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Five facts on the Huracan STO

The new Lamborghini Huracán STO has been traveling all over the world to entice people to order one … as if getting a street-legal Super Trofeo race car isn’t enough incentive, still Lamborghini marketing deemed it necessary to put the car in front of an audience anyway, and it seems to be working, as orders for this 640 hp V10 Raging Bull pile up … first deliveries are foreseen later this year.

The Super Trofeo Omologata is off course inspired by the Huracán EVO Super Trofeo developed by Lamborghini Squadra Corsa to run in their own race series, as well as the Huracán EVO GT3, the three-time winner of the 24 Hours of Daytona and two-time winner of the 12 Hours of Sebring.

Automobili Lamborghini just launched ‘#Focu5on’, a monthly series that will bring us “The 5 things you do not know about…”, giving anecdotes and behind the scenes information about Lamborghinis so that both owners and enthusiasts of the ‘Raging Bull’ can learn more about, as Lamborghini states: “the more unusual and less-known enigmas of a company that is much more than just a car manufacturer of global excellence”.

The first issue of Lamborghini #Focu5on lists The 5 things you do not know about the Huracán STO:

COFANGO, a “Made in Lamborghini” design solution

The term Cofango derives from the fusion of two Italian words: cofano (hood) and parafango (fender), coined by Automobili Lamborghini to describe the design solution in which the hood, fenders, and front bumper are integrated into a single component. This innovative system created by Lamborghini engineers is inspired by the Lamborghini Miura and the more recent Sesto Elemento, and on the STO is made entirely of very light carbon fiber.

The key to opening the fastenings on the STO’s Cofango is unique: it was developed in-house by the R&D team and made using an innovative 3D printing technique.

Dynamic pit stop in just three seconds

There is not much that can be changed in three seconds, but the set-up of the Huracán STO is one. Three new driving modes – STO (normal driving), Trofeo (race mode), and Pioggia (raining or wet) – adapt the set-up of the car to match high-performance driving environments.

The Huracán STO allows the driver to experience a dynamic pit stop as if a team of mechanics was right there!

Three times around the world in simulator tests

Lamborghini’s R&D team drove a distance equivalent to three times around the world in simulator tests before starting the Huracán STO’s road tests. State-of-the-art simulator technology allowed Lamborghini engineers to save time on quality control, lead times, and emissions by verifying that every part of the car fully complied with standards during different stages of the STO’s development, certifying, and testing.

2,750 components to make an STO

“Do you want to build a Huracán STO 1:1?”. It will take a lot of patience because there are over 2,750 components needed to build the latest car from Sant’Agata.

Connected telemetry thanks to 25,000 lines of code

The Huracán STO introduces an advanced connected telemetry system where the link between car-on-board cameras Connected Cloud Lamborghini and the App Lamborghini UNICA allows, thanks to an intuitive data analysis system and videos enriched with dedicated widgets, to transform the exclusive App dedicated to Lamborghini customers into a real track engineer. The development of this technology on the Lamborghini UNICA App required more than 25,000 lines of code.

Lamborghini Caps Production at 8,000 Cars for 2020

Driving Price and Exclusivity Higher

Supercar manufacturers place exclusivity at the top of their list of priorities. Companies can keep exclusivity high by limiting volume. The fewer the cars out there, the more highly sought those cars become. Ferrari capped its production for years with this principle in mind. Now, it seems Lamborghini will follow suit.

In an interview with CarAdvice, the Raging Bull’s CEO Stefano Domenicali said that the company will cap its production at 8,000 units for 2020. There would also be no increases in new markets. That means Lamborghini wants to keep close watch over its brand recognition. 

8,000 might not seem like much. If you look at the company’s sales, though, it’s plenty. The company sold 5750 models in 2018. That’s an over 50 percent increase from 2017. With the introduction of the Urus SUV, Lamborghini is expected to see similar or even more dramatic sales increases in 2019. However, for 2020, sales growth will definitely slow with the cap set at 8,000. 

Lamborghini UrusLamborghini Urus
Image from Lamborghini

With the addition of the Urus to the lineup, Lamborghini could sell all of the 8,000 vehicles it plans to make. The Urus just came into the lineup midway through 2018 and still managed to rack up 1,800 sales. A full year of sales could be a considerable money maker for the Raging Bull. 

According to CarAdvice, the company will break the 8,000 units down like this: half will be Urus and the other half will be either Aventador or Huracán supercars. 

Domenicali said the brand management of restricting the supply of the cars should help further with the residual value of the cars. He said Lamborghini’s residual value is already really high. He also said the brand’s cars seem to appeal to a younger generation of buyers. “It’s one of the reasons why we have to be at the right level when it comes to exclusivity,” he said.

Lamborghini Officially Reveals the Huracan EVO

This is the Real Deal

Lamborghini teased the Huracan EVO and then an image was leaked. Now we get to see the real car in all its glory and get all the juicy details. Here it is, the mid-cycle refresh of the Huracan EVO. 

