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Home / Waikato News

Open air dream weaver

By John Simister
Hamilton News·
20 Dec, 2012 05:00 PM4 mins to read

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The MP4-12C Spider mightn't be officially on sale in New Zealand but you can get them, and we have a big soft spot for anything carrying the famous McLaren name. UK writer John Simister takes it for a skid.

Forgive me if, for a moment, I sound like a spoilt motoring journalist. So-called supercars, sleek and loud machines which occupy the fantasy garages of otherwise sane people, don't automatically "do it" for me. I can't see the point of these unusably fast and entirely impractical machines, which are ridiculously over-specified for a quick spin along just about any back road.

Just occasionally, though, an ultra-car comes along which shakes even cynical old me out of my what's-the-point stagnation. You're looking at one now.

This new 466kW, 333km/h McLaren MP4-12C Spider is the most thrilling muncher-up of real roads, the most viscerally astounding conqueror of corners and annihilator of straights, that I have experienced in all the years I have been writing about cars.

Given the road space and a suitable guardian angel, this McLaren will do things I have never quite dared to make a car do before. Even better, you can feel and hear much of the magnificence even without going ridiculously fast.

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It's not just that it will scorch round corners, it's the way it does so, helping you all the way, always predictable and friendly. This is where the McLaren differs from, say, the Ferrari 458, which is its most obvious rival. The Ferrari offers full aural theatrics, ultra-quick responses and superlative agility, but there's a slightly artificial feel to its drama and a sensation that you have to take some of its abilities on trust.

By comparison, the McLaren feels almost super-real even though it, too, uses electronics to keep it stable and some aural-effect manipulation in its engine. The difference in these enhancements is the key.

McLaren's "brake steer", as used in Formula One, nudges individual brakes as required to help point the car where required. Combined with active hydraulic suspension, which gives an astonishingly supple ride while keeping the McLaren near-level in corners, the result is a car which almost melts into the road.

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This model, you will notice, can expose its passengers to the elements. The MP4-12C was launched as a coupe a year ago, but a Spider was always promised. This is it, with an automatically retractable roof which, when closed, makes available a secondary boot space, which might be useful for a long weekend in the rain.

The exhaust system, meanwhile, has been honed for aural effect over the already improved coupe system, because with the roof open you're in a particularly good position to hear the result.

Yet it is not a total success. There's a lot of wind-buffeting at speed, and the view in the interior mirror is restricted. Also, the Spider costs more than the coupe. That said, it uses the same ultra-stiff carbon-fibre structure and feels just as solid, with none of an open car's typical shudder over bumps.

As for the engine, one small criticism of the MP4-12C as launched a year ago was that it sounded a touch too "clinical" and its response to the accelerator was not quite as natural as it should be. This is now fixed, along with changes to the double-clutch, paddleshift gearbox, which now shifts with breathtaking immediacy; in combination with the engine's explosiveness, it triggers a whole new kind of excitement.

So, would I have the Spider over the coupe? This is a car to thrill beyond all others, and with its sonic delights, the Spider thrills even more. Wind in the hair it is, then.

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