How One Man Made the Perfect Car

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great video

explained the what where why when and how of the supercar in an entertaining format

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/5_dollars_hotnready 📅︎︎ Feb 16 2023 🗫︎ replies

The ultimate car of the 20th century.

A journalist was invited to test drive the car along with a Mclaren test driver, at the test track. When the journalist was seated in the driver's seat and started the engine, the test driver told him to depress the clutch, but don't touch the accelerator and engage first gear, then let the clutch out gently, the car moved off and the test driver told him to change to the next gear and continue to change gears until he got to top gear, all without touching the accelerator. Now that's torque with a capital T

If only the desired carbon fibre brake discs and pads had been advanced enough at the time to be used on public roads, as Gordon had desired, the F1 would have weighed under 1000kg, unfortunately, he had to settle for metal brakes which put the weight up to 1038kg.

Nowadays the F1 owners have had to get together to establish a fund of money to make another batch of bespoke tyres. The same applies to the windscreen, which of course has a plasma discharge system to demist the screen.

It's a great pity that when the construction started and all the cars had received buyers' deposits the stock market crash at that time meant that a lot of buyers had to drop out, thus the desired production run of 300 cars only resulted in the seventy-two road models that exist today.

The seventy-two owners who took possession of their cars now have a multi-million dollar investment.
The last one changed hands for $ 20.5 million.
A guy stopped me on the street the other day and asked me if I wanted to buy a ticket in a raffle to win a Mclaren F1, I told him I've got too many already!

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/EnvironmentalFly3507 📅︎︎ Feb 16 2023 🗫︎ replies
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What does it look like when something is designed without rules, without restrictions, without limits? One goal, one singular vision to break the template of what is possible, to redefine what it means to be fast. To push the limits of performance until just before they break with whatever means necessary, whatever the cost. In 1992, one man was brave enough to ask this question and gave everything he had to find the answer a difficult pursuit that led him to create something that transcended sports cars that bounded past what it even meant to be a super car, a monolithic achievement forged from carbon fiber, titanium and gold, a singular pursuit of speed, of performance that changed the very definition of fast forever. From the mind of a South African madman came a machine capable of knocking down the Giants. Porsche. Ferrari, Lamborghini. All came to know the answer to the question What if a car was created without rules? Without limits, that car would be the world's first hypercar. The McLaren F1. Close your eyes and imagine a fast car. No, you idiot. A properly fast car. That's better. Yes. When you think of real, proper, fast cars, they're typically the screaming metal death traps made by overzealous Italian men. Difficult cars, unreliable cars, but fast cars. But by 1990, the world of supercars had largely been resting on its laurels. They were using antiquated technology. The Countach’s V12 was nearly identical to the engine Lambo developed in the late 60’s The Ferrari F40 was a tube framed chassis. It was basically a race car, wasn't exactly high tech, and owning them was terrible. They didn't drive very well, and it cost a fortune and required a team of people to keep them running. But that was what was working. That was what people wanted from the world's most expensive cars. They wanted owning them to hurt, apparently. And thanks to that, the Italians were set in their ways, afraid to break the rules, fearful that the next step forward in technology might step them off of a cliff. And then Honda came along and well broke all of those rules. You see, Honda didn't know that a supercar had to be unreliable just to be fast. They didn't know that they needed to be undriveable just to look cool. They just knew that when you stick an engine in the back of a little car, it was a lot of fun. And since they were Honda, they just weren't capable of building an unreliable cable car. The Honda NSX was essentially an accident, but it had impact. And like any impact, it produced waves and ripples. Distortions that carried quietly through the fabric of sports cars long after it was released. It brought in Senna, the brilliant Formula One driver, who at the time was the secret weapon of McLaren, a bespoke racing company who employed some of the most brilliant car designers in the world and used Honda engines to power those cars that they built. Now it's pretty safe to assume Senna probably brought his personal NSX to the office once or twice, because one of those designers at McLaren, a magnificent bastard by the name of Gordon Murray, happened to fall in love with that speedy little Honda wedge. Up until then, he had assumed that the Porsche 911 was the perfect sports car. But now he had tasted an even sweeter fruit. The Honda NSX Murray knew that there was unrealized potential in the world of fast