Last year, Lamboghini pulled the old a prank on us and instead of unveiling a brand new V10 supercar, they brought forth another facelift for the Gallardo. It was a good facelift, but a facelift nonetheless.
This gives them more time to work on the replacement model, a replacement which has already been testing for a while and which might be ready to show us what's what.
The supercar will reportedly come under the Cabrera name and will be powered by an evolutionary V10. The architecture will be borrowed largely from the Gallardo but will also be lightened in places. Total output of 600 PS will be delivered to all four wheels via automatic gearbox, a new dual-clutch system, not the single-clutch E-Gear system.
Some photos which emerged on CarBuzz.com have been making waves on the Internet, as speculation that this is the new Gallardo is rampant. The car you see is reportedly coming to the Frankfurt Motor Show.
Styling-wise, this car shares its looks with the Sesto Elemento. It's a different breed of stealth fighter to the Aventador. It would be easy to dispute that this can't be the real think we see in these photos. But if these are renderings, why are the wheels so small, why are the markings of the Pirelli tires visible and why can we see the the panel lines on the dashboard?
Story and photos via carbuzz.com
The supercar will reportedly come under the Cabrera name and will be powered by an evolutionary V10. The architecture will be borrowed largely from the Gallardo but will also be lightened in places. Total output of 600 PS will be delivered to all four wheels via automatic gearbox, a new dual-clutch system, not the single-clutch E-Gear system.
Some photos which emerged on CarBuzz.com have been making waves on the Internet, as speculation that this is the new Gallardo is rampant. The car you see is reportedly coming to the Frankfurt Motor Show.
Styling-wise, this car shares its looks with the Sesto Elemento. It's a different breed of stealth fighter to the Aventador. It would be easy to dispute that this can't be the real think we see in these photos. But if these are renderings, why are the wheels so small, why are the markings of the Pirelli tires visible and why can we see the the panel lines on the dashboard?
Story and photos via carbuzz.com