Hilton HHonors Bahrain GP Race Guide






Get up to speed on the Bahrain GP circuit with our track guide from Lewis Hamilton.




2012 Bahrain Grand Prix :: Qualifying

Bahrain International Circuit, Saturday April 21

 

mclaren owners club

 

“Our intention is to go for the win”

LEWIS HAMILTON

MP4-27A-03

P3

4th                            1m33.782s (+0.528s) 16 laps

Qualifying

Q1 16th                    1m34.813s (on Primes)

Q2 1st                      1m33.209s (on Options)

Q3 2nd overall       1m32.520s (on Options)

 “I’m very happy with how qualifying went and the job the team has done so far this weekend. I’ve put the car on the front row at every race this year, and I feel this was one of my best qualifying performances so far. Both my laps in Q3 were very good and I feel I got everything out of the car.

“Fingers crossed for tomorrow: both Red Bull drivers will be very hard to beat in the race, but we’re less than a tenth behind on race pace. The start could be key – we’ve had good launches all season so I expect us to be able to challenge Seb [Vettel] down to Turn One.

“This season is shaping up to be very interesting: it’s anyone’s for the taking, at the moment”

 

JENSON BUTTON

MP4-27A-04

P3

6th                            1m33.899s (+0.645s) 14 laps

Qualifying

Q1 15th                    1m34.792s (on Primes)

Q2 6th                      1m33.416s (on Options)

Q3 4th overall       1m32.711s (on Options)

“Fourth position wasn’t quite what I’d been hoping for, but it’s not too bad. It’s always a horrible feeling on your final Q3 lap when the balance isn’t quite where you want it. I couldn’t get the best from the car so I pitted early to save the tyres. Besides, fourth isn’t too bad anyway.

“The car is definitely a lot better than it was yesterday – we made some improvements overnight. We’d expected the Red Bulls to be very quick in qualifying, so to be close to them is a positive. A nice surprise is that we’re ahead of Nico [Rosberg] who was on pole just a week ago.

“A good launch tomorrow will be very important – both Lewis and I will be starting on the dirty side of the grid, which makes things more difficult, so we’ll need to get it right. Tyre management will be crucial too.

“I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

 

MARTIN WHITMARSH

Team principal, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

“As we’ve already got used to seeing this season, it was very tight at the top today.

“Even the early stages of qualifying – Q1 and Q2 – are nowadays extremely hard to get through. Michael [Schumacher] and Kimi [Raikkonen] can confirm that.

“As for our boys, well, Lewis drove an excellent lap, and missed out on pole position by just a tenth of a second. Jenson, too, was his usual rapid and reliable self, ending up in fourth place, directly behind Lewis on tomorrow’s grid.

“The race will inevitably be a physically challenging one for all the drivers, as is always the case in hot climates such as Bahrain’s, but we’ve got two tough racers in Lewis and Jenson and our intention is to go for the win.”





2012 McLaren MP4-12C: First Drive





Formula One 2012: The New Vodafone Mclaren Mercedes MP4-27





McLaren F1 takes on the MP4-12C on track





ROB BELL, ALEXANDER SIMS AND ALVARO PARENTE TO RACE FOR McLAREN GT CUSTOMER TEAMS IN 2012

Jan 12, 2012

 

  • Rob Bell and Alexander Sims join Alvaro Parente in McLaren GT customer team driver line-up for 2012
  • Three examples of the MP4-12C GT3  race car and one MP4-12C road car to be presented at Autosport International
  • 25 MP4-12C GT3’s to race in Europe in 2012

McLaren GT is building on its successful 2011 development programme for the new MP4-12C GT3 by adding Britons Rob Bell and Alexander Sims to its driver line-up for 2012.  Bell and Sims will join Portuguese racing driver Alvaro Parente at McLaren GT, with each driver available to teams racing the stunning new MP4-12C GT3 in 2012.

 

Rob Bell said: “I’m very excited to be joining McLaren GT and the opportunity to drive the new 12C GT3 in its first full season of racing.  When I was invited to drive the car last year at Spa, I welcomed the chance to sample this new British racer.  As I anticipated from a company which is synonymous with cutting edge technology and a dedication to success, the car lived up to its expectations.  It delivered the speed and showed the performance potential necessary to win in the highly competitive environment of sportscar racing. I’m looking forward to contributing to further development of the car with a customer team when we take to the track at the start of this season.”

Alexander Sims won the prestigious McLaren Autosport BRDC Young Driver of the Year Award in 2008, and joins McLaren GT following a successful period in his career racing single seaters. Sims said: “I’m really looking forward to the forthcoming season with McLaren GT and the opportunity to race the MP4-12C GT3. I am delighted McLaren continue to support young drivers in their careers and I’m proud to join the likes of Rob and Alvaro on the driver programme for 2012.”

The 12C GT3 is a unique technical concept in sportscar racing. It features McLaren’s one-piece moulded carbon MonoCell chassis and technology normally reserved for Formula 1 race cars. The 12C GT3 has been specified and developed by a team comprising senior personnel from McLaren Racing, McLaren Automotive and successful GT car race team CRS Racing.

McLaren Racing Chief Vehicle Engineer Mark Williams has been at the forefront of technical development of the 12C GT3.  Williams said: “Since the 12C GT3 development programme began in March, we have entered endurance races all over Europe and more recently in Macau.  We have undertaken independent 24 hour tests at some of Europe’s most challenging circuits, and experienced some real highs and of course, had to deal with a number of challenges.

“The 12C GT3 qualified in pole position in the British GT Championship race in Spa in July. We returned to Spa for this season’s 24 hour event and had a car complete the race at its first attempt. That is remarkable and was a good indication that core technologies were proving efficient and reliable in racing. More recently, Danny Watts secured third place in the Macau GT Cup. We’re really proud of these achievements.

“In the last month the McLaren GT team of engineers, technicians and test drivers have been concentrating on refining the calibration of vehicle electronics during tests in Portugal, Spain and Germany. We are very close to the finished article now and I am looking forward to seeing our race cars at the front of the grid in 2012.”

Road and race versions of the new 12C to star at Autosport International 2012

McLaren GT plans to present three versions of the stunning new 12C GT3 at this year’s Autosport International event, which is held from 12-15 January at the NEC Birmingham, UK. One example will feature on the main Autosport Central Stage, another will feature in the Live Action Arena and a third will be displayed by MIS.

In addition, McLaren Automotive will be supplying a very special Production Prototype (PP) edition of the MP4-12C sports car to Pistonheads.com, for display throughout the event.  Finished in signature colour McLaren Orange, PP7 was the first ever 12C to be tested by the world’s media. Following its debut test at the Portimao Circuit in January 2011, PP7 went on to record a remarkable 1:16.2 lap of Dunsfold Park at the hands of BBC Top Gear’s ‘The Stig’, and subsequently achieved an impressive 7:28.0 lap of the Nürburgring Nordschleife, this time with Sport Auto’s Editor-in-Chief Horst von Saurma-Jeltsch at the wheel.  A short film featuring PP7 in action at the Nordschleife

 


 

Andrew Kirkaldy, Project Manager at McLaren GT said: “I am excited that McLaren GT and McLaren Automotive will be presenting these fantastic new race and road cars at Autosport International. It is a great opportunity for event visitors to see first-hand how we have developed the 12C GT3 from the 12C road car, which is the essence of a race car.

