The outrageous MSO Sabre, McLaren’s most potent ICE vehicle to date, is unveiled.

McLaren has rolled out the first of its exclusive Sabre supercars. Only available in the USA, the Sabre pushes McLaren’s twin-turbo V8 engine harder than ever before, and dips its toe into an exuberant and flamboyant new design direction.

You won’t find the Sabre in any catalog; it’s a McLaren Special Operations “bespoke commission hypercar,” being tailored to just 15 customers. Why only in America? Essentially, it seems, to take advantage of relatively lax US vehicle codes that give manufacturers considerably more leeway than the Euro standards. The company is being a little coy about specifics, stating merely that it’s “homologated solely to US federal standards – featuring ideas and innovations that global homologation would not permit.”

It runs a twin-turbo V8, most likely the 4-liter unit common to the roofless Elva, the Senna and possibly the Speedtail. In Sabre trim, it’s good for 824 horsepower and 800 Nm (590 lb-ft) of torque, pipping the first two to become the most powerful non-hybrid car the company has ever built. It’s also the fastest-ever McLaren two-seater, capable of 218 mph (350 km/h). The famous F1 managed 240 mph (386 km/h), and the Speedtail is targeted at 250 mph (402 km/h), but these both use a wacky three-seat layout with the driver front and center and two passengers behind and to the sides.

Dihedral doors and a Lamborghineqsue sloping back
Dihedral doors and a Lamborghineqsue sloping back

McLaren

The Sabre’s seating layout might be conventional, but the styling gets pretty out there, with wildly exaggerated wheel arches rising up from the floor line and curling over the car’s hips and shoulders, connected at the rear with a broad and technical-looking rear wing.

The gentle downward slope of the back of the car seems caged in, almost disconnected from the sides and the wing. It almost looks like somebody drove a regular supercar into a racy body kit. I can’t remember ever seeing a set of rear diffusers sticking out so far from the back of a car, it’s a lurid and provocative undercarriage beneath the tapered tail of the bodywork.

That bodywork, combined with the wide dihedral doors and this outrageously flashy orange, white and carbon color scheme, makes for one of the most ostentatious and showy designs we’ve seen from McLaren, a company that typically leans towards a curvaceous but classy look. The rear engine cover is reminiscent of the crazier excesses of Lamborghini, for Pete’s sake; we wouldn’t have seen that coming from Woking.

Massive diffuser rack
Massive diffuser rack

McLaren

But this is just car #1 of 15, and the rest will look very different as they roll out over the coming months. Each has been tarted up to the specific demands of its buyer, who has already been treated to a visit to McLaren’s “skunkworks-style” design studio in the UK and a few track sessions in the test mule prototype around a private track. A nice day out if you can afford it.

Source: McLaren Beverley Hills

Related Posts

Ferrari unveils the 488 Pista Spider, its most potent convertible to date with 720 horsepower.

Ferrari’s $48.4 million 250 GT may have just broken the auction world record, but it wasn’t the only curvaceous car from the Prancing Horse to turn heads at Pebble Beach this year. The event also saw the world premiere of the new 488 Pista Spider as part …

The SC18 Alston, Lamborghini Squadra Corse’s first-ever “one-off,” is unveiled.

Driving a stock Lamborghini will already cause you to stand out on the road, but what if you really want to make a statement? Well, how about driving a Lambo that’s the only one of its kind? That’s just what the SC18 Alston is, and it was made for one …

With McLaren’s 720S Spider convertible, you can get an Einstein hairstyle at 202 mph.

One good McLaren deserves another, and the British supercar company has chosen to celebrate the silly season with a new hardtop convertible version of its gorgeous 720S , capable of giving just about anyone an Einstein hairdo with its 202 mph top-down …

Vuhl finally reveals its power-to-weight monster, the 05RR open-top.

Although 385 horsepower might not sound like a lot, when your car weighs just 675 kg (1488 lb) dripping wet it means you’re in for a cheek-flapping 2.7-second sprint to 100 km/h (62 mph). Mexico’s feistiest road-legal track car is about to hit the street, …

The De Tomaso Pantera, complete with pop-up headlights, is returned by Ares.

Modena-based company Ares Design does a bunch of interesting work, “re-imagining” classic cars by keeping their iconic looks and updating them to enjoy this century’s reliability, performance and driver aids. As a company whose main business is essentially …

Ferrari unveils the P80/C, its most extreme one-off design to date.

Ferrari has released a beautiful new one-off supercar, and we all know what that means: a certain percentage of our venerable readership has already scrolled to the bottom of the page to leave a comment about how it’s slower than a Tesla, bad for the …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *