Lamboghini huracan sterrato

The Sterrato looks and feels like a Huracan that has been gene-manipulated in the base camp of the Rallycross federation. It sits 47mm higher above the ground than the rest of the range, its track is 30mm wider front and rear, the front spoiler has a stiffer upper lip and a receding chin, the rear departure angle was increased for extra clearance, the tread pattern of the bespoke softer sidewall tyres looks like two-thirds race track and one third Mount Everest car park.

Climbing behind the wheel is easy thanks to the wide-opening scissor door and the elevated ride height. The hip multi-material bucket seats look as if they come straight out of Kanye West’s Yeezy factory, the five-point harness scores nine out of ten points on the bondage chart for private parts, the driver environment looks familiar despite all the colourful new surface trim.

To compensate its weight, drag and suspension set-up handicaps, the stilted soft-roader is fitted with the 640bhp V10 of the no-holds-barred Performante. The normally-aspirated 5.2-litre engine works all four wheels through a quick-shifting seven-speed dual-clutch transmission, not the stubborn sequential ISR box unique to the Aventador. The mighty direct-injection motor needs 6500rpm to tick off 600Nm of maximum torque. The peak performance of 640bhp equals 8000rpm, the rev limiter is set at 8500rpm. This is a wonderful powerplant for a car dedicated to inveterate late-brakers and notorious apex clippers, but does it also perform to expectation in this softer sprung stacked go-anywhere metamorphosis?

Well? Does it?

We do two laps in Corsa, then ESP comes off by order from the lead car, and sure enough from one instant to the next the orange stripe-mobile is beginning to catch insects with its side windows as the driver´s heartbeat quickens and the intercom squawks avanti!, forza! and bravissimo!

This is hard work. Over the brows, the special BBS alloys shod with hand-baked 255/45ZR20 and 305/45ZR20 Pirellis stretch the springs until the aluminium monocoque hurts. Through the dips, the softer dampers and the cushier tyres extend the compression effect all the way to the pit of the stomach. When the radius tightens, blossoming lift-off oversteer can be coaxed into creamy slides. Drifting this wild thing in fourth gear at 75mph certainly fixed another treasured commemorative medal to the brimming clipboard inside my head. The adrenalin floodgates would open regularly on the approach to a roller-coaster off-camber uphill corner and towards the end of the fastest right-hander where it´s all too easy to run out of road, ability or courage.

On the circuit, the most radical Lamborghini since the 2013 Veneno does not handle and perform on quite the same level as its positively ground-hugging stablemates, and yet it loses only two tenths in the 0-62mph session which is over and done within 3.1sec. The maximum speed is 188mph compared to 203mph for the more slippery donor model. It´s too early to talk fuel consumption, but when you exhaust the car´s potential to the full, anything better than 15mpg is a miracle.

Because of the provisional tyres, the speed limit on the straight was set at 155mph which felt fast enough in violent crosswind and in the turbulent slipstream of the pace car. Although the transmission wastes no time selecting the appropriate ratios with the drive mode in Corsa, manually overriding the black box is even more rewarding since it keeps up the flow by avoiding redundant downshifts. Third is a great all-purpose weapon, fourth is the gear of choice for the two double-apex corners and fifth is a test for high-speed cornering grip.

What about off road?

The fifth-generation Haldex four-wheel drive system has been carefully recalibrated for the Sterrato. On solid ground, it channels only slightly more torque to the rear wheels, but when it comes to pulling the car presto out of a second-gear kink, the front wheels are for three or four car lengths assigned a larger chunk of the traction work.

This explains why the fun-friendly Huracan is tail-happier on the track than the Performante yet every bit as competent as the Urus on sand and gravel. Having said that, the different tyre compound and the more compliant suspension set-up do add a yard or two to the stopping distance which is prone to increase in small increments as the rubber and the pads must absorb more heat. As a compensating measure which also helped to keep understeer at bay, the mechanics reduced the tyre pressure by 0.2bar during the first three pit stops. Like the Huracan Evo, the Sterrato features LDVI, short for Lamborghini Dinamica Veicolo Integrale. The reprogrammed system controls ABS, ASR and ESP along with AWD, torque vectoring, damper setting and steering action front and rear.

On the loose stuff, power-on equals snap-oversteer, one quick zig-zag pendulum manoeuvre sets the car up before it enters the bend, storming out of one radius and roaring towards the next shifts the momentum briefly but reliably to the front wheels - fantastic! Except that it takes a lot of confidence (or the encouragement of a seasoned co-driver) to keep the foot planted for that vital rear-to-front torque transfer which makes all the difference. It´s goose pimple stuff on lap two, makes you feel like a hero on lap three, chips a morsel off the left rear wheel spat on lap four, becomes totally addictive from lap five onwards.

