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View Full Version : Mercedes-Benz McLaren P8 targets Ferrari F360 and Ford GT



rage2
03-02-2004, 06:35 PM
http://www.maybach.ru/pics/news/p8benz400main.jpg

http://www.maybach.ru/spy/p82.jpg

The SLR was just the first shot: Mercedes-Benz and McLaren are beyond planning stages for a mid-engine, V8-powered supercar with sights set on Ferrari’s 360 Modena and Ford’s GT. The project car—though only in its formative stage—has a dedicated group looking into its engineering, manufacturing, sales and marketing feasibility, and is codenamed P8. If given approval in the coming months, P8, which would slot between the robust SL65 AMG and the SLR McLaren, could be on the streets testing by late 2006 and in showrooms by late 2007.

2008 MERCEDES McLAREN P8
ON SALE: Late 2007
BASE PRICE: $200,000 (est.)
POWERTRAIN: 6.3-liter, 500-hp, 516-lb-ft V8; rwd, seven-speed automatic
CURB WEIGHT: 3000 pounds (est.)
0-60 MPH: 3.9 seconds (est.)

The P8, depicted here as an artist’s rendering, is officially only a concept. Clearly, management from both Mercedes-Benz and the McLaren Formula One super team would like to put a car like P8 into production. “Yes, we are looking at a mid-engine road car,” Mercedes boss Jürgen Hubbert told AutoWeek last week. “But there is no decision on production.” Before production can happen, M-B and McLaren board members must give P8 unanimous approval.

What gives credence to the likelihood of P8 seeing production? News that ultra-performance car guru Neil Hannemann, the engineering mind behind the Dodge Viper, Saleen S7 and the Ford GT, left the friendly confines of Ford in Dearborn Jan. 31 for a job as engineering director at McLaren.

P8 also makes smart business sense. The SLR is built in the new McLaren Technology Center in Woking, England, a reported $300 million investment already made by both Mercedes and McLaren. Only by expanding the model product lines of this collaborative effort can that investment be amortized.

There is also ego at stake—M-B and McLaren compete with Ferrari in Formula One on racetracks around the world and want to take on the Italians in the performance street car arena. Perhaps another spur in the side to do this car is knowledge that rival Audi is at an advanced stage with its own mid-engine supercar, the Le Mans, using the Lamborghini Gallardo underpinnings (AW, Feb. 16).

Mercedes-Benz's first mid-engine supercar for the road may end up wearing a McLaren badge instead of the familiar three-pointed star. Officials from the German carmaker do not rule out the creation of a range of mid-engine supercars under the McLaren name. McLaren, along with Smart, Maybach, Mercedes-Benz and AMG, forms part of what is referred to as the Mercedes-Benz Car Group-itself a key component of the giant DaimlerChrysler concern.

The idea would be to use the McLaren name, which has a high-tech image thanks to its considerable success in F1 racing and its earlier F1 road car project, as a direct rival to Ferrari, Lamborghini and Porsche. "It wouldn't be impossible to build up a supercar brand with the name," says Mercedes' Jürgen Hubbert.

Though many specifics of the program remain speculation, some of what we know about the direction of both Mercedes and McLaren opens a window on what such a sports car could be like. Why mid-engine? “If you see the competition in the segment, they are only mid-engine,” says Hubbert. “In McLaren and especially (McLaren’s) Gordon Murray, we have vast experience with mid-engine cars.”

Hubbert stressed the Mercedes supercar bears no relationship to the mid-engine ME Four-Twelve concept shown by Chrysler at Detroit. Mercedes engine-tuner AMG merely provided the 850-hp quad-turbo V12 for that concept, which Hubbert doubts will see production.

The high-tech SLR, with its 0-to-60-mph time of 3.7 seconds and 204-mph top speed, has proven both companies can compete in the supercar arena. However, this new mid-engine contender is a tougher assignment, not least because it must be built to a tighter budget and with an eye toward larger sales volumes than the targeted 500 annual build rate of SLR.

This is not the first mid-engine road car Mercedes-Benz has considered. The striking C112 concept back in 1991 nearly made it to showrooms but was abandoned due to a downturn in the world’s economy. Also, the company’s CLK GTR was built in small numbers in 1998 to satisfy the FIA’s sports car regulations, though it was very much a race car modified for road use.