“This is a great time for fans of McLaren in motorsport. I’m delighted McLaren GT has agreed a new contract with Alvaro, and equally pleased that Rob and Alexander have joined our team.  These drivers are some of the best in GT racing and we are looking forward to all three of them working with our customer teams in 2012.”

McLaren GT will deliver 25 cars to established GT race teams and private customers for racing in Europe in 2012. The new race car manufacturer will announce its full line-up of customer teams and contracted drivers prior to the first race of the 2012 race calendar.


Driver biographies:

Rob Bell

Double Le Mans Series champion, Rob is a respected British sportscar driver with a wealth of experience.  Rob has raced sportscars for seven years, winning the Le Mans Series title in 2008 and 2009, and additionally racing in the FIA GT, ALMS and Grand-Am series.

Rob began his racing career in karting and enjoyed early success at international level.  Moving to single seaters in 1998, Rob started in the Formula Vauxhall Junior championship, progressing to British Formula Ford and then on to Formula Renault, taking the Formula Renault Winter Championship title in 2002 and 2003. He became a front runner in the British and European championships, scoring regular pole positions and podium finishes in Renault V6 (now called World Series by Renault).

Turning to sportscars in 2005, Rob quickly established himself as a strong competitor, winning the GT1 LMES 6 hours of Nurburgring in the first race of his debut season. In 2007 and 2008 he claimed the Le Mans Series Champion title and since that time he has competed in every major sportscar series and blue riband event. With five Le Mans 24 Hour race starts, Sebring 12 Hours, Petit Le Mans, Spa 24 Hours and Daytona 24 Hours to his name, Rob is one of the few top sportscar names who can speak from experience about all of these classic races. He has experience of a broad range of marques, with a breadth of knowledge which can help to assist a team in a car development programme, tyre testing and other technical evaluations, evidenced by his involvement with Ferrari and Dunlop for the last five years.

In addition to his race programmes, Rob has provided driver coaching services to a number of teams for a number of years and has been able to assist with young race driver development in both single seater and sportscar categories, counting three McLaren Autosport  BRDC Young Driver of the Year Award winners – Alex Sims (2008), Dean Smith (2009) and Lewis Williamson (2010) -  as his protégés.

Alexander Sims

 

As winner of the McLaren Autosport BRDC Young Driver of The Year Award in 2008, Alexander is on the fast track to the world of Formula 1. With the interest of Formula 1 teams, along with his superb results, Alexander is currently one of the most promising drivers below Formula 1.

Alexander competed in Karting for 8 years, winning numerous National and British Titles, The Monaco Kart Grand Prix, The Parma Industrials Championship and 3 British Grand Prix. Finishing his karting career with Pole at the World championships in 2006, Alexander then adjusted to cars extremely quickly, finishing 2nd in his first ever race.

In 2008 Alexander finished the season 2nd in the Formula Renault UK Championship with 2 wins and 12 podiums to his name. He then went on to win the highly prestigious McLaren Autosport BRDC Young Driver of The Year Award and receive his prize of a test in the McLaren Formula 1 car.

In 2009 Alexander moved into the hugely competitive F3 Euro Series. Competing with Mücke motorsport, Alexander scored his maiden pole in round 3 along with his first Podium. Winning once and scoring 4 further podiums, Alexander finished the season in 4th place in the Championship and 2nd placed rookie. Alexander raced in GP3 Series for Status in 2011, finishing sixth in the Championship.

Álvaro Parente

 

Álvaro Parente started his motorsport career in Karting in Portugal, showing exceptional early talent. Aged only nine years old, Álvaro won his first national title in the Cadet category, and continued his success by winning two more National Championships, one National Cup and the European Championship in the junior category.

In 2001, Álvaro started his career in Formula racing, participating in nine of the 13 races of the F3 Spanish Championship. He finished the second best rookie and 12th overall, in a championship with more than 30 drivers.  In 2002, the young driver repeated the F3 Spanish Championship with the Racing Engineering team, achieving 4th place overall.

In 2003 Álvaro began a new challenge in the F3 Euro Series Championship with Ghinzani team, participating also in the prestigious F3 Marlboro Masters, with the direct support of Phillip Morris.  In 2004 aged just 19 years old (the youngest driver in the championship), Álvaro competed in the F3 British Championship with Carlin Motorsport.

In 2005 he competed for the second year in the F3 British Championship with Carlin Motorsport. Álvaro won the Championship, winning 11 of 18 races.  Álvaro was crowned F3 British Champion with four races left before the end of season.

These results lead to an invitation for Álvaro to represent Portugal in the World Cup of Motorsport, the A1 GP, during the 2005-2006 season. Álvaro took sixth place in the Championship, which included 25 participating countries.

In 2006, Álvaro took another step towards Formula 1, participating in Formula Renault 3.5, the headline event of the World Series by Renault. The ultimate prize for this Championship was a test with the Renault Formula 1 team.

Alvaro finished the season in fifth place, only nine points behind champion Alex Danielsson, and 33 points ahead of the sixth placed competitor.  With three victories and seven podiums, Álvaro Parente was the rookie driver with the most victories and leading laps in the championship, closing his season with a brilliant win in Barcelona.

In 2007 Álvaro Parente showed he was the fastest driver in the World Series 3.5, winning the Monaco and Spa-Francorchamps races, and subsequently winning the World Series by Renault Championship more than 20 points ahead of his nearest competitor.

Alvaro subsequently raced in the GP2 Series for three years with Super Nova, Ocean Racing Technology and Scuderia Coloni, with his highest season finish in eighth position.

In 2011 Alvaro joined McLaren GT for the development programme of the new MP4-12C GT3.



McLAREN AUTOMOTIVE CONFIRMS NEW MIDDLE EAST / AFRICA REGIONAL DIRECTOR AND ASIA PACIFIC REGIONAL EXPANSION PLANS

Jan 11, 2012

(WOKING, UK, 11 January) – McLaren Automotive has confirmed that Mark Harrison, the current Head of PR, has been appointed as Regional Director, Middle East / Africa. This follows Ian Gorsuch’s move from the role and appointment as Regional Director for Asia Pacific; a newly created position that supports the creation of McLaren Automotive Asia, a private limited company registered in Singapore to oversee McLaren Automotive’s Asia Pacific operations.

Gorsuch will also be responsible for McLaren Automotive’s expansion in the Asia Pacific region and managing the company’s relationships with its appointed retailers in Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore. He previously held these same responsibilities for the Asia Pacific and Middle East / Africa regions.