cars, and he intended to prove it. It's 1988 and at an airport in Milan, Italy. Cigarette smoke fills the air. Negronis fill tumbler glasses at the bar. And after a particularly grueling Grand Prix, four grumbly men sit around a table unaware that they are about to decide the future of supercars. History books would call them the McLaren four. Sitting in one corner is the director of McLaren Racing, Creighton Brown, a man who in his life wore 1,000,001 hats, including pig farmer, jazz musician and most relevantly, British team world champion driver. Next to him is Ron Dennis. McLaren's team manager, a Formula car mechanic. Since the age of 18, when most people were concerned about picking a college major, Ron was turning wrenches on the fastest cars in the world. Across the table was Mansour Ojjeh, a French Saudi Arabian who, being born with a pretty large silver spoon, pushed up his butt was the financial backbone of the team. And there at the head of the table. Was Gordon friggin Murray, a meticulously minded control freak, a pioneer in race car design He's basically the reason that Formula One cars look the way they did in the seventies, and probably the reason that most car designers have Rockstar hair now together, circled around a table, coffee breasts wafting an air filled with cigaret smoke. They made a plan. You see, at the time, McLaren didn't make normal cars that people drive. They only made racecars for race tracks to be shown in front of an audience. Ujiri Ever the businessman saw an opportunity for them to do something more. Ferrari and Lotus were both racing, but they were also selling sports cars. McLaren, he reckoned, could do better. He stood in front of his team of grizzled automotive veterans, each of them a genius in their own right, and clasped his hands together. Let's do a road car, the best road car in the world. Ron Dennis. Usually the voice of reason, hardened and cynical after years of being the one fixing all of the mistakes had visions of money being flushed down the toilet as they pursued this idea. But he got so caught up in the dream of what was possible, he couldn't find the voice to say no. Creighton, Dennis and Ojjeh began to hash out the details of this brand new company, cleverly called McLaren Cars. Engineers aren't really good marketers. As they debated, Murray sat quietly in the background, putting it all together in his own way and on a simple sheet of paper. Gordon pens the prophecy of the F1, sketches, words and thoughts that would become one of the greatest engineering manifestos ever written. But before we read the prophecy, maybe we should meet its hairy messiah first. Ian Gordon Murray was the son of a motorcycle racer from Scotland. Born in 1946 in Durban, South Africa, a beautiful coastal city known for its rich art deco architecture and also its poisonous reptiles. His father at the time worked for Peugeot, but would help people build race cars under the moonlight. Most people didn't have the money to just buy a fast car, and that didn't sit right with Poppa Murray. On the weekends, he would drag young Gordon to watch the cars that he built. Race, whether it was hill, climbs up cobblestone roads or rivalries being hashed out on tight city streets. You can bet that the Murray duo was there watching and taking notes. Papa Murray encouraged Gordon to study engineering and continue to make cars better. Gordon begrudgingly did, but had different ideas. Sure, he liked engines enough and had even sketched a three passenger rear engined car in his freshman notebook. But what Gordon really wanted to do was race. So when Gordon was 21, he decided he wanted a race car, but not having the money to buy one. He just set about building one. He managed to find a crashed Ford Anglia that he could build into a race car, but he didn't have a garage, so he built his engine in his bedroom. The chassis welded together on top of his mother's flower garden. He used her fertilizer caked shovel to shape the body panels. It almost sounds like an origin story from a comic book Akin to Iron Man's suit being built in a cave. Gordon Murray built his first race car in his family's backyard. He called it the AGM Ford or T.1 This is the naming convention that Gordon Murray still uses today. They're all t dot something. The T1 looked a bit like a Lotus seven kit car. And that's because he used parts from a Lotus seven to shape the body. But underneath it was all Gordon Murray. The T one's triangular tube suspension would be the basis for future Formula One cars, and even though the lotus was already known for being lightweight. Gordon had built a car that was both lighter and stiffer. After a few wins, Gordon decided that while racing was indeed a lot of fun, he should actually pursue his two greatest passions by moving to the cultural epicenter of both the center of rock and roll music and racing engineering. No, not. Not America’s South. God's own England. Having sold the IGM Ford for a plane ticket, Murray took his first few steps into the halls of automotive mythology. He got to work designing championship, winning Grand Prix cars. Lotus was who he wanted to work for, but he got Brabham instead. There he was, named lead designer by Bernie Ecclestone. Yeah, that Bernie, the F1 Bernie At Brabham Murray would design one of the most unique and controversial F1 cars of all time. The BT 46 B or as you probably know it, the