2012 McLaren X-1 Concept
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(from McLaren Press
Release) UNIQUE X-1 CONCEPT SHOWS THAT NO CHALLENGE IS TOO
GREAT FOR McLAREN SPECIAL OPERATIONS
McLaren Special Operations (MSO), the division of McLaren Automotive
responsible for the delivery of bespoke projects, will present a
breathtaking one-off supercar at The Quail, an exclusive event on
August 17, 2012 that is a highlight of the Pebble Beach weekend in
Monterey, USA.
Called the McLaren X-1 and based structurally on the company’s
groundbreaking carbon MonoCell but with a totally unique body, it
has been created for an anonymous car enthusiast.
X-1: the brief
It’s not every day that
a team gets to create something unique in a project that would take
the supercar, even by McLaren standards, to a different level. The
challenge began with a special brief.
‘One of our clients who already owned a McLaren F1, a Mercedes-Benz
SLR McLaren and now a 12C, wanted a unique car,’ says MSO Programme
Director, Paul MacKenzie. ‘The conversation began with our Executive
Chairman Ron Dennis almost three years ago − before the 12C was even
launched. The client wanted a machine that had all the capability of
the 12C but wrapped in a unique body that reflected his needs and
personality.’
In a subsequent meeting, Paul Mackenzie and Design Director Frank
Stephenson went to see him to start to explore the sort of car he
wanted.
Says Frank Stephenson: ‘The key qualities the client desired were
“timeless and classical elegance”. Which was some challenge.’
That meeting with Mackenzie and Stephenson lasted for almost three
hours. From the pages of notes that were gathered, the design team
brought together hundreds of images from the world of automotive,
architecture, fashion, design and even film. These were then
presented to the customer, and were then narrowed down to a mood
book, full of inspiring images from which the design spirit of this
unique car would be derived.
Inspirational cars included a 1961 Facel Vega, a 1953 Chrysler
D’Elegance Ghia, a 1959 Buick Electra, a 1939 Mercedes-Benz 540K and
a 1971 Citroën SM. There were various examples of architecture –
including the Guggenheim museums in New York and Bilbao – plus a
Jaeger LeCoultre art deco clock, an Airstream trailer, a Thomas Mann
Montblanc pen, a grand piano – and an eggplant. ‘The client liked
the shiny texture of the finish,’ notes Stephenson. There was also a
black-and-white photo of Audrey Hepburn.
‘The client wanted a competition between external designers – some
outside the automotive world – and McLaren’s own designers,’ notes
Stephenson. In the end, a design by McLaren’s Korean-born RCA
graduate Hong Yeo was chosen, and completed under the direction of
Stephenson.
One of the biggest design challenges faced by Yeo was that most cars
that embody classic elegance and timeless values have front engines
and rear-wheel drive proportions. This is the exact opposite of a
mid-engined supercar. So a new visual language for the car had to be
found which led to months of sketching and modelling to find that
perfect visual balance.
Stephenson recalls: ‘From this design, we then produced a 30 per
cent scale model, then a full-size hard foam model. Initially, we
planned to do it all digitally but the client insisted on seeing
“real” models.
‘The client was very clear in his own mind what he wanted. But the
only styling feature prescribed were metal brightwork rails running
from the nose, over the shoulderline and hips, to the rear of the
greenhouse.’
In the words of Hong Yeo: ‘X-1 embodies the McLaren value that every
part has to have a purpose. No details are simply visual cues, every
one has a purpose. Although I like to think the wide body combined
with pontoon style rear fenders will ensure the car glides when it’s
moving just like a superhero’s cape...’
The styling took 18 months to sign off but the result is a design
that in a few decades time will be hard to pinpoint exactly when it
was created ... timeless, therefore, exactly as the client
requested.
X-1: the creation
The X-1 is the most
ambitious example yet of MSO’s expertise. It has a whole new body
made of advanced materials. Everything is bespoke, even down to the
lights and wheels, necessitating new testing and homologation
meaning the car took two and a half years to build, a process that
began before the styling was signed off.
The X-1 had its own development programme because crucially, this
wasn’t to be a fragile concept car that would never see tarmac. It
was to be a usable car, road legal and capable of travelling at
supercar speeds. It also had to comfortably seat two adults so
although the 12C was already as shrink-wrapped as it could be from a
packaging perspective, the ingenious flexibility of the MonoCell
allowed the creation of a completely different form while
maintaining the engineering purity of a McLaren.
A full CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) aerodynamic testing
schedule ensured high-speed stability, and the car also completed
approximately 625 miles of testing including two intensive testing
stints at the Idiada circuit in Spain with chief McLaren test
driver, Chris Goodwin. After testing, the whole car was meticulously
rebuilt, by hand to concours standard.