Commenting on the development of McLaren Automotive Asia, Gorsuch said: “The first phase of McLaren Automotive’s entry into the Asia Pacific region is nearing completion as our appointed dealers are opening their showrooms and successfully growing a strong forward order bank. We are now focused on building our Asia team and looking at the China market as the next phase of our growth.”

Harrison will be responsible for managing the company’s relationships with its appointed retailers in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE (Abu Dhabi, Dubai), Saudi Arabia, and South Africa. He moves to the role after three years as McLaren Automotive’s Head of PR, having overseen the media launches of the MP4-12C road car and GT3 racing car version, and the development of a global PR team.

Harrison said: “This is a fantastically exciting opportunity to move into a role that is at the core of the company’s business, working closely with our retail partners and our customers. I have thoroughly enjoyed the challenge of launching McLaren Automotive to the world’s media as we have grown into a new car company with truly innovative cars, but the rare chance for a PR guy to experience a commercial role out in the market was something I just couldn’t turn down.”

Greg Levine, McLaren Automotive’s Sales and Marketing Director, said: “I am really pleased to confirm these appointments. Ian Gorsuch has a wealth of experience in the luxury sector in the Middle East and Asia regions and has a huge opportunity to open up the region’s mature and emerging markets to McLaren’s new range of sports cars through the Singapore-based subsidiary. Mark, meanwhile, was one of the first appointments into the company’s newly formed sales and marketing function in 2009 and has successfully supported the business through its launch phase. Throughout that time he has shown great appreciation not only for the demands of the world’s media, but also the expectations of our retailers and customers. His ability to manage his PR operation in a way that considers the wider business was fundamental to his appointment as one of our four Regional Directors.”



NEW McLAREN AUTOMOTIVE FILM AND PHOTO CONTENT PRESENTS THE EVOLUTION OF A NEW SPORTS CAR COMPANY

Nov 24, 2011

 

 

The new McLaren Production Centre on film

2011 is not just the launch year for the McLaren MP4-12C, but for a new car company, with its past and future rooted in motorsport and with technological innovation, manufacturing skill, and a unique heritage at its core.  Close to £50m has been invested in the development of the new McLaren Production Centre (MPC), which will be the birthplace of all future sports cars from McLaren Automotive.  MPC was opened on 17 November 2011 by UK Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. David Cameron MP. A new film, presented by McLaren Group Executive Chairman and McLaren Automotive Managing Director Antony Sheriff, marks this milestone in the development of McLaren Automotive

The first MP4-12C from MPC was produced approximately 18 months after ground was broken on site. During this term, McLaren Automotive has announced the launch of a network of 35 retailers in 18 countries, which will be responsible for the sale and service of the new MP4-12C and a future range of sports cars.  McLaren London is the company’s flagship retailer and is located at the prestigious One Hyde Park in Knightsbridge.

‘See Inside Manufacturing’ with McLaren Group

The commitment of McLaren Group to developing its race and road cars through innovation in engineering made the company a valuable partner for the British Government’s ‘See Inside Manufacturing’ campaign – an initiative aimed at encouraging young people to see engineering as an exciting and viable career choice, while also increasing awareness of the importance of a strong manufacturing base to the future of the UK economy.

The campaign saw groups of local students partake in the ‘McLaren Manufacturing Challenge’ – a competition designed to get students thinking about engineering and manufacturing in a practical, hands-on sense by designing, and building, a motor-less vehicle to carry an object over a 10 metre distance in the quickest time possible.

Woking College took the chequered flag with their ingenious mouse-trap propelled vehicle, which completed the distance in an impressive 2.28 seconds. The winning team wasinvited to the official opening of the new McLaren Production Centre, where UK Prime Minister, David Cameron presented them with the winning trophy. A short film capturing the occasion and taking viewers inside the McLaren Group headquarters.

 


 

McLaren Automotive named ‘Best British Luxury Brand’ by Walpole

Underlining the progress made in developing its brand identity, McLaren Automotive has now been awarded the title of Best British Luxury Brand by Walpole, the not-for-profit organisation that represents the British luxury industry and 170 leading luxury brands. The award gives recognition to the British luxury brand that has had the greatest national impact in terms of sales, customer service and business & media exposure in 2011.

McLaren Group Chairman Ron Dennis accepted the award on behalf of McLaren Automotive and said: “We set out to build a world leading automotive business, manufacturing and marketing category-leading high performance vehicles.  To be recognised by such esteemed peers as having also built Britain’s Best Luxury Brand is both an honour and reaffirmation for our team that we are moving in the right direction.”

New MP4-12C avoids ‘Gas guzzler’ tax in North America

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced that the 2012 McLaren MP4-12C will not be subject to a federal gas guzzler tax.

Tony Joseph, Director of McLaren North America said: “Avoiding gas guzzler tax provides us with a unique advantage and selling point over our competitors. The 12C is unequalled in this segment.

“It was a priority to make this vehicle both high-performing, but also relatively modest in terms of overall carbon footprint. Thanks to its lightweight body, based around a carbonfiber MonoCell and developed through innovative engineering, we were able to achieve exactly that.”

The 12C is powered by a twin-turbocharged, 3.8-litre V8 which produces 592 bhp. 0-60 can be reached in 3 seconds, and the 12C can complete a quarter mile sprint in 10.4 seconds. Engineering the car for optimum fuel efficiency versus competitors in its market segment was a priority from the 12C’s inception.

Geoff Grose, Head of Vehicle Development said: “Class-leading fuel economy and low emissions are additional aspects of vehicle performance that we have worked hard to develop. Developing our own engine and transmission, together with pioneering lightweight technologies across the whole vehicle, has helped us achieve good results at the EPA and gives us a platform to develop for the future.”

The 2012 McLaren MP4-12C goes on sale throughout McLaren Automotive’s North American dealer-partners starting in late 2011. The car will have a base price of $229,000 in the US, with $2400 for destination and port processing.

Development phase McLaren MP4-12C GT3 achieves podium finish in Macau

One of the most exciting challenges faced in 2011 by McLaren Group has been the creation of McLaren GT. The new race car manufacturer combines the experience of McLaren Racing and McLaren Automotive,  and is tasked with developing of the first racing iteration of the 12C sports car; the new McLaren MP4-12C GT3.

 

The 12C GT3 was announced to media in May 2011, and subsequently undertook a series of endurance races and independent tests throughout the 2011 season.  With McLaren GT aiming to provide the most reliable, efficient and easy to drive GT car on the grid next year, customers for the 25 cars it will deliver for racing in 2012 were delighted to see a development-phase 12C GT3 liveried in Gulf colours and driven by Danny Watts achieve a podium finish in Macau at the weekend.  McLaren GT managed the 12C GT3’s entry into the Windsor Arch Macau GT Cup in partnership with future customer team United Autosports.