The new Lamborghini Huracan EVO has taken many lessons from the Performante version of the car. It has a new, more aerodynamic front bumper and splitter. The Ypsilon shape to the intakes comes from Lamborghini’s design heritage, and overall the vehicle is more aggressive. 

While the front of the car is attractive, the rear is the true money shot. It features dual, high-mounted exhaust ports that look like a couple of cannons ready to fire. the new low spoiler helps with airflow and looks fantastic, and the general open feel to the rear makes the Huracan look even more like a supercar rocket. 

Faster and Better Around Corners

The vehicle gets a 5.2-liter V10 engine that makes 640 hp and 442 lb-ft of torque. Lambo says the exhaust note is as raucous as the car’s exterior thanks to a new lightweight system with titanium valves. It can sprint from a standstill to 60 mph in 2.9 seconds and has a top speed of 202 mph. 

While the car’s straight-line speed is impressive. What should be more impressive is how the car handles a racetrack or curvy road. The car has rear-wheel steering, four-wheel torque vectoring, and adaptive suspension. It also gets Lamborghini Dinamica Veicolo Integrata. It is a system designed to anticipate the driver’s next intention through a variety of gyroscopic sensors and the vehicle’s dynamic systems.

Inside the car gets an 8.4-inch touchscreen for multimedia and climate controls. It comes with Apple CarPlay for easy connectivity. Finishing the car off is the Arancio Xanto four-layer paint, 20-inch Aesir rims, and Pirelli P Zero tires as well as a luxuriously appointed interior.

2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO Images Leaked

Here’s Your First Look

The 2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO was teased earlier this week on the Unica app. Those images were the two close up shots you see below. Now, it seems another image of the full car, shown above, has made its way onto the wonderful World Wide Web. 

The new leaked image come from Huracan Talk. The shot shows that the car will have a center-exit exhaust and a short wing at the back as opposed to the Huracan Performante’s large wing.

The thread on Huracan Talk says the car does not have Lamborghini’s active aero ALA system. However, The Supercar Blog reported that the 2020 Huracan EVO will have the ALA system, but it won’t be quite as extreme as the one on the Performante. 

The publication points to the ALA logo at the bottom of the engine cover to show that the car will, in fact, have the system installed. 

Other changes include a pretty much all new rear fascia. The rear of the car as a whole looks more aggressive. Also, the leaked image gives you a good look at the new and absolutely gorgeous five-spoke wheels. The new image along with the two teasers, which can be easily viewed at Driver’s Magazine, gives you a pretty good idea of how the entire model will look. Overall, it’s a beautiful machine. 

The Huracan EVO will likely use the 5.2-liter V10 engine that is in the current model. Lamborghini could always revamp certain parts and components of the engine to make it spin faster and produce more power. I think the new model should get a bump over the current car’s 620 hp. I don’t think 650 hp is too much to ask for, but then that may be a little greedy.

2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO
Image from Driver’s Magazine
2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO2020 Lamborghini Huracan EVO
Image from Driver’s Magazine

2018 Lamborghini Huracán Performante Second Drive | The Lambo of the moment

Down the front straight, past the pits, over the start/finish line, sixth gear at 140 mph. Suddenly, the shrieking wail of the 2018 Lamborghini Huracán Performante’s mid-mounted V-10 and hits me right between the eyes. It’s an easy shot, since I’m wearing an open-face helmet.

Speed is not a problem for the Performante. This new lighter and more powerful version of the Huracán is the best-performing Lambo of all time. It just set the new production-car record around the Nürburgring Nordschleife of 6 minutes, 52.1 seconds. That’s 35 seconds quicker than the standard Huracán. And Lambo says it can accelerate from 0 to 62 mph in 2.9 seconds, which is as quick as the Aventador S. Its 202-mph top speed still lags the top end of the V-12-powered Aventador by 15 mph, but does it really matter?

Completely flat, smooth as glass and just 1.8 miles around, Thermal’s South Palm Circuit isn’t exactly the Nordschleife, but the bathrooms are much fancier. Built in 2014, the luxurious Thermal Motorsports Club outside of Palm Springs, Calif., is an ideal facility for us to taste the 2018 Huracán Performante. If owners of the $274,390 supercar want a safe and controlled environment to wring out their new toy, chances are it will be at private amusement parks such as this.

2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante

In the age of twin-turbos, the Huracán’s naturally aspirated V10 is a (glorious) anachronism. In the Performante, it has been cranked up to 640 hp at 8,000 rpm and 442 lb-ft of torque at 6,500 rpm, a 30-hp and 40-lb-ft increase over the standard all-wheel-drive model, and it’s all above 6,000 rpm.
Displacement remains 5.2 liters, but Lambo’s engineers added lighter titanium intake valves, more aggressive camshafts, a less-restrictive air intake and a lighter freer-flowing exhaust system. The engine’s compression ratio remains a stratospheric 12.7:1, and it runs into a very aggressive rev limiter at 8,500 rpm.