fan car, its giant fan at the rear sucked air from the bottom of the car, creating insane downforce. The BT 46 B was a revolution, so upsetting that it was only raced once before. Bernie decided that it maybe a bit too much and might shake F1 to its breaking point. Gordon went on to pen more F1 cars for Brabham, racking up 22 wins and taking second in the Constructors Championship. His time at Brabham gave Murray a singular focus and that was to out engineer everyone and win. And in 1987, Gordon Parks, his low slung F1 car designs into his coat jacket and leaves Brabham behind him He lands at McLaren shortly after on a three year contract under Ron Dennis. He helps then lead designer Steve Nichols create winning designs cars that helped McLaren set records and even earned Senna his first championship. And thanks to all of this. In 1991, he's named the lead of the new McLaren Cars Project, where his newly drafted manifesto would be etched into the minds of everyone who took part. These were the words that everyone on the F1 project had to live by. It must not weigh more than 1000 kilograms. It will have a maximum width of 1.8 meters, and the front and rear overhangs must be absolutely minimized. The majority of the car's mass must be between the wheels, and most importantly, it must not have any of the issues normally associated with mid-engined cars. It must survive on roads, be stable at high speeds, drivable at low speeds, and comfortable in short sketched on wrinkled paper while talking shop. Murray had but one simple request. Just build the greatest road car ever. A car that could be lived with like the NSX. A car that was beautiful, like the Alfa Romeo, 33 Stradale. And oh yeah, faster than the Porsche 959. It would be built with Formula One technology because after all, that is what Gordon knew best now. Notably absent from the manifesto was anything about top speeds or lap times or 0 to 60 times. That's right. For a car that dominated those performance figures for years. They were never a part of the plan. Murray didn't care about any of that stuff. And in fact, he kind of hated cars that had a singular focus on speed. Murray specifically set out to make sure this was not a race car. It was a road car. It was the ultimate road car. In Gordon's mind, race cars had far too many rules. McLaren's debut would have no rules. They had no inertia to overcome. They needed to fit in no mold. They were limited only by their imagination. Racing was regulated. And road cars were the Wild West. The three bigwigs at the helm saw Gordon's design, read his holy words and said, Yes, we want this car. We want this car without rules. But in order to create a car with no rules. Gordon Murray wrote probably more rules than any other designer ever dared to make. And God help you if you ever tried to break them. You see, Gordon Murray is a man of details. The initial meeting to hash out the specs of the F1 took nearly 11 hours after getting the green light on the F1 project. Gordon put together his dream team the best of the best. It included masterminds like Peter Stevens, the man who designed the Lotus Elan M100 one of Gordon's favorite cars of all time, and Steve Randale, an early pioneer in using computer models to design car chassis and who would later go on to design flying frickin cars. This think tank got to work on making Gordon's manifesto reality. It would simply be a no compromise car made of advanced composites, carbon fiber, titanium, gold. There would be three seats because a real driver's car had its driver sitting in the middle fully in command of the machine, like a race car. But it still had to be practical enough to bring your wife and daughter to the market. It needed luggage space. It needed to be reliable. And of course, this was a sports car. It would need instant throttle response and pure driving feel. It couldn't have any assists. There wouldn't be any abs or power steering or traction control. Those systems, those safety features would take away control from the driver. A car controlled by computers is not the ultimate driver's car. Gordon was confident that he could design such a car. He had the vision to bring this all to life. He knew he could engineer the perfect chassis. The one thing he knew he didn't have was the ability to create the perfect engine, and for that he was going to need a partner. From the outset, Gordon Murray knew the numbers. He wanted his engine to give him 100 horsepower per liter and at least five and a half liters, 550 ponies on tap, 12 cylinders furiously spinning beyond 7500 RPMs and most importantly, naturally aspirated, waiting for a big, dumb turbo to spool up was not Gordon's idea of the ultimate experience. And importantly, the engine couldn't weigh very much. He wanted a power plant that would stay under 250 kilos. As if that wasn't enough. It also had to be able to run forever and have long service intervals, be able to run reliably while experiencing race, car like G-forces and all while being a structural component of the entire car. I don't think I need to tell you this, but in 1990, engines like that did not exist, not even in racing. Gordon wanted the impossible because again, this was a car made without limits, a machine made without rules. But, you know, as you can see, it has a lot of frickin rules. Gordon made the rounds. First he approached Honda. After all, they had already been