Danny Watts said: “I’m very happy with third for the first time here with McLaren. We’ve learned a huge amount this weekend, developed the 12C GT3 and moved it forward throughout the race weekend. To get a podium on its debut here is just fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Every year the standard gets higher and higher: the drivers and their cars. The car and team have done extremely well here.”



UK PRIME MINISTER DAVID CAMERON VISITS McLAREN TO OPEN BRAND-NEW McLAREN PRODUCTION CENTRE

Nov 17, 2011

Ron Dennis (Executive Chairman, McLaren Group and McLaren Automotive) outlines McLaren’s ambitions for 2012 and beyond

 

 

Just like our racing cars, the McLaren Group never stands still – and you may like some of the pioneering new directions we’re taking.

McLaren is more than just a builder of beautiful and successful Formula 1 cars: we’re a relentlessly competitive entity, bred on high-performance and determined to bring to market ground-breaking products and solutions that are set apart by their top quality and dependence on totally unique and highly innovative steps in performance.

To take just one example, we’re poised on the verge of a hugely exciting automotive programme with our high-performance sports car, MP4-12C.

And today’s visit to McLaren by Prime Minister the Rt Hon David Cameron MP is a statement of intent: that we’re committed to building a homegrown sports car manufacturer to take on the likes of Europe’s and North America’s giants.

But that’s not all.

Through everything we do, we’re absolutely dedicated to fostering the rebirth of one of Great Britain’s industrial cornerstones: beautiful and meticulously crafted high-tech industrial design and manufacture.

Design and manufacturing have been at the backbone of British industry for more than 100 years, and are activities that we as a company not only passionately believe in, but consider of primary importance to the future economic growth and recovery of the United Kingdom.

It’s a philosophy that is at the cornerstone of McLaren Group chairman Ron Dennis’s view for the future of the Group.

He said:

“Through everything we do, McLaren strives to find the solution.

“We never stop. We exist to go faster; to be state-of-the-art; to innovate; to perform with belief, flair and passion; to be the absolute best at what we do. And everything that McLaren is has been built on the founding principles of good design and solid, seamlessly efficient engineering and manufacturing.

“Since the dawn of the industrial revolution, great minds such as George Stephenson, James Watt, Matthew Boulton and Isambard Kingdom Brunel have brought tremendous and justified acclaim to Great Britain via their relentless innovation and restless desire to deliver societal benefit.

“But, in the UK, there has been an over-reliance in the past on the financial and service sectors. Now, industry is realising that Britain’s grand manufacturing tradition is a solid platform upon which to build – and I want the McLaren Group to play its part in the crucial recalibration of UK plc.

“I’m delighted that the Government is embracing that initiative too: we need to encourage young people to embrace the STEM subjects, by which I mean, science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

“This should not trigger the abandonment of the arts – of which I am also a keen patron. However, I firmly believe it is the role and duty of British industry to offer STEM graduates the appropriate destination jobs – the provision of a worthwhile career path that ensures that our brightest scientists, technicians, engineers and mathematicians aren’t lured into finance or banking – simply because they feel that engineering cannot compete to offer equal satisfaction or reward.”

As Ron Dennis’s words make apparent: our vision is clear, and the means by which we achieve it are rich and diverse. We are proud that McLaren is a British industrial icon, but there is more to us than you may imagine…

Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

The historic cornerstone of our business, a household name within the UK and one of the most prestigious brands in world sport. With 175 grand prix wins and 20 world titles achieved by a roster of talent, including our world champions – Emerson Fittipaldi, James Hunt, Niki Lauda, Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna, Mika Hakkinen and Lewis Hamilton – our Formula 1 team has rightfully become one of the most famous and established in the history of the sport.

  • 702 grands prix, 175 grand prix victories
  • 12 drivers’ championships & eight constructors’ championships
  • Six grand prix victories so far in 2011 with our drivers Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button

You might be surprised at what we’re doing next:

  • Completing a four-day technical test in Abu Dhabi with Gary Paffett and Oliver Turvey
  • Freighting spares and chassis to Brazil for the final race of the 2011 season in Sao Paulo
  • Preparing build-work on next year’s car, MP4-27 – we are nine months into the development programme and have already stored 18,918 individual components from more than 3,000 different works orders and signed off more than 5,500 technical drawings.

For more information, go to www.mclaren.com/formula1

McLaren Automotive

In the past decade, McLaren Automotive has become a ground-breaking British automotive powerhouse that is successfully taking on the giants of the European, Asian and North American sports car market. McLaren Automotive intends to become renowned not only as a premium automotive brand, but also as a high-volume high-performance sports car manufacturer with the presence and range to co-exist and compete with the most established supercar brands in the world.

  • The creation of what was then the world’s fastest ever production car, the 1994 McLaren F1
  • Manufacturing and assembly-line expertise with the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren
  • Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren becomes world’s highest-volume 200mph-plus high-performance sports car – 2,153 units built
  • MP4-12C – the world’s most advanced high-performance sports car – is launched in 2011
  • MP4-12C is hailed by critics as “the most complete supercar the world has ever seen” (CAR magazine) and “the most capable supercar on the planet right now” (Pistonheads)

What we’re doing next:

  • Officially opening the Foster + Partners-designed McLaren Production Centre
  • Rolling out 35 global dealerships between now and the end of 2012
  • Preparing our works and customer GT3 racecar operations for their first full season of competition in 2012
  • Working on the design of a range of game-changing high-performance production cars whose launch will take our annual production to 4,500 cars per year by 2014

For more information, go to www.mclarenautomotive.com

McLaren Applied Technologies

McLaren Applied Technologies successfully mines the rich seam of accumulated knowledge within the Group to resolve a diverse and fascinating series of third-party technical projects and collaborations. Recent projects have capitalised on our unique expertise in applying simulation, modelling and telemetry to achieve greater performance, used our technical and strategic know-how within the sporting world or simply harnessed our world-class understanding of carbon-fibre.

  • Successfully collaborated with National Air Traffic Services to improve ground-level air traffic efficiency for airports, including Heathrow
  • Providing telemetry and engineering design assistance to five British Olympic teams: canoeing, cycling, rowing, sailing and winter sports
  • Providing telemetry and data management to professional football and RFU teams
  • Collaborated with bicycle manufacturer Specialized to provide carbon-fibre lay-up expertise for the S-Works + McLaren Venge – the bike that took of Mark Cavendish to the Tour de France’s green jersey and the road race world championship
  • Working with GlaxoSmithKline to develop software to improve the time-to-market of new pharmaceutical products, among other high-tech collaborations
  • Pioneering human telemetry for health and wellness – already applied to executives in high-performance positions and also for weight-management
  • Created the McLaren High-Performance Centre – a simulation and training tool for racing drivers and engineers

What we’re doing next:

  • Planning permission submitted for the McLaren Applied Technologies Centre – to be built on ground adjacent to McLaren Group’s current premises
  • Commencing specification and design of the new McLaren GSK Centre for Applied Performance – an engineering centre of excellence
  • Kicking off a new five-year deal with Specialized for development of the new top-of-the-range S-Works SL4 carbon-fibre road bike
  • Working with marine competition teams

For more information, go to www.mclarenappliedtechnologies.com

McLaren Electronic Systems

With more than two decades’ experience on the racetrack, and with centres in Woking, UK and North Carolina, USA, McLaren Electronic Systems has grown into professional motor racing’s leading supplier of electronic control and data systems.  Honed in some of the most hostile and competitive environments in world sport, McLaren Electronic Systems has continued to develop a series of technical solutions that sit at the cutting-edge of technical know-how while remaining user-friendly and mechanically bullet-proof.

