Specifications |
1. R8 V10 Plus models get a 25 hp bump for a total of 550 hp and 398 lb-ft of torque.
2. 0-60 takes just 3.3 seconds with a 197 mph top speed. 3. Pricing is set at $179,645 with the S-Tronic paddle-shift transmission. |
Preview
The R8’s ferocity is tremendous. And not just in the shocking
acceleration or spectacular braking, but in how quickly it can turn on you.
Adding emphasis is that this every day exotic can easily lull you into a
comfort zone. Rivaling the Porsche 911 as a daily drivable sports
car (though with a much more wild look), it comforts you in luxurious leather
and Alcantara and let’s you cruise through your day with its fancy new
smooth-shifting 7-speed dual clutch transmission. And then there’s that
“quattro” badge on the dash, delivering a mental safety net, with the
reassurance of all-wheel grip.
Push it to the limit, however, and the R8 reveals itself as genuine
exotic. Once the tail end of the car moves around quattro becomes about as
meaningful as your Miranda rights in an Iranian jail.
Interior
Other goodies added on as a part of the “plus” designation include a collection of carbon fiber bits. Up front is a carbon splitter, while out back is a diffuser so aggressive it looks lifted from a competition race car. Mostly hidden, you cannot, however, miss the huge carbon side blades.
These parts, along with some reduced sound deadening and lighter seats, add up to drop 130 lbs, meaning the V10 Plus model weighs nearly identical to the V8, with a curb weight at a reasonable 3,660 lbs.
The interior is far from stripped out, though our tester included $6,300 optional diamond-quilted leather seats (white stitching on black leather) and a matching quilted Alcantara headliner. With V10 Plus models equipped with the dual-clutch automatic starting at $179,645 don’t balk at the extra…. it’s worth every penny.
These extravagances add to the already excellent livability of the R8. Only the Porsche 911 offers this combination of performance and practicality.
If there are any drawbacks to the R8, it’s that the roof overhang is quite severe and for taller drivers you’re forced to crouch down and forward in order to see traffic lights.
In that respect it gives up only a slight amount of daily drivability to the 911. Oh, and it costs a serious chunk more. It compensates for those faults, however, in a look so extreme that in the bar scene of exotic sports cars it makes the 911 look like the hot girl’s ugly friend.

Under The Hood
It’s unlike almost any other AWD car on the market. That may be because
it’s capable of delivering 85 percent of its power to the rear wheels. Step out
a bit and modest application of throttle can help you steer it with the rear.
But if you don’t spell careful with a capital C, it’ll swing round faster than
a Chuck Norris roundhouse.
That’s
because while it does offer grip at both axles, as well as exceptional daily
drivability, it remains a mid-engine exotic and there’s only so much quattro
can do to combat the momentum of a 5.2-liter V10 engine mounted behind your
head.And it feels it. Perhaps the only thing more astounding than the pull of
the V10 engine at high revs, is how amazing it sounds. Blasting along at full
song and there’s no denying this is German car has an Italian soul – the V10
being the very same one found in the Gallardo.
Making 525 hp in most V10 models, this halo car ups it to 550, enabling
an outrageously fast 0-60 mph time of just 3.3 seconds. Top speed is an equally
eye-opening 197 mph, though we only managed 121 on the rather short front
straight at our test track.
Also impressive is the new dual-clutch 7-speed S-Tronic transmission.
Replacing the old R-tonic unit that was jerky on the street, the new tranny
dramatically improves smoothness and further enhances the car’s credibility as
a daily driver.
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