building the engines for McLaren's Formula One cars. And they did just build the NSX, which is one of Gordon's favorite cars. So it seemed like a natural fit. But Honda straight up, ghosted him. They probably took one look at the demands, especially the V12 and more than 300 horsepower part, and went back to doing Honda things. But that was no problem because when you're Gordon Murray, you eventually get what you want. He even considered reaching out to Ferrari, but came to the conclusion that Ferrari would not be able to make a reliable powerplant. I don't know what would have given him that idea. Sure, Honda and Ferrari are masters of the internal combustion engine and they're pretty obvious choices and I know this sounds crazy for those of us living in the future now. He considered working with Isuzu. I know that sounds crazy, but Isuzu actually had their own V12. A three and a half liters screaming lot of intricate piping known as the P799 W.E. and the Engine actually met Gordon's requirements. Ironically, though, head honcho Ron Dennis didn't want to give Isuzu the chance because they hadn't proven themselves yet. I mean, I guess when you're McLaren and you're developing your first road car, you didn't really want to take any chances. So Honda left McLaren on red Ferrari was too unreliable and Isuzu was too new thing. Gordon for Paul Rosche. Paul worked with Gordon before and thus had a lot of insight into the designer's turbulent mind. You see, before Honda's partnership with McLaren's F1 team, Gordon Murray had relied on BMW engines. Paul Rosche was the guy that designed those racing engines and when Gordon called him up to tell him about his new road car, they're building. Paul immediately said, I'm in. In record time, BMW produced an all new 12 cylinder monstrosity called the S70/2. It was an aluminum forged masterpiece at 6.1 liters and 627 horsepower. It exceeded the 100 horsepower per liter requirement, which was kind of a holy grail at the time. It had dry sump lubrication, meaning that oil would lubricate the cylinders, even under intense cornering. Each cylinder bank had its own water pump and each specifically forged aluminum piston had its own ignition coil, making sure that the electric system was absolutely bullet proof. It even had Vanos, BMWs version of VTEC so that it could be manageable at low speed and scream as it climbed in the ribs. The only issue as far as Murray was concerned was that it was a little heavy. I mean, it was German, after all. Gordon really wanted to keep the weight below 250 kilos or about 550 pounds. The s70 was 20 lbs heavier than that. The weight you gain after your first year of college eating nothing but Top Ramen. I can only imagine a frustrated Gordon wrinkling his nose and going, I guess it'll have to do. Inside, he must have been furious. But the engine was the final piece of the puzzle. The missing piece that allowed the car to finally come together. And slowly all of these pieces came together and automotive history began to form. The new BMW powerplant would sit neatly tucked behind the rear seats, wrapped in gold just to keep it cool. The exhaust pipe specially made out of Iconel Yeah, I haven't heard of it either. Iconel is a special lightweight aerospace metal. It stands up to heat and it's really damn strong. They used Iconel because the exhaust had to do double duty. It was both the speakers. You heard angel's scream out of. And they were also the rear crumple zone. Everything in the F1 was engineered to damn near perfection. Most things had dual use and this included the transmission. Like everything else about the F1, conventional logic was ignored. Murray told BMW that the car did not need a flywheel. BMW stared at him like he was on fire. The clutch was only 200 millimeters and very light. The 60 degree V12 is perfectly balanced. Why do you need a flywheel? Gordon inquired. BMW argued that you couldn't build a road car without a flywheel. But telling Gordon Murray that he can do something only delays the inevitable. So the McLaren F1 doesn't have a flywheel and it doesn't end there. Included in the F1 quirks and features are a number of industry road car firsts, including active, intelligent, brake cooling. Whatever the hell that meant. And did you forget about that Brabham BT 45 B with the giant fan? Gordon didn't. He added fan assisted underbody downforce effects to keep the F1 planned into the road. And overall there were two commandments that Gordon Murray had for the F1. Lightweight and rigid to suit that purpose. The engine was designed to be a part of the suspension. It was load bearing. The McLaren F1 was as rigid as any car made before it and yet it weighed less than a Honda Fit. All of this and more resided under the skin of the F1. What was visible on the outside was given no less thought. As soon as Murray knew the dimensions of the engine, he knew what the rest of the car would look like. They started with models. Thousands of models were built until the best four were chosen, and then those 4/3 scale models were used in more than a thousand wind tunnel tests. The McLaren team chasing the absolute perfect shape, the most downforce with the least resistance. This was before the rise of computer particle modeling, mind you. These guys had to move little bits of clay around and take notes more than a thousand times. And in 1991, they sculpted the entire car out