Notices
Car Chat General discussion about Lexus, other auto manufacturers and automotive news.
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by: Innova

Edmunds Drive: Caparo T1

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Oct 10, 2007 | 08:41 PM
  #1  
GFerg's Avatar
GFerg
Thread Starter
Speaks French in Russian
CL Folding 25,000
20 Year Member
Liked
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Oct 2002
Posts: 13,397
Likes: 100
From: What is G?
Default Edmunds Drive: Caparo T1




* 575 hp at 10,000 rpm
* 1,213 pounds
* Six-speed automated sequential transmission
* 3 Gs of cornering force

All of us have had to face up to the fact that our schoolboy dreams of glory as a Formula 1 driver will never come true. But thanks to the 2007 Caparo T1, we don't have to make do with video beamed back from some McLaren's in-car camera.

The Caparo T1 isn't an F1 car, but it's about as close as you can get while still displaying a set of license plates. It's the fastest-accelerating production car in the world. Straight or twisty, whatever the road ahead, the T1 will annihilate any car in its path.



Another McLaren F1?
The T1 started off in 2005 as the Freestream, the brainchild of Ben Scott-Geddes and Graham Halstead, two engineers known for their work on the 1994 McLaren F1 supercar. They were intent on showing the world what could be achieved with lightweight materials by building the T1, a formula-style racing car with street-legal equipment.

The T1 generated huge interest, and Freestream was gobbled up in March 2006 by a diversified Indian company led by CEO Angad Paul with interests in automotive manufacturing, notably brake components, body panels and castings. At an elaborate presentation in Monaco in April 2006, the Freestream became the Caparo T1.

To be honest, it's stretching the truth to call the T1 a road car. It might be street legal, but it has more in common with a real F1 car than something as ordinary as a Lamborghini. An exotic monocoque chassis of carbon and aluminum honeycomb is clothed in carbon-fiber bodywork. Menard supplies the engine, a DOHC 3.5-liter V8 that began life as a Nissan-designed unit for Infiniti's IRL IndyCar racing program. It's calibrated to deliver 575 horsepower and it screams to 10,500 rpm to do it.

The Caparo T1 weighs 1,213 pounds (165 pounds heavier than its target weight), and it has an incredible power-to-weight ratio, twice as good as that of the Bugatti Veyron.

Sit Down, Strap In, Hang On
Although the T1 looks like a single-seat racing car, there's room for two. You actually sit slightly to the right of the cockpit centerline, leaving enough room to your left for the legs of the passenger slightly behind you. It's a pretty friendly space, but not very glamorous. Let's just say that your wife isn't going to be suggesting you nip out together on a Sunday once she's sampled life squashed in the second chair.

Apart from some quilted leather on the seat and the sides of the cockpit, there's not much in the way of luxury. The dashboard is a simple row of buttons and toggle switches; the steering wheel incorporates an electronic display for the instrument readouts. You can't see much of the road ahead, just the tops of the front wheels.

All of which maintains that F1 feel. As does the need to wear a helmet. The full canopy fitted to the car in the pictures isn't ready yet and won't be available until Caparo sorts out an electric air-conditioning system to cool what would otherwise be an unbearably hot cabin. So we drove with the top removed and a helmet firmly in place.

Like Acceleration, Only Faster
This is purportedly the world's fastest production supercar. Not in terms of its absolute maximum speed (which Caparo estimates at between 190 and 220 mph, depending on the amount of downforce the various aerodynamic appendages are configured to produce), but certainly in terms of acceleration and cornering speed.

Actually the term "accelerate" just doesn't do the Caparo justice. It doesn't gain speed when you hammer the right pedal; it simply teleports from where you started to where you're going. Even the mighty Veyron would struggle to keep the T1 in its sights. Zero to 60 mph takes 2.5 seconds as you bang the Hewland-designed, non-synchromesh sequential-shift six-speed transmission through the gears with the shift paddles located on the steering column. By the time 5 seconds have elapsed, the T1 has demolished the 100-mph barrier and is spearing off into the distance.

Unless you run an F1 car on the weekend, the action of opening the taps on the 575-hp V8 can feel pretty surreal. Once you're rolling there's no need to use the clutch or even lift off the throttle to shift among the six gears. Just grit your teeth, wait for the blue sparkle of the last of the shift lights to illuminate on the steering wheel display and then tug on the little carbon-fiber shift paddle.

Since the Caparo T1 weighs so little, it never feels sluggish, even though the V8 doesn't have its 310 pound-feet of torque on hand until there's 9,000 rpm on the tachometer. So the T1 feels fast at any speed. But it's from the point at which most road car engines are starting to expire that things really begin to happen.

Cornering Force
Just as you've about recalibrated your brain to the forward thrust available, a corner looms into view and your mind is scrambled all over again.

Luckily the T1's braking power is incredible and the pedal is really easy to modulate, although you never need to shed anywhere near as much speed as you think. Even on these Pirelli P Zero street tires, the grip is staggering, as if there were racing slicks on each corner instead.