In McLaren, Mercedes-Benz has a partner that knows well how to apply mid-engine design to road performance. The firm’s celebrated F1 road car may be a decade old, but few would argue it still ranks as the most accomplished supercar ever placed into production.

These illustrations reveal how the baby M-B McLaren supercar could look, though wind-tunnel testing will undoubtedly change the package by the time it appears. Chances are a convertible will get the nod, insiders say.

It is reasonable to think P8 will use the same lightweight carbon fiber monocoque construction as the SLR, and incorporate features such as Mercedes’ Pre-Safe early warning system that triggers safety systems in the event of an impending crash. Engineers are striving to keep weight to 3000 pounds, or close to that of the 360 Modena and Gallardo. “Anything lower would be utopian, given the stringent crash standards the new car will need to adhere to, both in Europe and the U.S.,” said an AutoWeek source. The ME Four-Twelve beat this weight target with similar equipment and a bigger engine but no price target.

Expect serious attention to weight distribution to maximize handling, with 42 percent front and 58 percent rear weight bias the likely target. We know Mercedes and Michelin are developing a two-compound tire that could make it to P8. Given M-B’s penchant for high-tech gadgets, the P8 is likely to employ the latest in electronic driver aids, too.

AutoWeek can reveal top-secret details about the P8’s powerplant. Codenamed M156, it is an all-new normally aspirated 6.3-liter V8 that is also destined to power future AMG versions of the E-, CLS-, S-, CL- and SL-Class cars.

The aluminum-block unit is based on Mercedes’ M273-designated four-valve-per-cylinder V8 due out next year, an engine that develops a reliable 500 hp on the engine dyno, say highly placed sources. A twin-turbocharged version that churns out a mammoth 700 hp is in early development, though that mill has not yet received the production green light.

The M156 is being developed under AMG engine boss Rolf Zimmermann, who is the mastermind behind the 367-hp normally aspirated and 500-hp supercharged 5.4-liter V8 powerplants in AMG models now. Zimmermann also developed the 555-hp 7.3-liter V12 engine that powers the Pagani Zonda S.

Mystery still surrounds the gearbox choice for the new car. All of Mercedes’ recent performance cars—SLR included—get a beefed-up automatic transmission that runs the company’s so-called Speedshift electronics, which make for quicker gear changes.

Sources tell AutoWeek the most likely scenario is a reworked version of the new Mercedes 7G-Tronic unit. With torque converter lock-up on each of its seven forward gears, and electronics that allow it to skip ratios on kickdown, it could turn the monster output into scintillating performance—though without the tactile feel of a manual like those in the 360 Modena and Ford GT. The torque limit for this gearbox is well within what the V8 engine could produce.

As the car still awaits a production green flag, there is no firm on-sale date for P8. Still, insiders hint 2008-model-year examples will hit the road by the end of 2007—or just 46 months from now. We are told the business case for a mid-engine supercar centers on annual global sales of 800, which seems low; in fact, flexible assembly methods can allow production to increase to around 1500 a year if necessary.

And the price? Positioned between the SL65 AMG and the SLR, industry analysts predict a price tag for the two-seater of around $200,000—a slight premium over the current 360 Modena and a healthy $60,000 more than the $140,000 Ford GT. Still, that is a fraction of the $1.2 million a used McLaren F1 will cost now.

Ben
03-02-2004, 06:44 PM
Mercedes is quickly becoming my favorite automaker!

cycosis
03-02-2004, 06:51 PM
The back reminds me of an austin martin adn the front looks like an extreme version of a celica:rofl: , still itll be nice on the roads. hope it gets approved.

1badPT
03-02-2004, 06:52 PM
WOWOWOWOW :eek: :eek:

:thumbsup:

:hitit: :hitit: :hitit: :hitit:

hjr
03-02-2004, 06:55 PM
Originally posted by Ben
Mercedes is quickly becoming my favorite automaker! NOOOOOOOO. haha. Merc. is cool and all but it will take a lot to pull me from porsche's hands. haha, especially now that the GT3 RSR is out next year. Props to any company that makes a spec race car from the factory.

Ben
03-02-2004, 06:56 PM
Hey, I'm a Die hard Porsche fan, but unfortunatly they just dont seem to be as active lately.