  • A software pioneer within motorsport since the company first raced at Le Mans in 1991
  • Complete electronic control systems in Formula One since 1993
  • Sole provider of engine control units to the IndyCar series since 2007
  • Official supplier of engine control units to the FIA Formula 1 World Championship since 2008
  • Official engine control unit of NASCAR from 2012, provoking the biggest single change to the engine in 60 years
  • Winner of Queen’s Award for Innovation in 2009

What we’re doing next:

  • Official supplier of master control units for Formula 1’s new 2014 powertrain
  • Developing and manufacturing advanced automotive control systems and powertrain solutions for high performance road cars
  • Supplying engine control units for piston-engine aircraft engines
  • Providing data and video systems for the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system in San Francisco
  • Developing data and telemetry systems, based on Formula 1 experience and technology, for use in acute paediatric care (in collaboration with Birmingham Children’s Hospital, Health Foundation and Vodafone)
  • Exploiting real-time data systems from Formula 1 in large sensor network solutions (‘machine-to-machine’ or M2M applications)



McLAREN FORMULA 1 TECHNOLOGY DELIVERS ULTIMATE PERFORMANCE ON TRACK AND ROAD IN THE NEW MP4-12C



Nov 4, 2011

  • Formula 1 integration – technologies, processes and people – inspire the 12C’s headline performance data and record lap times
  • 30 years of carbon composite chassis design at McLaren inspires the 12C’s revolutionary carbon MonoCell: the lightweight safety cell, designed around the driver
  • Innovative chassis concept offers performance foundation: McLaren Airbrake  and McLaren Brake Steer support 12C dynamics; bespoke ProActive Chassis Control suspension and SSG transmission deliver ultimate track times and supreme on road comfort and behaviour
  • Debut media test, and first recorded hot-lap, of MP4-12C at  Nürburgring Nordschleife captured on film atwww.youtube.com/mclarenautomotivetv

In 2011, a McLaren team with experience in developing successful Formula 1 cars and expertise from launching McLaren cars in the past, has launched a new type of sports car. The groundbreaking new MP4-12C features technology born on the race track, and for the first time available in a road car.

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The 12C development team has pushed the car to its limits in all climates and driving scenarios in Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Bahrain, the USA, and South Africa, but much of the car’s performance credentials have been honed on the broken surfaces and offset cambers much closer to home; Dunsfold Aerodrome in Surrey, England.

Located close to the McLaren Technology Centre, Dunsfold has proved an effective ‘home’ for the 12C development programme.  It is there that bespoke components including the one-piece carbon ‘MonoCell’ chassis, unique Proactive Chassis Control suspension system, race-derived Brake Steer and McLaren Airbrake were first tested and tuned in unison.

Fast laps on world-famous test tracks

Unusually for a development track, Dunsfold is also a very public place: hundreds of millions of people have, in fact, followed cars around its eight corners, having watched Top Gear’s ‘The Stig’, on line and on TV, take the world’s best sports cars to task at the Surrey circuit.

And earlier this year, the McLaren MP4-12C sealed its position at the top of the TV show’s laptime leaderboard, having achieved a record time for a mid-engine sports car, and the fastest lap for a typical road-going performance car. A stunning 1:16.2 lap of Dunsfold Aerodrome at the hands of ‘The Stig’ in a production specification 12C, was particularly rewarding for the dedication displayed by the 12C’s Dunsfold-based development team.http://www.bbc.co.uk/topgear/show/powerlaps.shtml.

Prototype versions of the 12C featuring unique race-bred technologies have undertaken test programmes in every imaginable environment, at circuits and proving grounds all over the world.  In all cases, data captured by McLaren Electronic Systems telemetry equipment has shown the 12C to be quicker than the lap times set when testing benchmark competitor cars.

In its debut Nürburgring Nordschleife media test, by German performance car specialist publication Sport Auto, Editor-in Chief, and ‘Ring expert, Horst von Saurma-Jeltsch recorded a superb single-lap time of 7:28* in a production specification 12C at the famous circuit.  Independent data from Sport Auto shows the 12C in its one and only recorded flying lap to-date to be already ten seconds quicker around ‘The Green Hell’ at the hands of von Saurma-Jeltsch than the nearest Ferrari and quicker even than ‘hypercars’ from Koenigsegg and Pagani.*

The 12C was conceived at the McLaren Technology Centre in Woking, UK under the same roof as McLaren Racing’s Vodafone McLaren Mercedes Formula 1 team: ‘performance’ lies at the heart of the 12C and the McLaren Automotive team responsible for its design, development, engineering and now manufacture.  The result is a car that McLaren believes is faster, more efficient, more agile and even more comfortable than any other sports car in the world. A unique combination of attributes.

MP4-12C performance data highlights

  • 0 – 200kph in 9.1s (8.9s on optional Corsa tyres)
  • CO2 emissions of 279g/km (equating to 24.2 EU mpg combined)
  • 0 – 100kph in 3.3s (3.1s with optional Corsa tyres)
  • top speed: 330kph (205mph)
  • 100 – 0 kph in 30.5 m (100 ft)
  • ¼ mile: 10.9s @ 135 mph
  • dry weight (with lightweight options): 1301kgs / 2868 lbs
  • carbon MonoCell chassis weight:  75kgs / 165 lbs
  • power:weight (lightweight options): 461PS / 455bhp per tonne.
  • power: 600PS (592bhp) at 7,000 rpm
  •  torque: 600Nm between 3,000 – 7,000 rpm
  • CO2 per horsepower: 0.47

For racing and road: the world’s most advanced simulator

McLaren Automotive undertook an advanced simulation programme to define the technical specification of the 12C, an approach that the McLaren Formula 1 team takes every time it designs a new race car. The McLaren simulator is believed to be the most advanced in motorsport, and was conceived by the Technical Director responsible for the 12C, Dick Glover, during his time in McLaren Racing.

Glover, now occupying a new position as Director of Research, and one of many ex-McLaren Racing experts now at McLaren Automotive, said: “Having the McLaren simulator at our disposal from the start of the 12C development programme has been a tremendous asset.

“We were able to accurately predict the dynamic performance of our very first concept-phase vehicle and ensure that it was suitable for extreme testing from day one. It would be incredibly difficult to achieve similar results if you were designing and building a car without simulation.