X-1: the detail
MSO Programme Director
Paul Mackenzie explains: ‘The X-1 showcases the skills of McLaren
Special Operations. More and more luxury customers want bespoke or
individual features. The X-1 demonstrates that we can provide the
ultimate personalisation service. It also shows that MSO is not just
a technology led company. X-1 demonstrates a commitment to
perfection and to the highest levels of quality.’
All body panels of the X-1 are made from carbon, and are finished in
a rich piano black, as specified by the owner. Body sides are
lacquered visual carbon fibre. ‘The black paint has no metallic or
colour tints and is one of the most challenging colours to paint,
but the finish is absolutely exquisite and befits the car perfectly’
adds Stephenson.
Components were tooled exclusively for the car. They even include
unique head- and taillights, inspired by the McLaren Speed Marque
logo. The brightwork is machined from solid aluminium, and a nickel
finish is then applied. The McLaren logo in the nose is specially
machined from solid aluminium then nickel plated. Wheels are also
unique to the X-1, and are diamond turned with a tinted lacquer to
complement the exterior nickel-plated brightwork.
The brightwork itself is all machined from solid aluminium, and then
nickel finished to give the same hue throughout. Even the McLaren
Speed Marque badge in the nose is machined from solid aluminium,
then nickel plated.
The same brightwork is used for the over-the-shoulder rails (as
specified by the owner), at the base of the windscreen and the back
of the glasshouse, and for the ‘eyebrows’ over the bespoke
headlights. The McLaren Airbrake rear wing is also machined from
solid aluminium and nickel plated, to complement the rest of the
brightwork.
Perhaps the most unusual styling feature is the enclosed rear
wheels, an upshot of the owner’s desire to have a car reflecting
‘timeless elegance’. The wheels are accessed by carbon panels using,
as Stephenson explains, ‘some of the most gorgeous hinges you’ve
ever seen’. The styling, too, is in no way compromised by the
opening rear wings.
He adds: ‘The attention to detail is astonishing. Neat styling
touches feature throughout the design, such as the rear number plate
illuminators finished in carbon, a gorgeous machined aluminium cap
is used for the header tank, and carbon finishers line the engine
bay.’
The doors have also been developed specifically for the X-1,
although they retain the dihedral action and twin hinges, and the
roof is also new. Externally, only the glasshouse is carried over
from the 12C.
The unique body of the X-1 means most dimensions have changed. The
X-1 is 4658mm long – 109mm longer than a 12C. Width is 2097mm (with
mirrors) – an increase of 188 mm. Despite the revised roofline, the
height remains the same, at 1199mm. Kerb weight is almost identical
(about 1400kg), as the lighter carbon body panels compensate for the
greater length and width. Light weight, as with all McLaren
projects, was a priority.
While the basic architecture of the interior did not change,
personalisation includes bespoke Harissa Red McLaren Nappa leather
used for the seats, door and roof trim, and switchgear with machined
nickel-coated, aluminium bezels. The carbon interior trim has a
titanium weave, to give a magical 3D-like effect. Special Andesite
tufted carpet covers the floor.
All these changes ensured the X-1 needed special homologation for
road use. The car has been thoroughly engineered to be usable and
road legal. The X-1 shares the same the major mechanical components
as the 12C, including the twin-turbo 625PS engine, giving
astonishing acceleration and top speed.
Stephenson explains: 'The X-1 epitomises how we can not only create
a truly unique product tailored to the client, but also enable the
client to become a key member of the design team throughout the
process. It has been a truly rewarding and unforgettable experience.
And I think that we as a team have created a completely
unforgettable car that is true to one man’s vision.’
Hong Yeo concludes: ‘We designers are often blinded by the sun and
assume that whatever we see and understand is the only way forward:
to see the stars, sometimes you need the absence of that blinding
light ... looking at a car from a different perspective is what X-1
stands for.’
After its debut, on the Monterey Peninsular, the X-1 will return to
MSO headquarters in Woking and be carefully checked over before it
takes a place in the owner’s collection.
McLaren Special Operations:
The bespoke McLaren
Special Operations division was launched at Pebble Beach in August
last year. It offers a personalisation service that varies from
simple trim changes to a whole new car – as showcased by the X-1.
‘We can realise almost anything,’ says MSO Programme Director Paul
Mackenzie. ‘The only limit is the size of the customer’s
imagination.’
Changes are typically to colour and trim, although Mackenzie is keen
to do more mechanical work too. ‘We are not just about styling,’ he
notes.