of clay and set it next to the Honda NSX. Seriously, have I mentioned how much Murray loved the NSX? His goal was to make a smaller NSX and of course, a faster one with a full scale clay model done and an engine that defied physics ready to install. Murray got into the finishing touches. No detail was too small down to a handbrake that feels good to the touch and is firm enough to make you feel secure. Perfectly balanced. Gearlever a steering wheel trimmed in carbon fiber and very importantly, three seats that would allow each participant to experience ultimate connection to the road. Murray had thought of everything after years of meticulously planning. And I mean, there are probably bolts that Murray spent months agonizing over. The F1 was finally ready for production. Now, if you think Gordon's obsessiveness ended there, while you haven't seen the inside of his factory. Every single tool has a place the floors are clean enough to eat off of. And if you were one of the people tasked with building an F1 and you had oil stains on your hands, you were at risk of losing your job. I'm not saying it was a terrible place to work, but I am saying that Swiss watchmakers probably looked on with envy. It took a great deal of effort to get a single, hand-built, ready to drive McLaren F1 on the road, but it was worth it. Supercar competition in the early nineties was fierce. The Ferrari F40 was duking it out with the Porsche 959 2 cars that raised the bar for what a sports car could be. Lamborghini had released the Diablo giving rich assholes a car that matched their personas. Even Vector was experimenting with fighter jets that they called cars, and Bugatti had been revived in order to create the EB 110, a car that proved that fast was still in the Italian vocabulary. But the McLaren F1 left them all in the dust. It was the ultimate driver's car, something so fast that it was almost impossible not to break a law in it, and yet so easy to drive, so comfortable. You could let your mom borrow it for a run to the store. The seats were adjustable. Your passengers had miles of leg room. The roof was tall enough for an actual tall person. And when you were driving in, the naturally aspirated engine reacted in an incredibly predictable manner. No wild turbo lag or strange driving dynamics that scared you or tried to kill you. Sure, it lacked power steering, but it was also absurdly lightweight and its complete lack of computer assistance means that the car only did exactly what you made it do. The six speed transmission was fluid, described as feeling like a well-oiled rifle bolt. Easy to shift with a light clutch. Its wide tires and its revolutionary aerodynamics mean that it was absolutely glued to terra firma, its engine revving fast and free. There's more torque at 1500 RPMs in an F1 than most cars have at Redline. There was always power on tap competition. There wasn't any. The F1 blew past the 959 up to 60 miles per hour. It left the F40 in the dust on its way to a hundred. It accelerated as hard at 150 miles per hour as most cars did in first gear. You could see 200 miles per hour in the time that it took to watch a commercial. All of this speed and all of this fury from a car that was never designed to be a fast car. The F1 was made to be a good car. First performance always came second. I mean, shit, the thing got 20 miles to the gallon. If you weren't too heavy on the accelerator. This was a passenger car that put the world's finest cars to shame. Hell, it even embarrassed most of the fully built race cars at the time. There is still no car like it. Gordon Murray had succeeded in exactly what he set out to do. Each one of the 60 or so F1s ever built a monument to his fervent dedication to that singular goal to build the ultimate road car. What he didn't set out to do was break records, but the damn thing did it anyway. On a soggy autumn Saturday in Cologne, a rich banker by the name of Dr. Thomas Bscher brings his McLaren F1 into the shop to complain about a slight misfire. You see, he'd been daily driving it back and forth from Cologne to Frankfurt every single day. That's an 118 mile trip. The McLaren Mechanics take out the ECU and download his data to figure out the issue, and they stare the flickering CRT monitor stunned. When are you experiencing this misfire? They ask. Thomas replies. Around 197 miles per hour, and the issue data confirms his story. The doctor had been running up speeds over 200 miles per hour on his long commute every single day. Automotive journalists at the time, just for an article not in any serious capacity, had taken the F1 to well over 200 miles per hour screaming at 7500 rpm in sixth gear. The journalist sensed that the engine still had further to go. They just ran out of tarmac and the car ran out of gears. Murray himself estimated that with a longer gearbox, you could push the car to over 230 miles per hour. But these figures were of zero interest to him. He never set out to break top speed records, and yet his F1 has the longest held top speed record in history at Volkswagen's test track and Wolfsburg, Germany. Andy Wallace stepped in the cockpit of the XP5 a specially maintained McLaren F1 meant for testing. He would ease onto the banked corner and begin accelerating. By the time he left the bank, he was traveling at 270 kilometers per hour. Less than a minute later, he would shatter the production car land