“We use professional racing drivers in our development team. Throughout the real-world testing programme we continually schedule time for them in the simulator to fine tune the performance and driving characteristics of the 12C. This experience is then validated back against real-world conditions at one of the test facilities we use around the world. It is an ongoing, dynamic, feedback process that mixes the best of technology with the best hands-on track work,”Glover concluded.

The 12C development team took simulation to a new level as it sought to ensure the prototype cars were pushed to their absolute limits. This innovation in development was put into action at a Spanish test facility reproducing the impact of the famous Nürburgring Nordschleife. The Nordschleife in Germany is regarded as the world’s ultimate test circuit due to its combination of challenging surfaces and 20.81km (12.93m) length. McLaren Automotive visited the Nordschleife on several occasions for periods of sustained testing, but with the circuit being closed during winter months, the development team identified a way of recreating the extreme conditions found at the Nordschleife in a different environment.

Dick Glover said: “We have a permanent test base at the Applus IDIADA proving ground in Northern Spain.  Our team of engineers took data from the Nordschleife circuit including lateral g performance, vertical road inputs, engine throttle position and gearing, and created a programme which could be undertaken at IDIADA, which we call the ‘Idi-schleife Concept’.

“This programme allowed us to undertake challenging and aggressive testing to the level experienced at the Nordschleife but at a location where we can run testing literally twenty-four hours, seven days a week and quickly move our cars closer to their development targets,” Glover concluded.

From simulation to reality: ‘Pure McLaren’

Antony Sheriff, McLaren Automotive’s Managing Director: “The overriding principle that has driven us to where we are today is that every one of our cars will be ‘pure’ McLaren. This means that each and every component is conceived, designed and produced to McLaren’s specification to meet the extreme requirements of the 12C, from its revolutionary carbon MonoCell to the switchgear. There are no carryover components in the 12C. Similarly, our test programmes, production processes and aftersales plans are also brand new and bespoke to McLaren.

One fundamental result of this passion to produce a pure McLaren is that the 12C is what I call the ‘and’ car.  Compared to main rivals, it has better performance ‘and’ is more fuel efficient; it is lighter ‘and’ stronger, safer ‘and’ fully equipped; it is smaller in its exterior dimensions ‘and’ spacious inside; it’s handling characteristics will deliver unbeatable track times ‘and’ yet it is more comfortable on road. 

“As for the 12C’s performance, efficiency is a key aim; efficiency in performance is a goal that we believe our customers will appreciate. With 600PS it is the most powerful car in its class, yet with a CO2 figures of just 279g/km, when we launched the 12C it produced each horsepower more efficiently than any car on sale today featuring a petrol, diesel or even hybrid engine,” Sheriff concluded.

12C Carbon MonoCell: the essence of a racing car for the road

In 1981 McLaren Racing introduced the carbon monocoque to Formula 1: it offered an unbeatable combination of strength and lightness and, at Silverstone that year, John Watson piloted the MP4-1 to first place in the British Grands Prix, recording the debut win for a carbon-based Formula 1 car.

On October 16th 2011, McLaren competed in its 700th Formula 1 race in South Korea, with Lewis Hamilton taking the racing team’s 200th carbon fibre chassis car to yet another podium position, just a week after Jenson Button took top spot at the Japanese Grand Prix.

Statistics that mean no further explanation is required as to why McLaren settled on a carbon chassis for the MP4-12C: the first carbon chassis in a volume production sports car below £200,000, and the first to be produced as a one-piece moulded chassis. But not the first carbon-based car from McLaren, of course.

The legendary McLaren F1 sports car was the first road car to feature a carbon chassis when it launched in 1993. With 2,153 SLRs manufactured in its seven year production run, the 2003 – 2009 SLR is the most successful car in the £300,000+ price-point and the most successful of any car built on a carbon-fibre chassis. Since 1981, McLaren has never built a car without a carbon chassis.

Now, the 12C takes carbon innovation to a new level. The MonoCell is a unique one-piece moulded chassis that weighs just 75kgs (165lbs). The MonoCell concept required it to provide the perfect combination of occupant space, structural integrity, light weight, and relatively low construction costs. And the ideal chassis from which to deliver ground-breaking efficiency and performance in the sports car market.

Mark Vinnels, Programme Director at McLaren Automotive, said: “With 30 years experience in carbon technology, the physical benefits of carbon are well known at McLaren. What we are now progressing, on the 12C and future models, is making serious in-roads into economies of scale without reducing quality.

“The goal, that we are confident we have achieved, is to bring supercar performance to a new market, combined with never-before achieved levels of efficiency. Having met many of our future customers around the world, there is no doubt that those in the market for high-performance sports cars are looking for cars that offer more than just looks and power. Innovation, technology, and accessible performance are in demand. We believe that the 12C, with a one-piece moulded carbon chassis at its heart, heralds a new future for sports car design,” Vinnels concluded.

The MonoCell is a lightweight, hollow, very strong and predictable structure that is produced in one piece through the Resin Transfer Moulding (RTM) process.

The production process begins by loading dry carbon fibre into a complex 35-ton steel tool before it is pressed together, heated and then injected with epoxy resin. Using a steel tool is new to the manufacturing process: historically, carbon chassis’ have been formed in ‘soft’ tooling of composite materials, which adds production costs and time. The subsequent post-curing process hardens the resin, and the MonoCell then enters a booth where key surfaces are machined with great precision in preparation for vehicle assembly.  The process between forming and curing produces the MonoCell as a hollow structure, and is the key to the chassis’ combination of strength and light weight.

Once complete, the MonoCell is placed into a unique McLaren-designed test rig and subjected to high stresses, in order to prove that each part is capable of meeting exacting performance standards.

Looking back, the carbon chassis of the McLaren F1 was produced manually and took up to 3,000 hours to complete each unit. The bonded carbon chassis of the SLR reduced that manufacturing time ten-fold. The new carbon manufacturing process developed for the 12C will mean the MonoCell can be produced in a four hour cycle. Investing in this process means McLaren Automotive is making carbon a reality to sports car enthusiasts seeking the ultimate in lightweight and safe chassis construction, at a price point more affordable to a wider market.

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Claudio Santoni, Function Group Manager for Body Structures at McLaren Automotive, said: “With the carbon MonoCell, the 12C offers owners more than just exceptional occupant safety. It is incredibly light, which helps reduce the 12C’s CO2 emissions and improve fuel efficiency.  For the same reason; acceleration, braking, changes of direction and vehicle stability are all significantly improved. Using a carbon composite means we can manufacture the MonoCell with aerospace industry levels of precision, which is fundamental to accurate dynamic suspension geometry control.”