At the beginning of this year, Mackenzie expected 10 percent of all
12C customers to choose some level of personalisation – over and
above that offered from the extensive McLaren option list. In fact,
the percentage of customisation is currently 15 percent and rising.
MacKenzie expects 20 percent of all 12C customers will ask for some
degree of personalisation by the end of the year. ‘There is a major
trend to individualise premium cars, and we expect the demand to
continue to rise,’ he notes.
MSO grew out of McLaren’s Customer Care programme, which goes back
20 years to the days of the McLaren F1 road car. It looked after
servicing and maintaining cherished F1s for owners. It also
undertook personalisation when cars changed hands: new owners often
wanted to put their own marks on their vehicles. Today, MSO
continues to service and look after F1 road cars from around the
world. It also travels to destinations around the globe, to service
and maintain cars.
During the production period of the Mercedes SLR McLaren, the
Customer Care department moved into personalising new cars for
owners. ‘On the Stirling Moss limited edition version, about a third
of all SLRs had an element of bespoke build,’ says Mackenzie. ‘It
varied from more visual carbon fibre, to different colours, to
retrimmed interiors, to radios – all above and beyond the normal
options list.’
MSO was officially founded in August 2011 and encompasses design,
project engineering, technicians and purchasing. It also has
technical and design access to other companies within the McLaren
Group. MSO is headquartered in a dedicated building close to the
McLaren Technology Centre in Woking, UK.
Currently the most popular areas for personalisation include
external visual carbon fibre body panels, carbon fibre exterior
trim, carbon rear wings, vented wheel arches and different wheel
finishers. Different graphics are also in demand, while bespoke
colour schemes are popular. Interior changes typically include
different trim and unique upholstery stitching.
‘But it’s certainly not just colour and trim,’ notes Paul Mackenzie.
‘A number of cars have had different front and rear bumpers, which
has increased downforce and boosted performance. These cars had to
go through full aerodynamic CFD testing before engineering
sign-off.’
Adds Mackenzie: ‘We’re here to help the client personalise the car
to their precise taste. They typically come to Woking to see us, or
talk to their dealer, or we go to see them. We’ll sit down with
them, listen to their requests, then come up with a new colour or
mechanical components, or – as with X-1 – a new “tailor made” car.
Of course we make recommendations but we’re certainly not here to be
style police. Every client is different. Our main job is to listen
and then to interpret the owner’s requests into a superb car.’
As Mackenzie concludes: ‘This is the first fully client commissioned
MSO car, but it certainly won’t be the last. The carbon fibre
MonoCell chassis used in the 12C, is not only stiff and light, it
allows for great flexibility in body styling and provides an
affordable structure from which MSO can develop unique cars, as is
demonstrated with X-1.’
The majority of suppliers for the X-1 were British. Prominent
partners with the X-1 were Crosby Composites, responsible for the
bespoke carbon fibre, and Luzzo Bespoke, who made the brightwork.
Both are based in Brackley, Northamptonshire.
McLaren Automotive heritage:
McLaren Automotive has a
20 year heritage in producing landmark sports cars for the road: the
McLaren F1 road car, which was launched in 1992, set the world land
speed record for a production car, and is regarded as one of the
iconic sports cars of the modern age. The Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren
(2003 – 2009) is the most successful supercar ever in its price
bracket, having sold twice as many cars as its nearest carbon-based
rival.
McLaren Automotive has now moved from these successful automotive
projects to launching a new car company that will design, develop,
and distribute a range of high performance, highly efficient and
technologically innovative sports cars through a global network of
highly respected premium car retailers in every major automotive
market.
Around 4,000 sports cars will be built annually by the middle of the
decade in the advanced new manufacturing facility, the McLaren
Production Centre. McLaren Automotive’s debut model is the 12C.
Drawing on the company’s long-standing Formula 1 experience in its
concept and development, the 12C is lighter, faster, more powerful,
more fuel efficient and more exclusive than its key competition. It
supports its performance benchmarks by introducing a unique
one-piece moulded carbon chassis into the ‘core’ sports car segment
in a new production method that brings the performance of £500,000
cars to market at a third of the price. All future McLarens will
continue the themes presented by the 12C: innovation, integration of
Formula 1 technology, and ultimate performance.
In 2011 McLaren Automotive announced the launch of McLaren GT; a new
race car manufacturer combining the expertise of McLaren Automotive,
McLaren Racing, McLaren Electronic Systems, McLaren Applied
Technologies and CRS Racing. McLaren GT is responsible for
developing the first racing derivative of the 12C sports car, the
MP4-12C GT3. Twenty-five examples of the MP4-12C GT3 are now racing
with private teams in Europe in 2012