The same goes for the steering response. The Caparo engineers say the T1 will pull 3 Gs of lateral acceleration given the right setup. Since an F1 racing car generates 4 Gs, this is a remarkable feat, a measure of the 1,929 pounds of aerodynamic downforce this car can muster.

Whether the driver is up to 3 G loads is another matter, as this is foreign territory for most of us. It takes a bull-like neck and Popeye-size forearms to withstand the gravity-warping force of fast corners. Of course, the T1 also rewards you at lower speeds. The steering is quick but not nervous, and your hands are constantly being updated with data from the front tires.

The T1's long 114.2-inch wheelbase ensures the car's stability, but a little clumsiness with the throttle will set the rear tires free. And with so little steering lock to work with, you'd better be swift with your correction.



Not for the Road
It's pretty clear that while you can use the T1 on the road, you wouldn't really want to. Even at moderate speeds it's a physical car to drive. The clutch is snappy, the turning circle is gigantic and the visibility is terrible. And you'd never get the opportunity to do more than even scratch the surface of its dynamic talents, at least not without putting the safety of yourself and everyone within a hundred miles in jeopardy.

But given the space and freedom of a dedicated racing circuit, the T1 is incredible. And the fact that you can legally drive to that circuit, know that when you get there you're going to be quicker than anything else that turns up unless you've stumbled into an F1 testing session, and then drive home again, easily justifies the $380,000. While that's a whole lot of money for a car that's near useless on the road, nothing comes close to the Caparo T1.

Last edited by GFerg; Oct 10, 2007 at 08:45 PM.
Reply
Old Oct 10, 2007 | 08:44 PM
  #2  
JessePS's Avatar
JessePS
Lexus Test Driver
CL Folding 25,000
 
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 8,349
Likes: 0
From: QC/FRANCE
Default



Now that would be extremely fun to drive
Reply
Old Oct 10, 2007 | 08:51 PM
  #3  
Lexmex's Avatar
Lexmex
CL Community Team
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 17,321
Likes: 204
From: Miami, Florida
Default

I'd love to drive this around the hairpin and down the straightaway at nearby Hermanos Rodriguez Raceway.
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Gojirra99
Car Chat
24
Aug 5, 2007 06:00 PM
RX400h
Hybrid Technology
5
Feb 8, 2007 11:46 AM
GFerg
Car Chat
18
Jul 2, 2006 03:19 PM
southernsc
Car Chat
5
Dec 8, 2005 01:29 PM




All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:30 PM.

story-0
TRD Off-Road Premium: Best 2026 4Runner, Except This One Thing

Slideshow: diving into 4Runner TRD Off-Road Premium's pricing, performance, fuel economy, features, and amenities!

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-23 13:09:18


VIEW MORE
story-1
Top 10 Lexus & Toyotas to Drive Before You Die!

Slideshow: the 10 Lexus and Toyota vehicles you need to drive before you die.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-04-23 10:34:24


VIEW MORE
story-2
Top 10 Lexus/Toyotas With The LEAST 5-Year Depreciation

Slideshow: Top 10 Lexus/Toyota models with the lowest 5-year depreciation rate.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-04-08 12:19:06


VIEW MORE
story-3
Lexus LC500 Convertible Auction: A Preview of Rising Values?

The LC hasn't even disappeared from the Lexus lineup yet, and we're already seeing signs of an explosive market.

By Brett Foote | 2026-04-06 09:25:02


VIEW MORE
story-4
GX 550 vs TX 550: Best 3-Row Luxury Lexus Family Hauler

Slideshow: comparing the pricings, specs, power, fuel economy, fun-factor, and features of the GX 550 Luxury+ and TX 550h+ Luxury.

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-03-19 13:44:11


VIEW MORE
story-5
9 Best Lexus Models You Can Buy for Half Price (And 1 You Shouldn't!)

Slideshow: 9 best Lexus models you can buy for half price and 1 you should avoid

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-03-19 12:01:07


VIEW MORE
story-6
2026 Lexus NX Buyer's Guide: Models, Features, Prices & More!

Here's everything you need to know about the latest NX.

By Brett Foote | 2026-03-19 11:56:59


VIEW MORE
story-7
Top 10 Reasons to Buy a Lexus TX 550h+ (& 3 Reasons to AVOID!)

Slideshow: reviewing the 2026 Lexus TX 550h+ Luxury plug-in hybrid crossover SUV!

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-03-05 19:04:47


VIEW MORE
story-8
Top 10 Lexus & Toyota Models of the 1990s RANKED!

Slideshow: Top 10 Lexus and Toyota model of the 1990s ranked.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-03-04 12:35:11


VIEW MORE
story-9
10 Great Toyotas That Could Have Been Lexus Models

Slideshow: 10 Toyotas that could have been Lexus models.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-02-19 11:44:33


VIEW MORE