The advantages that this innovative carbon chassis brings to the sub-£200,000 sports car market are:

  • Light weight:  The 12C MonoCell weighs just 75kgs, some 25 per cent lighter than a comparable aluminium chassis. Carbon fibre forms the structural basis for the whole car and contributes to the car’s low overall weight and overall efficiency.
  • High torsional rigidity: The MonoCell is 25 per cent stiffer than an equivalent all metal structure and provides the 12C with a higher torsional stiffness to weight ratio than competitors. This inherent rigidity means the unique front suspension system, mounted directly onto the MonoCell, requires less compromise for the flexibility of the suspension itself. Therefore, it is easier to develop the unique balance between supple ride and precise handling that McLaren has targeted.
  • A very strong safety cell: The MonoCell offers greater occupant safety. It acts as a safety survival cell, as it does for a Formula 1 car.
  • Ease of repair: Aluminium extrusions and castings are jig welded into the finished assembly and bolted directly to the MonoCell. In an accident, the light weight aluminium alloy front and rear structures absorb impact forces and can be replaced easily, whereas cars with full aluminium chassis use their structure to absorb and crumple on impact, causing more damage (and expense) to the whole structure, including the passenger cell.
  • Low perishability: Carbon composites do not degrade over time like metal structures that fatigue. One is able to get into a 15-year-old McLaren F1 and there is none of the tiredness or lack of structural integrity that afflicts traditional cars that have suffered a hard life. The 12C will feel as good as new in this respect for decades.
  • Extreme dimensional accuracy: There is absolute predictability in the production process. In any plane or dimension, between two points, every MonoCell will be within half a millimetre level of accuracy. This ensures an extremeely high level of build quality and predictable performance.

No compromise: Lightweight and efficient new 600PS powertrain

The unique new M838T engine powering the McLaren MP4-12C is a 3.8-litre twin turbo V8 engine, designed by McLaren Automotive.

Weighing 199kg (439lbs), the M838T features a dry sump lubrication system and a flat plane crankshaft, which has allowed McLaren Automotive’s engineers to place the engine extremely low in the chassis, lowering the 12C’s centre of gravity and in turn optimising the car’s handling responses.

At the rear, high level exhaust pipes exit the car from a mixing box rather than a conventional silencer unit, saving weight. An optional Sport Exhaust system made from Inconel, an extremely heat-resistant nickel-chromium-based alloy, further reduces weight and enhances the exhaust note.

Richard Farquhar, Function Group Manager for Powertrain at McLaren Automotive said: “The decision to design and build a turbocharged engine for the 12C was taken early in the programme. We wanted low weight, low rev range tractability, potent mid-range performance and extensive high-rev reach. All that, and a level of refinement and efficiency from a V8 that perhaps you might not expect. I’m confident that the 12C powerplant delivers on all these aspects.”

Mated to the M838T is a dual clutch, seven-speed ‘SSG’ transmission. Using the Active Dynamics Panel situated in the centre console of the 12C’s cockpit, the characteristics of the SSG transmission can be switched through three different settings: ‘Normal’, ‘Sport’ and ‘Track’ modes.  Each provide a progressive immediacy of gear shift, operated through finger-tip controls mounted on a rocker behind the 12C steering wheel: upshift by either pulling with the right hand or pushing with the left, and vice versa to downshift.  This ‘one-hand shifting’ principal, and the satisfying mechanical ‘click’ on gearchange, is reminiscent of the shift mechanics introduced and still used in Formula 1 cars.

The SSG system has another trick in its box. If the driver enters a sharp corner too quickly, requiring a strong braking action, there is every chance he will not be in the ideal gear for smooth acceleration out of the corner. If the left-shift control is depressed and held, instead of ‘clicked’, while under braking, the transmission matches engine speed to the correct lowest gear.

‘Automatic’ mode, ‘Launch Control’ and ‘Winter’ modes can also be selected on the Active Dynamics Panel, the latter changing all electronic functions to suit low grip conditions and delivering maximum driver aid and support. There is no traditional manual transmission offered; the two pedal layout offered further scope to create a narrow, lighter, and more comfortable car.

ProActive Chassis Control**

Working to the McLaren mantra of ‘no compromise’, McLaren Automotive’s Vehicle Dynamics engineers set about creating a brand-new suspension system for a sports car that aims to deliver executive car-like ride quality and a sharp, reactive  handling response.

ProActive Chassis Control featuring Adaptive Damping provides much higher stiffness in roll compared to conventional suspension systems, and greater comfort in a straight line. The suspension is based on double wishbones with coil springs. The dampers are interconnected hydraulically and linked to a gas-filled accumulator, providing adaptive responses depending on road conditions and driver preference.

Paul Burnham, McLaren Automotive Vehicle Dynamics Manager – and formerly McLaren Racing Senior Vehicle Dynamics Engineer – said: “It is not enough just to be fast. The 12C has to innovate in every area. An anti-roll bar is a common and simple solution to support handling, but the disadvantage is that stiffness is always there, whether the driver requires it or not. It is important to us that the 12C is rewarding and comfortable to drive at low and high speed, on the daily commute and on the track.”

The ProActive system features driver-adjustable roll control which replaces the mechanical anti-roll bars that have been a standard feature of road cars since time immemorial. It allows the car to maintain precise roll control under heavy cornering while decoupling the suspension in a straight line for excellent wheel articulation and compliance.

As with the transmission, but independent from it, 12C drivers are able to select ‘Normal’, ‘Sport’ or ‘Track’ settings for the suspension through the Active Dynamics Panel. Each mode is responsible for managing roll control system pressure, Adaptive Damping and Electronic Stability Control (ESC) settings. This ensures bespoke tuning between handling, ride and transmission for focused track activity, dynamic road driving, or comfortable cruising.

Burnham continues: “Adaptive Damping works by electronic sensors monitoring the movement of the body and wheels and only increasing damping when required. We believe Adaptive Damping as part of ProActive Chassis Control is the best system for a driver to set the car to his or her preferred driving modes. Its speed of response is particularly effective!”

The fundamental principle behind ProActive Chassis Control is simple physics: dampers featuring an hydraulic system of high and low pressure valves interconnected left to right, front to back. When high pressure meets high pressure under roll conditions, stiffness results; when high pressure meets low under heave and warp, there is more ‘give’ and comfort prevails.  See ‘notes to editors’ for full technical overview of ProActive Chassis Control.

 

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Brake Steer and McLaren Airbrake

Brake Steer is a variation on McLaren’s electronic driver aid used successfully in Formula 1 on the 1997 McLaren MP4-12. It was subsequently banned, indicating its clear performance advantage, but has been developed for the 12C as the control system to prevent wheel spin and improve traction.

Brake Steer does essentially the same job as a ‘torque-vectoring’ differential, but is up to 20 kgs lighter – part of the 12C’s ‘weight-down’ design philosophy.  It uses the same hardware to operate as the 12C’s Electronic Stability Control (ESC) system, preventing wheel spin, reducing understeer, and significantly boosting track times.

In essence, it is a system that applies braking forces to the inside rear wheel when the car is entering a corner too quickly to make the desired radius – supporting either a driver who has misjudged the corner, or a skilled driver seeking the fastest possible entry and exit from a corner. It supports later braking into corners, and earlier power delivery on exiting.

