Sunday 29 July 2012

Lamborghini Surprised with its Super Car Estoque Concept First Look



Lamborghini has stunned the automotive world — and not least its supercar rivals Aston Martin, Ferrari, Maserati and Porsche — by unveiling a wild concept on the eve of the 2008 Paris Auto Show. It's the Lamborghini Estoque, a concept for a $230,000 four-door sedan. A 5.2-liter V10 should provide the car with enough power to reach 200 mph.

The Estoque is officially described as a concept, but it's already under serious consideration for production according to well-placed sources at the company's headquarters in Sant'Agata Bolognese.

The Estoque neatly extends Lamborghini's flamboyant design language and emotional appeal to a highly fancied third model line. Naturally it offers a level of interior accommodation and practicality well beyond that of the midengine Lamborghini Gallardo and MurciƩlago, yet its dynamic qualities promise to set lofty standards of excellence comparable to the firm's sports cars.

Four Doors, Yet Uncompromising
Described by the company executives as extreme and uncompromising, the Lamborghini Estoque concept aims to compete in an area of the market that has been occupied by the Ferrari 612 Scaglietti and will soon include two similarly conceived upmarket sedan rivals in the form of the Porsche Panamera and elegant Aston Martin Rapide. Its name follows Lamborghini practice, as it's linked with bullfighting; estoque is a Spanish word referring to the traditional sword worn by a matador.
 
Some may be shocked to find a Lamborghini with its engine placed in front of the driver, never mind with four seats and a trunk out back to stow luggage. However, there is precedence here in the form of the fondly remembered Espada, which was produced between 1968 and 1978. It is the spirit of that car that the incumbent Lamborghini management has clearly set out to rekindle with the Estoque, albeit with one vital difference, because this practical four-door sedan layout should see it appeal to a much wider customer base than the Espada ever achieved.

With a record 2,406 sales during 2007, Lamborghini is ultra keen to keep the sales momentum gained in recent years on the boil.

Building the Brand
The main elements of the Lamborghini Estoque were laid down at the beginning of April as part of a brand-building exercise within the Lamborghini studio, and the car was completed at the end of September just in time for its Paris unveiling.

It's a lengthy 154.7 inches overall and measures a similarly wide 78.4 inches, but it's also very low at 53.2 inches. The four-door aluminum body is peppered with typically flamboyant Lambo styling cues as well as a raft of new design details that should start finding their way onto new Lamborghini models in the not-too-distant future.

It's a car with real presence thanks to a look of great strength, an impression reinforced by a wedge-shape front end and tautly drawn surfacing. The car's rear haunches are far from subtle and enclose towering 23-inch wheels with 295/30ZR23 Pirelli P Zero Rosso tires. Even so, it is unmistakably a Lamborghini, despite the fact that it has four conventional front-hinged doors.

But you shouldn't think of the Lamborghini Estoque as simply a design exercise. Every facet of its exterior has been developed with production feasibility in mind, right down to its ability to pass the tough European pedestrian safety laws. The new car is based around a sturdy but lightweight aluminum space frame that draws heavily on the construction technology developed by parent company Audi for the A8 sedan.

A Sport Sedan, Only Italian
Lamborghini says the Estoque really isn't a sport sedan; it's really a super sport sedan. Whatever you call it, it certainly doesn't appear to lack for performance of any kind.

At the heart of the new car is the Italian carmaker's mighty 5.2-liter V10 engine. In a departure from all other existing Lamborghini models, the 90-degree unit is mounted longitudinally in the front underneath a long hood.

To provide the best possible weight distribution, most of the engine nestles behind the line of the front axle, reducing the polar moment of inertia. Lamborghini makes no power claims about the engine, although the very same V10 in the Gallardo LP560 kicks out 560 horsepower at a soaring 8,000 rpm, with 398 pound-feet of torque available at 6,500 rpm. Drive is channeled to all four wheels via a six-speed, single-clutch automated manual transmission with Lamborghini's e-gear shift paddles mounted behind the steering wheel.

All this is sufficient, one could surmise, to provide the Estoque with acceleration to 100 km/h (62 mph) in the region of 4.5 seconds and a top speed on the high side of 190 mph.

Lamborghini actually intimates that the production version of the Estoque would appear with somewhat more practical engine choices, including a twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V8 and possibly even a 4.2-liter V8 diesel. It also suggests the new car even could be offered with a hybrid drivetrain, presumably drawing on the lithium-ion battery technology being developed by Audi for use by the next-generation A8.

Not in Stores by Christmas
There's as yet no public commitment to a production date for the Lamborghini Estoque, suggesting that company executives genuinely intend to gauge reaction to the new four-door before making any firm decisions on whether to build it or not. Behind the scenes at Sant'Agata, though, the Italian supercar-maker is already well advanced on a business plan that would see the Estoque join the Gallardo and a successor to today's MurciƩlago in a highly attractive three-strong model lineup from 2011 onward.

The Lamborghini executives we spoke to, prior to the Estoque's unveiling at the Paris auto show on the night of October 15, hinted at a possible price around $230,000, with annual production of up to 2,000 examples — a figure that would effectively double the company's volume in one fell swoop. Just where it would be built remains up in the air. But now that the Aston Martin Rapide and Porsche Panamera have broken the mold of what's expected from sports car manufacturers, the Lamborghini Estoque can be sure of scores of orders following its debut in the French capital.
source:edmunds
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