McClaren F1

A hyperexotic, accompanied by glamour, glitz, technical wonder—and penguins too

The Setting was glamorous indeed: ‘The Sporting Club of Mo-naco, Thursday evening before he Grand Prix. Elegantly dressed people. Marvelous music (of which more anon). At center stage, circled by benchmark cars bearing the McLaren name, was a mysterious shape draped in silver. Everyone knew it had to be the McLaren F1 hyperexotic. Then came the glitz: mellifluous tones from the master of ceremonies, swirly multicoloured lights, dry-ice mist. The silver cloth was pulled away—to reveal not McLaren’s new road car, but last year’s all-conquering MP4/6! A subtle joke, that. Then, rising out of the mist came another silver shape; this one, the object of everyone’s interest. The car, says technical director Gordon Murray, “represents the pinnacle of 20th century high-performance sports-car design.” A heady claim, indeed, were it from any company but McLaren.

Consider just a few of its features: a carbon-fiber monocoque defining a properly swoopy shape, 1+2 seating with central driving position, fan-assist-ed ground-effect aerodynamics, electronically controlled brake cooling, active aerodynamic center of pressure control, 6.1-litre BMW V-12 power; engine management and other electronics linked by modem to McLaren head-quarters. The list goes on.

But what’s most telling is the car’s philosophical positioning among the world’s exotic cars. The F1 is replete with technicalities, yet firmly grounded in McLaren basics; it’s innovative, yet conservative. For instance, its powertrain has no traction control of any sort, and its brakes are non-ABS, in fact, non-assist-ed. Instead, a Brake and Balance Foil is hinged into the rear deck. Under heavy braking, this airfoil angles automatical-ly for optimal grip and stability. And, in a latter-day adaptation of Murray’s 1978 Brabham BT46B fan car, two high-power electric fans remove the turbulent boundary layer from the un-derbody to enhance efficiency of the car’s downforce-generating diffuser. Let’s pay less heed to several of the car’s claimed “firsts,” especially when one can nitpick priorities.

As one example, a central driving position with a passenger seat set back on each flank isn’t new. It was an equally controversial feature of the Ferrari 365P executed by Pininfarina (R&T, November 1991). This time around, Murray says the layout has proved its practicality. How-ever, I must admit that no one was al-lowed to try it out in Monaco; admittedly, the Fl there was a mockup, a “clinic model,” not a fully engineered runner. It certainly looked inviting enough. What’s more, any of the three seating positions is said to accommodate a 95th-percentile adult, no doubt even the 6-ft. 5-in. Murray himself.

Unlike some other exotic cars that come to mind, there are no hardships here. Air conditioning, tailor-made leather luggage, a carbon-composite document case, a fitted titanium tool kit, and, from Kenwood, the world’s most compact 10-disc CD player. My music of choice? Simon Jeffes’ Penguin Cafe Orchestra: the same whimsically minimalist music that orchestrated the Monaco introduction—specially chosen by none other than Gordon Murray!

Certainly inviting, but you’ll have to wait your turn: 50 cars per year, the first in late 1993, at some $980,000 each; a maximum run of 300 cars by century’s end.

Take a look at our other Classic Magazines


Honda Accord Minilitte

Volkswagen Corrado

The Great White Cruise

JIO’ITO CASPITA

Morgan 8 Plus

The Complete Classic – Por­sche 911 RS America

Six Packed For Style

Mercedes-Benz C112

The Esprit SE on the Track

FERRARI 348 TWIN TURBO

Porsche 989

Mitsubishi 3000GT

Porsche 911

De Tomaso Pantera

Subaru Brat

LOTUS ESPRIT ZR— 1

AMC Concord DL

Dodge Mangum GT

The Fastest Lotus Esprit – Turbo SE

LAMBORGHINI P140 (Italy)

MCA Centennaire (Monte Carlo)

BMW 8 cylinder 740i

Ferarri 348 Twin Turbo

The Winfield Driving School – Where legends are born

From Lone Genius to General Motors

Bugatti T110

Ford Capri 3.0 GT

TurboHawking

Bentley Nepal

Ferrari F40

Bugatti T110

BENTLEY NEPAL (U.K.)

Dodge Magnum GT

FERRARI 512GT

Chevrolet Camaro Z28

Mercedes-Benz W124

Mercedes 280 CE

Vector W8 Twin Turbo

Supercharged Bonneville SSEi

Money Makes the Cars Go Round

FORD PROBE Contender or Nolo Contendere?