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Gautam Sharma26 May 2017
REVIEW

Lamborghini Huracan Performante 2017 Review

House of the raging bull winds its Huracan up like a coiled spring
Review Type
International Launch
Review Location
Imola, Italy

Lamborghini’s Huracan Performante is the most extreme interpretation to date of the Raging Bull’s V10 supercar. It’s also currently the fastest offering to emerge from the Bolognese marque – and, indeed, from any manufacturer – having posted a stonking 6:52.01 lap of the Nordschleife a couple of months ago. It’s no barebones stripper either, retaining all the comfort features and mod-cons of the standard Huracan. But what we’re here to explore is how rapid and satisfying it is to punt both on a racetrack and on the road, and to glean how well it gels as an everyday supercar

Confession time: I was mildly sceptical (and I’m certainly not alone here) of the Lamborghini Huracan Performante’s claimed 6:52.01 lap of the Nurburgring Nordschleife when it was announced a couple of months ago.

I simply couldn’t see how a 470kW coupe that weighs around 1500kg in road trim (1382kg dry weight) could blast around the 20.8km circuit a massive five seconds faster than the devastatingly quick Porsche 918 Spyder – a car that exploits all the high-tech engineering and motorsport nous the Zuffenhausen brainiacs could throw at it (albeit four years ago). It seemingly didn’t add up.

But now, after a day spent exploring the Performante’s breadth of capabilities at the dauntingly fast and undulating 4.959km Imola circuit and across some dubiously surfaced Italian backroads, it begins to make a bit more sense.

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Brutal, packaged
The Huracan spearhead’s point-to-point pace isn’t about brute force – even though it offers a decent helping of this. It’s more about the supreme cohesiveness of the whole package, enabling it to carry an extraordinary amount of speed into, through and out of corners.

It’s not too shabby on the straights either, as reflected by a 0-100km/h split of 2.9sec (versus 3.2sec for the Huracan LP610-4), 0-200km/h in 8.9sec (9.9sec for the LP610-4) and v-max of 325km/h.

The raw stats mightn’t be ground-breaking in today’s context, but every element of the Performante has been honed to the nth degree, and its trump card (thankfully nothing to do with Donald) is the pioneering ALA (‘Aerodinamica Lamborghini Attiva’) active aerodynamics system that Lamborghini has promptly patented.

More on this later, but the gist of this tech is that it provides high downforce under braking and cornering, yet low levels of speed-sapping drag on the straights. However, the real clever bit is its asymmetric ‘Aero Vectoring’ capability, which is essentially analogous to a torque-vectoring system (but obviously using airflow), to help get the car turned in to corners.

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F1 aero
Chatting over dinner, Lamborghini R&D boss Mauricio Reggiani reveals the tech was first proposed to him by a couple of ex-Toro Rosso Formula 1 engineers now in the employ of the Raging Bull, and preliminary tests in the wind tunnel proved the system had merit. Further development got the concept to a production-ready stage, and the Performante is the first car to utilise it.

The Huracan flagship’s emphatic Nurburgring benchmark is part of recently installed CEO Stefano Domenicali’s desire to stamp the brand’s identity as it embarks upon a major growth initiative that entails a massive plant expansion to churn out the crucial new Urus SUV that will be revealed at the Bologna factory in December.

Predictably, one of the Performante’s key upgrades is a subtle massaging of that musical, rev-happy V10, which gains lightweight titanium valves and a low-backpressure exhaust system comprising two fat drainpipes that exit higher up and closer to the centre of the car than the four tips you’d find at the rear of lesser Huracans. There’s visual differentiation within the engine bay, too, courtesy of bronze cam covers (previously seen on the 30th Anniversary Diablo SE30).

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These tweaks liberate an extra 30hp (22kW) and 40Nm over the LP610-4 for max outputs of 640hp (470kW) at 8000rpm and 600Nm at 6500rpm. The high revs at which peak torque arrives might have you thinking this is a peaky motor, but it’s in fact a very tractable unit, serving up 70 per cent of maximum twist from just 1000rpm.

The free-spinning V10 is hooked up to the same seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox as the regular Huracan, albeit subtly recalibrated for even faster response.

Both springs and anti-roll bars have been beefed up, which means the Performante’s suspension is 10 per cent firmer vertically, while roll stiffness is boosted by 15 per cent. It also gains stiffer (by 50 per cent) bushings to further sharpen lateral control.

Complementing the engine and chassis upgrades is a weight-shedding regime, as part of which the Performante gains ‘Forged Composite’ (chopped carbon fibres in a resin) elements that include the front and rear spoiler, engine cover, rear bumper and diffuser, resulting in it tipping the scales 40kg lighter than the standard Huracan LP610-4.

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Baptism of fire
So much for the theory, how does it all gel out in the real world? In a word, brilliantly.

For those who have never been there (and I’m guessing this will be the case for most readers), Imola – or Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, to refer to it by its officially moniker – is a proper, hairy, old-school racetrack.

It’s unfortunately remembered primarily as the place where Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger lost their lives during the fateful 1994 San Marino Grand Prix, but this shouldn’t detract from the fact that it’s an epic piece of tarmac, with pronounced elevation changes and fast, ballsy corners such as the downhill Tamburello and Piratella, where you basically take a deep breath and keep the foot flat.

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Firing out of pitlane, my eardrums are assaulted by the louder, harder-edged vocal signature of the Performante vis-à-vis its lesser siblings. Throttle response is sharper, too, and, in terms of raw straight-line urge, it feels lineball with its V12-powered Aventador S big brother. The 0-200km/h stats bear this out, as the latter is only a tenth quicker to this mark.

