UPDATE - 07.05.19
A very brief press release from McLaren means a very brief update from PH for you this Tuesday afternoon. That's because the name of McLaren's new GT has been officially unveiled to be... McLaren GT. So now you know.
Positioned alongside the Sports Series and Super Series as a standalone model, the car is promised to set new standards in the world of performance grand tourers. We'll have full details when the GT is officially launched on May 15th and, until then, you can read everything that we know already below.
McLaren's upcoming Grand Tourer has been spotted once more, this time being spied on the public road rather than in staged press photos. There are no further details, obviously, though the new images do provide a clearer view of the car from more angles than we've previously been offered. As such they represent the best look we're likely to get before the standalone model is fully unveiled next month, so feast your eyes and let us know what you make of it...
Images: S. Baldauf/S.B. Medien
In the run up to the reveal of McLaren’s Grand Tourer this May, the Woking brand has put out more images of its development car – but this time it’s lost cladding and wears only a shrink-wrapped camouflage. It means for the first time we’re able to see the form of the car's skin, which appears to mix 570S, Longtail and Speedtail features, probably to emphasise a combination of some of their performance traits.
McLaren has pledged that this standalone model – it won’t be part of any of the brand’s existing Series – will set new standards in the world of performance grand tourers. As part of its efforts to achieve this, the test car has been sent on a 1000-mile road trip from McLaren’s continental development base near Barcelona back to its Surrey home with two occupants on board, who’ve brimmed it with luggage.
This is all in the name of endurance and refinement testing and not just an employee jolly up, although it does sound rather fun. The occupants will be in constant communication with HQ, evaluating the Grand Tourer’s vitals and also reporting back on their conditions – McLaren’s long-distance performance machine can’t be giving anyone sore backs, can it? Particularly when interested buyers are said to be existing customers who have praised the 570GT’s touring abilities.
Woking has remained tight-lipped on the finer details, but we’re expecting the motor held midship of the Grand Tourer to be the firm’s Ricardo-built twin-turbo 4.0 V8, offering performance comfortably beyond that of its 570GT. The look suggests we could be looking at 720S-aping numbers in a more forgiving package; perhaps it could be aided by hybrid power to ensure this. Expect more info to trickle out of Woking soon…
ORIGINAL STORY - 05.03.2019
Excluding the Longtails (because they're limited), there's an argument to say that the 570GT is the best Sports Series McLaren. It loses little to the S dynamically (and that can be restored with a handling pack), while offering some welcome added style, luxury and sense of occasion.
It's not been lost on customers either, apparently, the majority of whom are conquest buyers from other manufacturers who haven't had any McLarens previously. How does that relate to this? Because those customers who have a GT have told McLaren that they love the car, but quite like the idea of something even faster and with its own distinct style - hence the 'McLaren of Grand Tourers'.
That really is the name for now, a full title set to follow in due course. Teased only with a video at the Geneva show, it will be the fourth car in McLaren's Track25 business plan (where 18 new cars are coming before 2025) and isn't part of the existing Sports, Super or Ultimate Series families. CEO Mike Flewitt said to expect "competition levels of performance with continent-crossing capability, wrapped in a beautiful lightweight body."
The line at present is that this car will "redefine the rules of grand touring", implying a car along Speedtail lines where refinement and comfort are the priorities, albeit still with plentiful performance. It's said this McLaren will be the most usable mid-engined car yet, too.
The new GT's silhouette, even disguised in a testing video, is something to behold; of course it's difficult to be sure for now, but it seems both wider and lower than even a 720S. One to investigate further once the hype dies down. But McLaren certainly isn't resting on its laurels, that's for certain - more as we have it!
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