Coated with mother earth´s finest powder, sprinkled with Puglia´s darkest soil and proudly displaying several gorse-inflicted battle scars, the Sterrato suddenly looks the business - like a motocross rider who just mastered the famous four-hour Erzberg Rodeo. Watching this unicorn Huracan gallop sideways through the green-and-beige Jurassic pleasure park is as unforgettable as zooming in as it steams out of the final second-gear turn on the handling track, trailing a whiff of blue tyre smoke while the two rows of LEDs stage a super-cool light show.

The only evident downsides concern the durability of those somewhat coarse add-on flaps and flares, the spiderweb roll cage and the armadillo rear window cover which mess up the view in the mirror, the jackhammer noise level no NHS would ever tolerate, and the puerile roof rack for snow- and surfboards which does little more than squeeze the lifestyle gland of easy to please influencers.

Lamborghini Huracan Sterrato: verdict

After driving it, they had to remove me from the hot seat with a blowtorch. The Sterrato is an intoxicatingly hilarious animal. It shaves third-gear brows like a buzzard on the final approach to his prey, it dives into dips like an angry rhino chasing the most hated gamekeeper, it corners with the frolic empathy of an antelope in the wake of early morning intercourse. It is even more playful than its brethren, and the mere prospect of enjoying a long cold winter in a hardcore sports car is bound to make quite a few Lambophiles reach for their chequebooks. oh btw if you want to offroad a super car offroad this

Am I getting carried away by the child inside? Perhaps so. But the Sterrato hits bullseye in more ways than one. If you don´t build this car, you need to see a doctor: do you hear me, Dr Diess?

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Specs

Price when new: ÂŁ0
On sale in the UK:
Engine: 5204cc V10, 631bhp @ 6000rpm, 442lb ft @6500rpm
Transmission: Seven-speed dual-clutch auto, all-wheel drive
Performance: 3.1sec 0-62mph, 186mph, 18mpg (est)
Weight / material:
Dimensions (length/width/height in mm):
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yes

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what you want a offroad bugatti or prius

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Seems like Lamborghini also likes MotorStorm.


The gun-slit-narrow rear view frames a huge Lamborghini-manufactured explosion of road detritus. The accompanying noise is a combination of dust, stones and rocks being thrown up by all four driven wheels and their impact in, around and under the car, and it is brutally violent. The road hits a rise which we crest and the car goes light, we touch down and I jump on the brakes, turn in and the car starts to rotate. I get back on the throttle and aim in one long sideways spray of dust, noise and V10 brilliance around the long left-hand turn in third gear.

While for most supercars this would be the wincingly embarrassing paragraph describing the moment when it all went wrong, when I ran out of talent and ended up talking to our insurers… this is what the Lamborghini Sterrato was made for. So, rather than my co-pilot bracing for impact, he continues to offer encouragement: “This is nice. Gas, gas, gas.” As my laps of the Strada Bianca rally stage continue, I learn to ignore the noise and enjoy the experience.

Let’s rewind a bit… I’ve been invited to Nardò – the top-secret test facility located at the bottom of Italy – by Lamborghini’s head of R&D, Maurizio Reggiani, to test drive this skunkworks project: the Huracán Sterrato. While there’s no direct translation of ‘sterrato’ in English, the best approximation is ‘dirt’. Yes, this is the Lamborghini Huracán Dirt. Like all the best projects, this one has been developed by a highly enthusiastic team in their own time, alongside other projects. While on first acquaintance your reaction may be that they must have spent too much time in the sun, dig a little deeper and these guys could well be on to something. Just look at it. If, like me, you grew up on a diet of Tamiya and Kyosho catalogues and building/racing/jumping RC cars around your neighbourhood, the Sterrato is the full-size realisation of those days.

The day starts with a technical briefing, which tries to insert the Sterrato into a logical planogram of Huracán models. Admirable, but I’m not sure it needs to fit into the model matrix. In a world all too often stymied by analysis and user clinics, it’s refreshing that Lamborghini still has the passion to create something it thinks people will simply like. Something fun. Something cheeky. If we’re honest, Lambo is the only carmaker provocative enough to develop a project like this and show it, just to see how its audience reacts.

The technical recipe for the Sterrato is as follows. Take one HuracĂĄn Evo with naturally aspirated 5.2-litre V10 delivering 631bhp to the all-wheel-drive, rear-wheel-steering drivetrain.

