lateral stability that ensures absolute safety even at the very highest speeds.

Pushrod suspension derived from motorsport

With its phenomenal engine output of 515 kW / 700 hp and its comparatively low vehicle weight, the new V12 super sports car from Lamborghini blasts its way to the very highest speeds. The most important characteristic of the new suspension is its design in line with the pushrod principle – inspired by Formula 1. The spring/damper elements are not located on the wheel mounts, but connected inboard to the bodyshell structure. They are transversely positioned: under the windscreen in the front and close to the engine in the rear. Pushrods and relay levers / rockers transmit the forces from the wheel mounts to the spring/damper elements.

Responsive handling characteristics at all speeds

This solution offers a whole series of impressive benefits: due to the combination of the double wishbone and pushrod arrangement, wheel control and damper remain separate from each other. As a result, handling is more responsive and easier to manage at all speeds, while rigid connection to the chassis also improves the precise and spontaneous reaction of the springs and dampers. As a result, spring stiffness can be notched back a little – comfort increases, while precision remains. On the front axle, the shock absorbers are equipped with a hydraulic lifting system, which enables the front end of the super sports car to be lifted by 40 millimeters at the touch of a button, simplifying its ability to negotiate minor obstacles.

Systematic lightweight engineering in aluminum and carbon fiber

Aluminum and carbon fiber are also the most important lightweight engineering materials on the chassis. The entire suspension system, including upper and lower control arms, wheel mounts and relay levers are made from forged aluminum alloy. The large-diameter discs on the high-performance brake system, on the other hand, are made from lightweight and extremely hard- wearing carbon ceramic composite material. On the front axle, the ventilated discs measure no less than 400 millimeters in diameter, with braking force delivered via six cylinder calipers. On the rear axle, 380 millimeter diameter discs are used in combination with four cylinder calipers. The parking brake on the new Lamborghini top model is electrically powered.

Steering forms the sensitive connection between driver and automobile

The hydraulic steering on the Lamborghini V12 forms the highly sensitive connection between the driver and the super sports car, which runs on 19-inch wheels clad on 255/35 tires at the front and 20-inch rims on 335/30 tires at the rear. Steering Gear foresees 3 different servotronic characteristics managed by drive select mode. After all, not every day is the same and the "corsa" (race track) setting can perhaps sometimes be a little too demanding.


suspension pics:

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:dance::dance::dance:
 
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Early feedback on the car forums is good. Not a drastic revolutionary change, but a VERY nice evolutionary design for sure. Definitely showing a lot of Countach styling cues :cool:

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A few more...

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Beautiful!! I still like the LP460 better....I gotta see one up close though.
 
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nice but stil smh at only 700hp
The Aventador is a great evolution of the Lamborghini Murcielago and Reventon But it is not a two generation leap over the Murci like the Lambo President wanted it to be.
2012 Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 First Look
The Murcielago's welded alloy tube-frame chassis was an old-school life-support system for its monstrous but dated 6.5-liter V12. For all its brutal charm, much of its technology was rooted in the past. What Lamborghini needed, its president claimed, was a two-generation leap.

And, technically at least, that's what his engineering team has delivered with the 2012 Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4.


Clad in a typically aggressive body shell, it's based around a carbon-fiber chassis and clings to the road with a sophisticated pushrod suspension. Then there's the all-new V12 engine and a radical seven-speed gearbox. Even if it's not a full two generations ahead of its predecessor, no one is likely to argue that it's not at least one generation ahead of its competition.


The Guts of the Beast

Lamborghini released details of the Aventador's driveline months ago, but it has been less forthcoming about its new flagship's body structure. Now we can finally reveal that the Aventador is made up of not one, but three different carbon-fiber technologies. The result is a passenger cell that weighs just 325 pounds, but with more than twice the torsional stiffness of the Murcielago.

It's this torsional stiffness, coupled with a race-inspired pushrod suspension setup and double forged aluminum wishbones all round that will give the Aventador the handling accuracy it will need to cope with the frightening speeds it is capable of. The pushrods remotely relay the wheel forces to springs and Ohlins damper units mounted directly to the chassis. Up front, the forged aluminum pushrod attaches to a unit directly in front of the windscreen, while the rear units sit almost horizontally and attach just behind the engine.


The new suspension layout allows for larger braking units, too. Up front, the Aventador uses massive 15.7-inch carbon-ceramic rotors clamped by six-piston monobloc calipers, while the rear setup gets 15-inch rotors and four-piston calipers. There are custom-designed Pirelli P Zeros all round, too, with seemingly tiny 255/35R19s up front and monstrous 335/30R20s in back.


Despite the ultra-lightweight chassis, by the time Lamborghini added everything else, the 2012 Lamborghini Aventador ended up at 3,472 pounds — 22 more than the old Murcielago SV and only 198 pounds lighter than the Murcielago LP650-4. It's better than being heavier, but it's a far cry from the 400 pounds of weight savings that was being talked about only half a year ago.


Science Behind the Speed

Lamborghini has built a new 5,400-square-meter carbon production facility at Sant'Agata to build and bring together the three different carbon-fiber production methods that come together on the Aventador — two of which have never been seen anywhere else before.

Then there's another carbon breakthrough called Braiding which weaves carbon strands into tubular shapes ideal for adding strength in the A-pillar and down in the sill. They are also, handily, easy to replace in collisions.


