Men in suits, police officers, kids, grandmothers, it didn’t matter, they all pleaded for a photo with the Lambos. We parked the cars on a main road, essentially blocking half the street to do our first photo shoot and had we done this in Sydney, the world might have ended, but in Italy, it was just another day.
Paul
Once we finished up, we headed towards the hills in the old Northern Italian town of Biella. In order to do that, we had to use the fast moving Autostrade to pass Milan. The trip on Italy’s tollway gave us the chance to see what the Superleggera and Spyder were like at high speed.
Surprisingly, the Superleggera was very subtle as we followed two 911 Porsches, as they seemed to know where those nasty speed cameras were. Although you could most certainly hear the engine right behind your head, it wasn’t deafening, you could still hold a conversation in the car.
One of the issues I had with the Superleggera was usability when it came to the seat belts. The four-point harness took some 30-seconds to assemble and due to the car’s height, I had to undo the harness each time we collected a toll ticket, which held up traffic behind us, as we couldn’t take off before the seatbelt was assembled again. There was no issue with the Spyder though, featuring a regular seatbelt.
Alborz
While Paul and Tony were stopping traffic just to pay a toll, Karl & I were simply handing over some cash, just like you would in any other car. The Superleggera then, isn’t exactly practical - but I don’t think they cared!
After an overnight stay in a lush hotel in Biella arranged by an Italian mate of Anthony’s, we headed for the Aosta hills where our video shoot took place. The higher we drove, the more snow we saw. To call the scenery amazing would be the understatement of the year. The Aosta hills gave us a chance to put the Superleggera and Spyder through their paces on a virtual switchback circuit up past the clouds.
Both vehicles were fitted with Lamborghini’s E-gear automated manual transmission. The system works – in general terms – by operating a computer controlled automated clutch while the gears are manually selected. The driver controls the gears by paddle-shifters statically attached to the steering column. You can also select an automated mode, which shifts gears much like a regular automatic gearbox.
Driving both cars back to back, it was hard not to sense a difference between the gearbox ferocity and shift times between the two cars. The Superleggera literally felt like a DSG gearbox, shifting gears with ultimate ferocity and speed. The Spyder on the other hand felt much more lax and laid back. By all means, the Spyder gearbox wasn’t slow, it just felt slow in comparison to the Superleggera.
|