Everything about the Performante feels razor-edged. Where the Huracan LP610-4 was notable for having softened up somewhat compared to its Gallardo predecessor (in line with the top brass’s directive to make it a more user-friendly everyday supercar), the Performante seems ultra-focused in much the same way that the first Gallardo Superleggera was.

The transformation can be gauged by Lamborghini’s test and development driver Marco Passerini’s revelation that the Performante is about 4-5sec a lap quicker around Imola than the Huracan LP610-4s that are being used as pace cars for our three-car convoys today.

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However, that deficit is partially offset by the fact the pace cars are shod with super-sticky, track-oriented Pirelli Trofeo R tyres that are worth at least 2-3sec per lap over the PZero Corsas that our cars are on. Even so, the lead car ahead visibly squirms under brakes and through many of the corners, where the Performante remains relatively unflustered.

Of course, part of the Performante’s exceptional composure is down to its firmer suspension, but there’s no doubt the aforementioned ALA active-aero system (activated in the hardcore Corsa drive mode) plays a role here.

Unlike a conventional active aero set-up, whereby the whole wing changes its angle of attack, the ALA system uses front and rear ducts within which sit electrically actuated flaps that open and close to either ‘stall’ (cancel out) the front spoiler and rear wing, or enable them to generate full downforce (750 per cent more than a standard Huracan).

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Reggiani says this not only saves weight (it’s 80 per cent lighter than a conventional hydraulic active wing), it’s also much quicker to activate, with the transition from full-downforce to low-drag mode taking place in less than half a second.

In addition, the rear wing’s inner air channel is split right and left, allowing ‘aero vectoring’ for high speed cornering. Depending on the direction of the turn, the ALA system activates either the right or left side of the spoiler, increasing downforce and traction on the inner wheel, which counteracts the load transfer under heavy cornering.

As alluded to earlier, it’s a bit like torque-vectoring, which means you need to apply less steering angle, and the car also remains more stable, which is particularly confidence-inspiring at a high-speed track like Imola.

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Benchmark road racer
What it all adds up to is arguably the most track-capable road car currently on offer (although the McLaren 720S may have something to say about that). The Peformante is electrifying in its hair-trigger responses, yet never seems intimidating in the way the first Aventador and the Murcielago were.

It’s forgiving and adjustable, so even if you dive into a corner too hot or are excessively violent with your steering or throttle inputs, it allows you to recover without having any white-knuckle moments or losing much in terms of forward momentum.

The electronic safety net is non-intrusive in its intervention (especially in Sport and Corsa modes), so the Performante is a terrifically enjoyable car on track, especially with that V10 singing at 8000rpm.

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In fact, the engine spins up to its redline so effortlessly that it’s not too difficult to inadvertently bounce off the rev limiter while your attention is focused on monstering the rear bumper of the pace car ahead.

But perhaps the Performante’s biggest victory is that it’s not a one-trick pony that pummels you into a pulp in real-world conditions.

Proof of this is provided by the subsequent road loop, for which Lamborghini’s events team has selected a route that includes some remarkably poor sections of tarmac – lumpy in parts, and sharply corrugated in others.

On the whole, the Lambo copes surprisingly well. Ride quality is composed even in Sport mode, and the only the sharpest of corrugations cause any level of discomfort. The Performante is a realistic everyday car, even though most prospective owners are likely to have at least one or two other vehicles in their garage for daily-driver duties.

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Grand entrance
There’s no chance onlookers will mistake your Performante for a lesser Huracan – the in-yer-face rear wing sees to that but, just for good measure, there’s also that elaborately sculpted rear diffuser, with its matt-black and gloss forged composite elements, plus those two massive exhaust pipes.

The snout is no less purposeful or menacing, thanks to a thrusting, sharp-edged front splitter and a pair of air intake winglets that mimic snake fangs.

There’s no doubt the car looks most striking in ‘Arancio Antheus’ matt-orange – it’s the signature hue for the Performante – which contrasts sharply with the numerous black elements, Italian flag pinstriping and bronze-painted Narvi 20-inch forged alloys.

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It’s no shrinking violet, and this means its visuals will appeal to some buyers, but not necessarily all. Personally, I prefer the aesthetic purity of the unmolested Huracan. But you can each make up your own minds.

As an overall package, the Performante is a hugely tempting proposition for those who can afford it, and its $483,866 pricetag (a premium of roughly 13 per cent over a Huracan LP610-4) is not excessive considering how much faster and more rewarding to drive it is than the car it’s derived from.

An English colleague perhaps summed it up best over lunch at Imola: “It’s the car the Huracan should have been all along”.

Better late than never. Bravo, Lamborghini.

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2017 Lamborghini Huracan Performante pricing and specifications:
Price: $483,866 plus ORCs
On sale: Mid-year
Engine: 5.2-litre V10
Output: 470kW/600Nm
Transmission: Seven-speed dual-clutch auto, all-wheel drive
Fuel: 13.7L/100km
CO2: 314g/km
Safety rating: TBC

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Written byGautam Sharma
See all articles
Our team of independent expert car reviewers and journalistsMeet the team
Expert rating
88/100
Engine, Drivetrain & Chassis
19/20
Price, Packaging & Practicality
14/20
Safety & Technology
18/20
Behind The Wheel
19/20
X-Factor
18/20
Pros
  • Searing point-to-point pace
  • Terrific balance, everyday usability
  • That musical V10
Cons
  • Rear wing compromises visual purity
  • No one will want a regular Huracan
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