Lamborghini also uses the traditional, labor-intensive prepreg system for all the surfaces people see and touch. It gives the surface a more finished look and is easier to paint.

Even after combining all three carbon systems and curing them together, Lamborghini says it can still manage production panel tolerances of just 0.1mm.

Heart of the Beast

A clean-sheet engine is a rare thing these days, and it's even more rare when you're talking about 500-800 cars a year. Yet a clean sheet is exactly what Volkswagen Group boss Dr. Martin Winterkorn gave Lamborghini's engineers, and they ran with it.

At 6,498cc,
the new V12 is roughly the same size as the old Murcielago engine, but that's where the resemblance ends. Its crankshaft is different, its cylinder heads are different, its bore and stroke are different. Even the bore centers are different. The only thing it retains from the old engine is the 60-degree V angle.

The first is RTM Lambo, a resin transfer molding system developed by Lamborghini and the University of Washington. Among its various benefits are a high level of automation, lighter carbon-fiber molds, a low resin injection pressure and far lower curing temperatures. Lamborghini then uses epoxy foam shapes to build spaces inside the tub that also double as harmonic dampers.


It's an enormously oversquare device with a 95mm bore and 76.4mm stroke, mainly, as Technical Director Maurizio Reggiani admitted, to reduce piston speeds at its 8,250 rpm power peak. Still dry-sumped, the engine has a silicone-alloy crankcase with seven bearings and a bedplate with eight integrated scavenge pumps to extract any last drop of unwanted oil.

The crank itself is a far lighter and stiffer unit, forged and nitride hardened, and spins beneath a pair of 32-valve cylinder heads that contain variable valve timing and lift technology, plus in-cylinder ionization to precisely control each spark and prevent any pre-ignition. Lamborghini insisted on this last piece of technology because, at 11.8:1, its compression ratio is high, enough to warrant more precision in case of poor fuel.
With 690 horsepower and 509 pound-feet of torque, the new motor is not only more powerful and lighter than the old engine, it revs all the way to 8,250 rpm and is strong enough to launch the Aventador from zero to 62 mph (100 km/h) in just 2.9 seconds. Top speed? Lamborghini officially says it's 217 mph, though engineers admit to seeing more than that in testing.

But this engine, an unforgiving refinement of existing road and race principles, wasn't developed in isolation. While Lamborghini's engine development once stood alone, it's now part of an entire powertrain department, so it was developed in concert with the new electronic architecture, the new Haldex IV center differential, the driveshafts and, last but definitely not least, the gearbox.

The old six-speeder was past its time and, in keeping with the "two generations" ethos, Lamborghini and Graziano developed the most radical, audacious gearbox in production today. The seven-speed unit is called an ISR (independent shifting rods) gearbox, and boasts the fastest gearchange times in the production car world today. At 0.05 second in Corsa mode, it can change gear faster than the Ferrari Scuderia or 599 GTO.

It's a two-shaft gearbox (again, designed from a clean sheet of paper) and it's been derived from ideas used in racing gearboxes developed by Australian Peter Hollinger. It breaks up the traditional gear pairings so that, as one gear is disengaging, the next one can be engaged by a different shifting rod simultaneously.

The whole unit is 265 pounds, which is 2.2 pounds lighter than the old gearbox, but with an extra gear, and there's far less rotational inertia, too. It channels power to a Haldex center differential which usually sends 70 percent of the drive to the rear end, but can switch that instantly to 100 percent (or zero) if it needs to. It could, theoretically, send 100 percent drive to the front, but the front diff is too small to handle quite that much
torque.

Styling Remains Bullish

Covering all of this is a body shell built for both speed and drama. Unlike the Murcielago, when the Aventador needs more air at higher speed, it doesn't create more drag by opening a set of batwings. Instead, the 2012 Lamborghini Aventador uses active aerodynamics to open movable ducts in the side flanks for the oil cooler, while the higher side openings are purely to feed air into the engine.

There's a flat undertray to help the downforce at high speed and the rear wing also moves automatically. It has three settings, dropping down to 5 degrees at very high speed and lifting up to 11 degrees to help with the handling.


Inside, the Reventon's dalliance with TFT instrument-cluster screens has paid dividends, because the Aventador has three of them in the dash alone plus another for the MMI screen, mounted high on the center of the dash.


This has allowed Lamborghini to provide all manner of information and give all manner of options, including switching the speedo to a lower priority on the Corsa (track driving) mode so the driver can have a more prominent tachometer.


Two Steps Ahead?

Clearly the 2012 Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 is more than just a reskinned and updated Murcielago. The styling isn't ground-breaking by any means, but how much more radical than a Reventon can you get before it starts to look ridiculous?

The proof will come when we get behind the wheel. Hard to believe that nearly 700 hp and an ultra-stiff carbon-fiber chassis won't make for a heroic experience. Then again, you can have too much of a good thing. We'll see for sure this summer.
 
:confused: I liked the Murci's interior, I wouldn't have called it "shitty", but yes this is an improvement


The materials used is some of the limited edition models were nice, but overall I just never cared for the styling of the interior.. particularly the dash. Everything just looked dated from day one.
 
The materials used is some of the limited edition models were nice, but overall I just never cared for the styling of the interior.. particularly the dash. Everything just looked dated from day one.

But who buys a super car for the interior? Aston Martin is the only company that's impressed me in that dept.

One-77 Interior
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might buy one tomorrow
 
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