speed record as the McLaren F1 XP five hit 391 kilometers per hour. Over the radio, he seemed disappointed it ran over 391. But that's quite fast, isn't it? Quite fast. Might have been a bit of an understatement in 1998, when that McLaren traveled just 1/500 shy of 243 miles per hour, it became the fastest naturally aspirated production car to ever be built. Period. As Andy said after he drove it, it is the best car ever driven and will never be beaten. This was truly the world's fastest car. And much to Gordon's likely chagrin, it turns out the world's fastest road car was a really damn good racing car, too. From its conception, the F1 was always going to be a race car. I mean, sure. Ron Dennis said that it would never go racing and Gordon Murray kept touting that it was only a road car. But the design, the engineering and testing was all handled by the brightest minds in racing. What the hell did they think was going to happen? They had made a fast car and fast cars need to be raced, whether McLaren liked it or not. Demand for a race prepped version of the F1 was over whelming, so Murray begrudgingly agreed to make just nine race ready F1's designated GTR. Luckily there wasn't a lot that had to be done to get an F1 ready for the race track. They added a roll cage, tighten up the steering, upgraded the brakes, detuned the engine and spent just one day in the wind tunnel to give it a little extra downforce. Those nine GTR's rolled out of McLaren's top secret facility in Surrey and immediately set out to dominate the world of racing in its debut year. Seven were entered into Le Mans Among them was a GT-R sponsored by Tokyo Ueno Clinic, a plastic surgery firm. This would be the humble McLaren's first foray into racing from road car straight to the most prestigious auto race on earth. There, among purpose built race cars, weapons on four wheels honed over decades to compete in Le Mans The seven shiny F1 started the race relatively mid-pack, but one of them took home the gold. The winning team was managed by a group of McLaren eggheads who called themselves The Kokusai Kaihatsu Team. They gathered three drivers to pilot the F1 GT-R from France. Yannick Dalmas from Japan, Masanori Sakai and from Finland. JJ Lehto Not only did the McLaren win Le Mans, it set the speed record of 174.6 miles per hour on the Mulsanne Straight. It was BMW Power's first win. It was the first win for a Japanese driver and the first win for a Finnish driver. Oh, and of course, not only was it McLaren's first win in Le Mans they took four of the top five spots. The ultimate road car proved to be one of the most consistently fast race cars, and people continue to race them professionally to this day. Gordon and his team had truly created something groundbreaking, and it was almost an insult to call it fast. So what do you call it? Fast. A Porsche is fast. Ferrari is fast. But the McLaren F1 was something different. In 1993 you had supercars. Ferrari had their F40. They was fast, but it was basically a tube chassis racecar. Jaguar had the xj220 beautiful and fast, but sadly underpowered. Bugatti's EB 110 might have run with the F1, but Bugatti in the 1990s was a mess. Lamborghini's Diablo had the looks but was still an unrefined experience. Its beauty was only skin deep. Porsche's 959 was as close as it got, but it remained in the f one's rear view window. No. The McLaren F1 stood alone. It was rarer than Ferraris, more expensive than Lamborghinis behaved on the road, better than anything from Porsche. And more importantly, it was faster than anything else. So raw, so fast, so monolithic in its performance that it took a decade for something to even come close. Gordon Murray and his team started with a singular goal to create the ultimate road car through three years of development. With Gordon's unshakable resolve and steadfast commitment to perfection. He succeeded in creating something more beyond what anyone at the time could even imagine was possible. A machine so delicately balanced, so poetic in its delivery, it demanded to be heard an amalgam of raw brutality and space age technology sharpened teeth and fiery ichor well behaved but capable of savage brutality. Piloted by professionals, the F1 was described as criminally fast and impossible to drive slow. But not because of its power. But because even in a pedestrians dumb shaking mortal hands, it was capable of being controlled without gimmicks, without turbos, without assists. The F1 was pure. Huddled around a table in Milan in 1988. Four men set their minds to one purpose not to make a supercar, but to make something bigger. And in 1993, they did. They created the world's first true hypercar.
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Channel: THE SQUIDD
Views: 2,186,613
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Keywords: mclaren, mclaren f1, supercar, hypercar, gordon murray, gordon murray automoative, gma, t.50, supercars, ferrari, lamborghini, formula 1, mclaren p1, mclaren cars, bmw, v12, jaguar, xj220, f40, diablo, countach, 90s supercars, f355, f50, testarossa, senna, senna f1, ayrton senna, honda, nsx, nsx vs f1, mclaren vs ferrari, acura nsx, honda nsx, mclaren formula 1, documentary, car documentary
Id: i9KyjQKIMLE
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Length: 35min 38sec (2138 seconds)
Published: Thu Oct 20 2022
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