Under normal circumstances these scenarios would tend towards a state of understeer. Brake Steer controls this and makes the car behave in a more neutral fashion, bringing its nose back on line. It assesses the steering angle to determine the driver’s intended course and applies the inside rear brake to increase yaw rate and resume the desired course.

The 12C’s ESC system is managed electronically by the driver-operated Active Dynamics Panel settings. The 12C provides ample grip and safety in ‘Winter’ or ‘Normal’ modes, yet ESC offers increased slip in ‘Sport’ or ‘Track’ modes. ESC can be switched off by drivers seeking to engage with the limits of the car’s performance in safe environments, but a supremely discreet level of stability control still remains as a final layer of protection.

A unique McLaren Airbrake adds drag and rear downforce when deployed under braking, helping the car to decelerate and meaning more rear brake pressure can be used, hence stopping distances are shortened.

Adding rear downforce also improves the car’s stability under braking to give a more secure feel and optimum track performance: under typical heavy braking, the rear can go ‘light’ as weight is transferred forwards, ‘pushing’ the front of the car down. With an Airbrake, the car behaves as if ‘pulled’ from behind, counteracting the tendency to dive, therefore maintaining traction.

Under heavy braking above 95 km/h, a piston operated by transmission hydraulics raises the Airbrake to 32°. Once the first stage ‘wing angle’ is set, and the Airbrake pushed into the airflow, the centre of aerodynamic pressure forces the bottom of the ‘wing’ back up to 69°: aerodynamics raise the Airbrake to its full and maximum angle rather than relying on a larger, and therefore heavier, motor. This weight-saving solution took almost 50 per cent of weight out of the mechanism.

At the press of a button on the Active Dynamics Panel inside the 12C cabin, the Airbrake can be manually raised to 32°.  Chris Goodwin, McLaren Automotive’s Chief Test Driver, said: “This operation allows the driver to significantly adapt the 12C’s handling characteristics. Raising the Airbrake increases downforce and therefore stability through circuit corners. It glues the 12C to the track and the result is clear: a faster lap time!

The option of engaging the Airbrake is indicative of McLaren DNA present in the 12C. Some performance cars only offer one setting, drama, whereas technology in the 12C, evolved from that designed by McLaren for its Formula 1 cars, produces a range of driving experiences like no other.  Owners will enjoy discovering the depths of the 12C’s dynamic performance on road and track, and as you’d expect with race-bred technology, it will be applied in the safest possible package.”

Wheels, tyres and brakes

The wheel and tyre combination selected for the 12C is critical to performance and handling agility. The front wheel diameter is 19” to ensure the sidewall height is large enough to ensure good impact isolation, and maintain excellent aerodynamics.

The MP4-12C is supplied as standard with Silver finish cast aluminium 5-spoke design wheels (8.5”x 19” Front, 11” x 20” Rear). Two wheel upgrade options are available. Lightweight and Super-Lightweight Forged Wheels offer significant weight savings, in turn increasing efficiency and performance. The 5-spoke Lightweight Forged Wheels have a technical appearance and save 6kg, compared to the standard wheels. The 10-spoke Super-Lightweight Forged Wheels offer a pure performance look and are 10kg lighter in total.  To date, more than 70 per cent of 12C customers have ordered upgraded Lightweight or Super-Lightweight Forged Wheels.

Standard tyres on the 12C are bespoke Pirelli P Zero’s, with latest generation tyre technology. The 12C’s ProActive Chassis Control system has allowed the Vehicle Dynamics team to use a softer compound than is normal on high performance sports cars to achieve extra grip. Pirelli P Zero Corsa ‘sport’ tyres are available as an option for use at higher temperatures and on circuits. These give more grip in normal conditions than the PZero tyres, but are less effective than the standard tyres in standing water or temperatures below 7°C.

The standard forged aluminium bell and cast iron brake configuration is bespoke to the 12C and has been optimised for weight, saving around 8 kg from a standard cast iron option that was considered. Naturally, it gives excellent performance in terms of braking bite and feedback.  As an upgrade, Ceramic Composite Matrix (CCM) brakes may be specified.

McLaren MP4-12C Technical Specification

Drivetrain layout Longitudinal mid-engine, RWD
Engine configuration V8 twin turbo
Engine material Aluminium block and cylinder heads
Oiling Dry sump
Compression ratio 8.7:1
Valvetrain 32-valve, DOHC, dual VVT
Redline ( rpm) 8,500
Bore x Stroke (mm) 93 x 69.9
Engine displacement (cc) 3799
PS / rpm 600 / 7000
Torque Nm / rpm 600 / 3000-7000
PS per litre 158
Transmission 7 Speed SSG with Pre-Cog
Body structure Carbon fibre MonoCell with aluminum front and rear frames
Wheelbase (mm) 2670
Track, F/R (mm) 1656 / 1583
Length (mm) 4507
Width (mm) 1909
Height (mm) 1199
DIN weight (kg / lbs) 1434 / 3161
Dry weight (kg / lbs) 1336 / 2945
Dry weight with lightweight options (kg / lbs) 1301 / 2868
Weight distribution at DIN F / R % 42.5 /  57.5
Active aerodynamics McLaren Airbrake
Suspension ProActive Chassis Control
ProActive Chassis Control modes Winter / Normal / Sport / Track
Powertrain modes Winter / Normal / Sport / Track
Brakes Cast iron discs with forged aluminum hubs (F  370mm / R 350 mm)
Wheel sizes (F / R) 19” x 8.5”J / 20” x 11” J
Tyres (F / R) Pirelli PZero 235/35 R19 / 305/30 R20

McLaren MP4-12C performance data

EU US/UK
Engine Power 600 PS (441kW) @ 7000 rpm 592 bhp @ 7000 rpm
Torque 600 Nm @ 3000-7000rpm 443 lb-ft @ 3000-7000rpm
Weight DIN weight 1434 kg 3161 lbs
Dry weight 1336 kg 2945 lbs
Dry weight (with lightweight options) 1301kg 2868 lbs
Efficiency CO2 279 g/km 279 g/km
Fuel consumption (combined) 11.7 l/100 km 24.2 mpg (UK)
Power to weight (with lightweight options) 461 PS/tonne 455 bhp/tonne
CO2/power 0.47 g/km per PS 0.47 g/km per bhp
Speed Maximum speed 330 kph 205 mph
Acceleration 0-100 kph (62 mph) 3.3 s (3.1 s with Corsa tyre option) 3.3 s (3.1 s with Corsa tyre option)
0-200 kph (124 mph) 9.1 s (8.9 s with Corsa tyre option) 9.1 s (8.9 s with Corsa tyre option)
0-400 m / ¼ mile           0-1000 m 10.9 s @ 216 kph 19.6 s @ 272 kph 10.9 @ 134 mph
Braking Braking 200-0 kph          123 m 100-0 kph          30.5 m 124-0 mph       403 ft 62-0 mph         100 ft

All figures apply to a European specification MP4-12C



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