Next, raise the ride height by 47mm (handily improving ground clearance, plus approach and departure angles) and retune the standard dampers. Increase the track by 30mm. Leave the wheel size the same at 20in, but fit special high-profile balloon tyres developed with Pirelli to work on-road and off. Move the front axle 30mm forward by redesigning the suspension geometry, ensuring the wheels clear the arches on compression, and revise the front wings to accommodate the 30mm shift. Add a new steel front splitter, cladding around the wheelarches and side sills, and a reinforced undertray. To help the engine breathe and prevent the V10 from swallowing much dust, add aero flicks in front of the air intakes and fit a revised air filter. Finally, add roof rails, a light bar and two front spotlights (anyone else think it should be a five-light cluster?) and you have a Huracán Sterrato. Inside, it’s familiar Huracán, but a titanium rollcage, new adjustable sports seats (comfy), four-point harnesses (fiddly) and aluminium flooring differentiate it from the ‘regular’ car.

Presentation finished, Nardò health and safety briefing done (which seems to consist mostly of warning us not to feed the animals), it’s time to find out what the Sterrato feels like on the 3.8-mile tarmac handling track.

The short answer is: comfy, rear-biased and amusing to drift. The more detailed analysis is that, thanks to the Sterrato’s increased ride height and tyre sidewalls, the car pitches and squats on braking and acceleration, which is unnerving at first and feels slightly foreign in a modern Lambo. But the R&D team has spent a lot of time modifying the Lamborghini Dinamica Veicolo Integrata (LDVI) system to make the Sterrato more rear-biased. After a couple of laps, you begin to enjoy this new supple Lamborghini, turning in on the brakes to get the car sliding, and then powering out on oversteer. It’s clearly not going to threaten the regular Evo’s lap times, but its accessibility and the enjoyment you get from a completely different kind of Lambo experience is addictive. Moreover, it’s far less compromised on track than you would have thought looking at it sat in the pitlane.

Track work done, we move to the Strada Bianca, a ribbon of white road made up of sand, dust, rocks and VERY SOLID BANKS. This is where the Sterrato comes alive. Initially, my onboard computer can’t process the fact I’m flat-out in third, occasionally grabbing fourth and drifting a supercar around a rally stage. To be honest, it feels wrong to me, and I spend my time waiting for the chassis-compromising crunch as the car grounds on landing, or the glow of the warning lights as the Italian diva waves the white flag… but they never come. The Sterrato takes or, rather, revels in the abuse.

It genuinely feels like you’re the latest star of Police, Camera, Action! who has stolen someone’s supercar and are desperately trying to flee the scene cross-country. But once you get past the noise and remember the Sterrato was designed to do this, it proves hugely capable and, without question, the most fun I have had in a supercar.

In Corsa mode, the LDVI system has been revised to lengthen the transition into oversteer, making it flattering and easier to drift on broken and unpredictable surfaces. At the end of my second stint, I get out expecting there to be some damage to the car, such is the pounding the surface was giving it, and so horrendous were the noises of stones battering it, but, while covered in dirt, it sits happily idling with not a mark on it.

Dirty supercars, supercars that show they have been used, have long been something we admire at Top Gear. As the Sterrato ticks cool, covered in an extreme layer of, er, ‘sterrato’, it looks fabulous. It’s done enough during my time with it to make me sincerely hope it makes the move from skunkworks R&D special to production car.

In a world where the supercar spectrum is driven by the pursuit of thousandths of a second, it’s refreshing for Lambo to have the confidence to go in a different direction, and I genuinely think it could be onto something.

As the world’s roads continue to deteriorate at a frankly alarming rate, the chances of finding a road good enough to fully pull the pin on a supercar become a vanishing rarity. Emerging markets like China, Russia and India have hugely disparate road quality and vast tracts of routes only reachable by something off-road-capable. But why should a supercar, or, more accurately, the supercar experience, be restricted to roads? Too many of these incredible feats of engineering are bought and hardly ever used, the surface of their potential barely scratched. The Sterrato breaks the stereotype the supercar has backed itself into, and offers a broader capability and with it broader appeal.

Need to get to your Alpine retreat? Bolt the snowboard on the roof and head for the snow line. Bored with Sunday evening traffic back into LA? Why not take a diversion across the trails? Want a supercar that can survive the harshest environment of all: daily life in a megacity? The Sterrato has you covered.

What Lamborghini has created in the Sterrato is a diverse, enjoyable and usable supercar for the battleground of the world we find ourselves in today. A supercar that deserves to be let out of the skunkworks and let loose on our planet.
(source: Top Gear)


CC2 Stats

Derby Tier: 1
Token: 3
Price Range: 6.3B
Exclusivity: Group
Scrap Limit: 6000

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FUCK

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lol

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When you realize they can’t have the same car suggestions:

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Lol

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This is his rival (idk)

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We alr got the 911 dakar ingame, why not have this to rival it?

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This is my favorite Lamborghini. This needs to be added.

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I didn’t even know this existed, that is hilariously awesome

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Revive

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probably a Lamborghini I would drive, not to rally, but so I don’t bottom out the instant I drive on an uneven road

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Lol that’s exactly what I’d get it for too. You get a supercar without the anxiety of a speed bump, and it can go off road?!

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