The Performante is 88 pounds lighter than the standard Huracán Coupe thanks to liberal use of the company’s patented Forged Composite, which it calls the lightest, strongest and most innovative material ever used by Lamborghini. Chopped fibers embedded in a matrix of resins, it’s sort of like carbon fiber 2.0, although its finish looks like high-tech camo with golden flecks. It’s all over the Performante, including its massive rear spoiler, rear bumper and diffuser, front spoiler and its engine cover, which weights 21 percent less than the piece it replaced. Inside you see more Forged Composite on the dash, doors and console.

Lambo also stiffened up the Performante’s suspension by 10 percent, the sway bars are 15 percent more aggressive and the A-arm bushings are 50 percent stiffer. But the coolest piece of the Performante, and what’s really going to wow the crowd at local Cars and Coffee, is the new active aerodynamics system.
Officially called Aerodynamica Lamborghini Attive (ALA), the patented system opens and closes a flap in the front spoiler depending on conditions. When closed, the spoiler creates downforce for high-speed cornering and full brake conditions. When the small electric motor opens the flaps, which takes 0.2 second, it redirects the airflow through an internal channel and the underside of the car. This reduces drag, increasing acceleration and top speed.

2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante

The fully automatic system also controls two internal ducts connected to inner channels of the rear wing. When the flaps are closed, the fixed rear wing works in a traditional manner, creating downforce and aiding cornering and braking. Lambo says it generates 750 percent more vertical downforce than the wingless standard Huracán Coupe.

In high-throttle conditions, ALA opens the flaps, which routes the air through the rear wing’s inner channels and through ridges underneath the wing, reducing drag. But here’s the cool part: The air channel is split left and right and the flaps work independently, allowing aero vectoring for high-speed cornering. The ALA system can increase downforce and traction on the inside wheel, counteracting the natural cornering forces.

After 10 laps, it’s hard not to be madly in love with this ridiculously antisocial supercar. Lambo says it weighs 3,047 pounds dry, and out on the track it feels small and light. Not exactly Miata miniature, but it’s tossable and it likes to turn on the brakes. It also understeers a bit on power out just to keep you alive, but it will drift if you chuck it in and get back on the power quickly. Do it, it’s also easy to catch with a small amount of counter steer.

Our codriver agrees. Sinya Sean Michemi races a Huracán in Lamborghini’s Blancpain Super Trofeo North America. “Compared to the original Huracán, it feels quite a bit less understeery,” he yells over the Performante’s screaming V-10, which is mounted just inches behind our heads.

2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante

Most of the corners on this circuit are handled in second gear, although there are two good, long straights where we touch sixth gear and get to enjoy the upper-rpm pull and full song of the big V-10. The straights also reveal the silky and rapid gear changes from the Lambo’s dual-clutch 7-speed, which Lambo geared perfectly to keep that goddess of an engine above 6,000 rpm.

There’s also a three-apex right-hander with a fast third-gear entry at the end of the backstraight. It’s the most challenging section of the track, and the Performante’s stability is impressive as we enter hard on the brakes and drop it down to second to finish the corner hard on the power. It’s massive 20-inch Pirelli P Zero Corsa’s are incredibly forgiving, and the compliance of the suspension over the track’s tall curbing is a nice surprise.

It’s almost stupid how easy it is to drive this car fast. The Huracán’s gargantuan cross-drilled carbon-ceramic brakes are foolproof, with telepathic pedal feel and awesome heat resistance even after constant lapping on a 100-degree day. There was a time not too many years ago that Lamborghini brakes would have caught fire and failed under such conditions.

2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante

Lamborghini’s ANIMA system offers three modes: Strada, Sport and Corsa. In Strada, Lambo says traction and stability are prioritized, and it’s easy to find the point at which its electronic watchdogs step in on the track. In Sport, the all-wheel-drive system offers a more rear-wheel-drive bias, and the stability control system loosens up enough for some light rotation. Also, the transmission will upshift for you, even in manual mode. In Corsa, the transmission is completely manual, and the stability control allows for plenty of oversteer.

Lamborghini says demand for the Performante is high. However, buyers should know that there’s a Spyder version coming and it’s sure to steal thunder from this hardtop, especially in the States.

But the Performante’s real issue is Lamborghini’s new SUV, which will begin to overshadow the supercar the instant it is unveiled on Dec. 4. The much-anticipated Urus is the Italian automaker’s most important new product since the Countach in 1974, and according to Alessandro Farmeschi, the COO of Lamborghini North America, it’ll double the company’s production when it goes on sale next year.

When that bomb drops, the Huracán Performante will no longer be the Lambo of the moment. Its 15 minutes will be up. Hell, that game clock is already ticking. But until then, let’s enjoy the Performante for what it is: Lamborghini’s best sports car ever. It’s a masterpiece—a masterpiece with unfortunate timing.

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