McLaren Speedtail prototype begins year-long test program

McLaren Speedtail prototype
McLaren Speedtail prototype

The first hybrid powertrain prototype of McLaren Automotive’s new Ultimate Series flagship, the McLaren Speedtail, has officially embarked on a year-long test regime that will underpin the development of the first McLaren Hyper-GT.

The test programme in the run-up to production, commencing at the end of 2019, will see Speedtail prototypes running in Europe, North America and Africa, initially at bespoke automotive test facilities but later amongst traffic on normal roads.

Deployment of the first Speedtail attribute prototype marks a new stage in the development of the fastest McLaren ever made. The prototype is officially designated MVY02, but echoing the naming of development test mules of its legendary forebear, the 1992 McLaren F1, it has been christened, ‘Albert’. This is a reflection not only on the name of the McLaren F1 mule ‘Albert’ but also the Albert Drive premises in which the F1 was designed.

Distinguished by testing livery, ‘Albert’ has a production-specification chassis and petrol-electric hybrid drivetrain, as well as a three-seat cockpit with central driving position. As the development and validation programme progresses, every aspect of the Speedtail’s performance will be honed as the full 1,050PS available to Speedtail drivers to propel the prototype to 250mph is used – including in high-speed trials with McLaren Automotive chief test driver and former IndyCar champion Kenny Bräck at the wheel.

Ben Gulliver, Head of Vehicle Development, McLaren Automotive, said: “The start of real-world testing represents a major step in the development of the McLaren Speedtail. As the first fully representative prototype, ‘Albert’ will build on the invaluable work still being put in by earlier development cars, allowing us to sign-off vehicle attributes including chassis dynamics; brake performance; damper tuning; tyres; NVH and aspects of ergonomics and comfort. With a huge amount achieved already, the McLaren Speedtail is well on the way to fulfilling its destiny as the greatest McLaren road car ever.”

The central driving position and three-seat layout of the Speedtail was pioneered by the iconic McLaren F1 in 1992. This configuration is uniquely McLaren, remaining exclusive among production cars until McLaren Automotive confirmed in November 2016 that it would be reprised for the next Ultimate Series model, then codenamed BP23.

Despite its test livery and the bodywork from the A-pillars forward, ‘Albert’ is fundamentally a Speedtail, with shape-representative body panels and dihedral doors around the carbon fibre McLaren Monocage core structure. The production-level specification allows Speedtail attributes to be proven in real-world conditions early in the development process, including for example ingress and egress to the three-seat cockpit.

Production of the £1.75 million McLaren Speedtail is due to commence at the end of 2019, with first deliveries in early 2020. As with the McLaren F1, 106 cars will be available and all have already now been allocated to owners.

McLaren Automotive www.mclarenautomotive.com

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