/////AMG
03-02-2004, 08:02 PM
:clap: :clap: for Benz

Hakkola
03-02-2004, 08:14 PM
The "new hotness."

I want one.

cappachihngo
03-03-2004, 12:40 AM
hmmm ya i don't like the front, but the back....:drool: :drool:

XylathaneGTR
03-03-2004, 01:06 AM
wow...that thing is fucking sexy...holy shiat.
the bodylines on it...ooooh

But, in 2006, won't the 360Modena be retired, and replaced with the 420monza or something like that? I know Ferrari is planning on retiring the 360...

Redlyne_mr2
03-03-2004, 01:14 AM
Originally posted by Ben
Hey, I'm a Die hard Porsche fan, but unfortunatly they just dont seem to be as active lately.
Hello...Carrera GT??? Just you wait for the 998

/////AMG
04-27-2005, 05:19 AM
Over a year later and..


McLaren gives P8 supercar new life


McLaren's new 6.3-liter V-8-powered mid-engine supercar has been granted a reprieve, even though partner Mercedes-Benz AG severed ties with the project this year.

The two-seater, code-named P8, is being engineered exclusively by McLaren.

The English race car specialist plans to oversee remaining development work before placing the sleek supercar into production alongside the front-engine Mercedes SLR at its factory in Woking, England.

Mercedes-Benz car group CEO Eckhard Cordes said the P8 was abandoned as part of a broad cost-cutting program in which the German manufacturer refocused attention on core models.

McLaren insiders confirm that P8 development is continuing but not at the same pace as planned.

"It is being engineered using the original Mercedes-Benz components," a source says. "The mechanical aspect is fixed. We're already in the testing phase."

The P8 was intended to slot into the Mercedes lineup between the SL55 AMG and SLR. Sources say it now will be sold under the McLaren name, as with the company's earlier F1.

The P8 is expected to use a high percentage of Mercedes components, including a new naturally aspirated 6.3-liter V-8 engine from the German carmaker's AMG performance division.

Source: Automotive News

DJ Lazy
04-27-2005, 07:14 AM
7 speed automatic???

No manual? :(

Hot car none the less... :thumbsup: :drool: :poosie:

rage2
04-27-2005, 10:20 AM
Originally posted by DJ Lazy
7 speed automatic???

No manual? :(

Hot car none the less... :thumbsup: :drool: :poosie:
F1 cars use automatics. Whats your point?

BumpinTalon
04-27-2005, 10:29 AM
Originally posted by rage2

F1 cars use automatics. Whats your point?

it's some kind of car guy elitist attitude that if it is called an "automatic" it just isn't worth the time... even if the automatic has one more gear then any manual transmission in the world, shifts far far faster then any manual transmission in the world, and is still bearable for daily driving in heavy traffic.

DJ Lazy
04-27-2005, 11:40 AM
Originally posted by rage2

F1 cars use automatics. Whats your point?

Regardless of the car, I know that myself and other prefer the "sensation" of shifting gears.



Originally posted by BumpinTalon


it's some kind of car guy elitist attitude that if it is called an "automatic" it just isn't worth the time... even if the automatic has one more gear then any manual transmission in the world, shifts far far faster then any manual transmission in the world, and is still bearable for daily driving in heavy traffic.

Excuse me? Elitist attitude? :rofl: :rofl:

It has nothing to do with elitism, as I am not an elitist, its the pure fact that I prefer a manual car.
I will admit, I would prefer an automatic, in rush hour traffic when my leg falls asleep from having to ride the clutch, but I will take that inconvience in stride, to be able to control the shifting myself.

rage2
04-27-2005, 01:08 PM
But you do get to shift gears yourself. Do you just prefer to use a clutch?

DJ Lazy
04-27-2005, 02:29 PM
Originally posted by rage2
But you do get to shift gears yourself. Do you just prefer to use a clutch?

Yea, its just the whole motion.

My parents have a maxima, automatic (w/ tiptronc), and as much as you get to shift when you want, its boring to drive. Just doesn't have the same feeling.

Just preference I guess.. :dunno:

Like I said, give me an automatic is rush hour traffic anyday.. :nut:

DannyO
04-27-2005, 02:46 PM
Yea I'm with Lazy, Automatics are getting much better, especially with the new type of trannys coming out, forgot the name, CVT I think, its like a cone the gear works off, doesn't change gear, its always in the right ratio for the speed, anyway, I would prefer a stick and a clutch, I just like the more mechanical feel of it, its like your part of the car, take the Merc-Mclaren SLR, it only comes in auto but if it came in manual (which ended up being slower) I'd still take the manual, just better overall driving experience IMO.

But lets not get into the whole auto vs manual argument, it comes down to personal preference and each one has there advantages and disadvantages.

TheBenzo
04-27-2005, 04:10 PM
Originally posted by Ben
Mercedes is quickly becoming my favorite automaker! Good for you man :thumbsup: Everyone eventually comes over from the dark side.

Redlyne_mr2
04-27-2005, 06:37 PM
No more of this F1 auto argument. These are street cars, ask someone with a CGT or a lotus elise wether they want standard or auto. Auto in a street car is for pure GT IMO.

rage2
04-27-2005, 08:35 PM
Originally posted by Redlyne_mr2
No more of this F1 auto argument. These are street cars, ask someone with a CGT or a lotus elise wether they want standard or auto. Auto in a street car is for pure GT IMO.
Funny you should bring up the CGT. I know an owner of one, and he told me that for the car has one serious flaw... it needs a semi-auto clutchless tranny like the Enzo. Dunno if you've ever been in one or listened to someone rev one in real life, but those things have next to no flywheel. Starting from a stop is not easy nor consistent. Then there's the upshifts, you have to be blazing fast, or revs will drop too fast and the car will lurch (and melt the clutch). Downshifts, you have to be perfect with the heel & toe and be lightning quick as well.

I've never driven one, but the owner told me it's a chore to drive anywhere except at the track.

And yes, even at the track, autos rule. When you drive a 400+hp car and have to row through gears every few seconds, you'll understand.

Redlyne_mr2
04-27-2005, 08:40 PM
Originally posted by rage2

Funny you should bring up the CGT. I know an owner of one, and he told me that for the car has one serious flaw... it needs a semi-auto clutchless tranny like the Enzo. Dunno if you've ever been in one or listened to someone rev one in real life, but those things have next to no flywheel. Starting from a stop is not easy nor consistent.

I've never driven one, but the owner told me it's a chore to drive anywhere except at the track.

And yes, even at the track, autos rule. When you drive a 400+hp car and have to row through gears every few seconds, you'll understand.
Hehe yes I know what you mean about the clutch, I have yet to drive one, only sat in one and seen it revved. I pushed the clutch in but that was when it was in parked so that doesnt matter anyways. One of the CGT owners on rennlist was talking about how hard the car is to drive on the streets unless you have some nice small shoes and concentrate on what youre doing. Like you said though in instances heavy throttle such as track use it does help to deliver insanely fast shifts so all the power in the next gear is there right away.

crazydriver
04-27-2005, 10:17 PM
wow, that'll definity give those exotic manufactures something to wory about

Car Fiend
04-29-2005, 05:11 PM
i guess im a little behind, what does CGT mean?

962 kid
04-29-2005, 05:18 PM
Porsche Carrera GT

BigMass
04-29-2005, 05:18 PM
Originally posted by Car Fiend
i guess im a little behind, what does CGT mean?
carrera gt... porsche supercar

SwitchBlade
04-29-2005, 06:37 PM
I thought McLaren and Mercedes were putting the 2 models on the backburner due to the 45% loss in profits last quarter.

/////AMG
04-30-2005, 03:42 AM
It's not coming soon, and it wont be benz and mclaren, it'll be under the McLaren name, but mostly MB parts. I think it was scheduled to come out in like 07/08 together but its not going to happen

AllGoNoShow
05-02-2005, 01:33 PM
Originally posted by Redlyne_mr2

Hello...Carrera GT??? Just you wait for the 998

Kinda offtopic, what happens when porsche runs out of 9XX series #'s for cars? Isn't it going to be a little odd buying a Porsche 1011

ZorroAMG
05-02-2005, 07:49 PM
^ lol...

The all new 2037 Porsche 911. Internal code 999.99^99

Redlyne_mr2
05-12-2005, 06:47 PM
Originally posted by AllGoNoShow


Kinda offtopic, what happens when porsche runs out of 9XX series #'s for cars? Isn't it going to be a little odd buying a Porsche 1011
Yeah good call dont know what they'll do.