RE: One-of-four Lanzante McLaren P1 GT for sale

RE: One-of-four Lanzante McLaren P1 GT for sale

Thursday 24th October

One-of-four Lanzante McLaren P1 GT for sale

See McLaren? That's how you do a long tail


Carmakers don’t get enough credit for dreaming up new names for their performance cars. Sure, the tried-and-tested R, GTR, S and RS all get the point across, but they’re as overused as Ford switchgear in old Astons. Not like Hyundai naming its sports division N (supposedly for Nurburgring, but probably to have a poke at BMW M as well), Toyota making ‘Gazoo’ sound cool with its various GR models and Lexus associating the letter F, once the least sporty character of the alphabet, with burly V8s and howling V10s.

Arguably the most creative of the last decade is the McLaren LT, a name that was just as novel as the cars that wore it. Taking inspiration from the stretched F1 GTRs that tore around Le Mans in the '90s, the LT - or 'long tail' - would not only be the lighter and more powerful model, but also a longer one so that McLaren could squeeze in a chunky rear diffuser for extra high-speed grip. The first ‘new’ long tail, the 675LT, extended the base 650S by a whopping 33mm, which, admittedly, is barely perceptible on a ruler, but it did bring a not insignificant 40 per cent increase in downforce. Most of McLaren’s series production cars got the LT treatment, too, but the P1 - the closest ancestor to the F1 prior to the GMA T.50 - was unfortunately overlooked.

That was until Lanzante, the firm behind the Le Mans-winning and the road-going conversions of the P1 GTR, decided to take matters into its own hands with the car you see here. Called the P1 GT, the stretched hybrid hypercar was heavily influenced by the one-of-three, road-going F1 long tail, with a drastically extended rear end mimicking the streamlined silhouette of Woking’s homologation special. Unlike the original, the P1 GT was incredibly complex in its design. The longer tail allowed for a ginormous diffuser, much bigger than anything McLaren was putting on its LTs, as well as a humungous rear wing that made the P1 GTR look positively puny by comparison.

It’s not just the tail that got a rework, either. The front was completely overhauled with a larger splitter, bespoke carbon fibre canards and louvres over the wheel arches, while a wider skirts run down either side of the cockpit. Above it sits a monster scoop, mimicking that of the F1 GT’s, funnelling vast amounts of air into the GTR’s 3.8-litre, twin-turbo V8 hybrid engine with an unchanged 1,000hp on tap. So extensive were the modifications that it’s said only the doors and bonnet were carried over from the GTR, with every other carbon fibre panel tailor made for the GT. 

At the time we thought the P1 GT was a one-and-done project, supposedly built for an immensely wealthy individual in the Middle East. As it turns out, three more would get produced, including a particularly striking example finished in the Gulf colours. But the one you see here is the very first Lanzante converted and served as the show car at the 2018 Goodwood Festival of Speed. As such, it closely resembles the spec of McLaren’s own F1 GT, from the ‘XP Green’ paintwork to the part-green, part-tan leather seats. And while the car first appeared with the P1 GTR’s multi-spoke rims, it’s now wearing a set of five spokes that better resemble those of the F1 GT.

Quite how much money you’ll need to get the keys will require a call to the seller, which I’m sure will come as a surprise to no one. For reference, the GT conversion was roughly £500k on top of the £2.0m asking price of a P1 GTR. That was back in 2018, however, and it’ll doubtlessly have gone up in value in that time. Just take at this standard P1 (albeit with just 29 miles on the clock) for £1.8m as an example, or this 230-mile GTR for £2.82m. The GT will surely cost more than that, but it’ll be a heck of a lot rarer and, unlike the GTR, be useable on the road, too.


See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

sidesauce

Original Poster:

2,710 posts

225 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
That's a big-ass rear wing...

Arsecati

2,502 posts

124 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Mother of sweet divine phuqing jaysus......... that is STUNNING!!!!! Wow, new top of the list for the Euromillions win - perfection.

PRO5T

4,920 posts

32 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Without the wing and the wheels (of which the wheels, resemble the aftermarket ones my roofer has on his van), a thing of beauty.

Orchardab

486 posts

133 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Simply Lovely.

Andy83n

451 posts

69 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Arsecati said:
Mother of sweet divine phuqing jaysus......... that is STUNNING!!!!! Wow, new top of the list for the Euromillions win - perfection.
The only problem is that you'd have to visit DK Engineering and would likely end up spending the whole of your winnings.

XK-SS Continuation and a pair of Carrera GTs?

200Plus Club

11,202 posts

285 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
"Guys, I gotta tell ya, I need more wing"....

Wow that's a heck of a thing. Ideal if you've endlessly deep pockets.

PHPH

19 posts

111 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Could someone please tell me what's the point of this thing other than to be drooled over.
£3+ mill. for a vanity object that will be bought but most likely never used by some supercar douche.

Why?

Andy83n

451 posts

69 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
PHPH said:
Could someone please tell me what's the point of this thing other than to be drooled over.
£3+ mill. for a vanity object that will be bought but most likely never used by some supercar douche.

Why?
its got 2,400km on the clock already which is 100x more than any garage queen, so i guess the previous owner(s) did use it quite often:

"Since collecting this example, it has been used by the sole keeper on numerous road trips, including Iceland, Marbella and Ascari. "

spikyone

1,611 posts

107 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Not sold on the wheels but otherwise this is a stunning thing. The Lanzante stand is always a highlight at FoS, everything they touch has exquisite craftsmanship and some very impressive engineering. Nice to see that the previous owner has enjoyed this one.

WhyOne

418 posts

205 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
PHPH said:
Could someone please tell me what's the point of this thing other than to be drooled over.
£3+ mill. for a vanity object that will be bought but most likely never used by some supercar douche.

Why?
Read the advert....it describes exactly why!

It has been well used for high-days and holidays (Iceland in this must have been epic!)

Hopefully the new owner will continue to enjoy the car in the same way.

Edited by WhyOne on Thursday 24th October 08:42

C5_Steve

4,861 posts

110 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
PHPH said:
Could someone please tell me what's the point of this thing other than to be drooled over.
£3+ mill. for a vanity object that will be bought but most likely never used by some supercar douche.

Why?
I think you're on the wrong website.


Red6

498 posts

63 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
That would make for an excellent track toy.

LotusOmega375D

8,118 posts

160 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Does it still only do 6 miles in electric only mode? That’s going to limit my choice of supermarkets.

WPA

10,208 posts

121 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Not for me, a standard P1 would do fine

smilo996

3,065 posts

177 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Not a massive fan of 2nd gen McLaren design especially the logo as an aero and aesthetic feature on the front but sweet mother of Jesus look at that thing. The wing off an airbus, WEC levels of aero, more carbon than a factory that makes carbon and 1000bhp. Even the wheels looks suitably brash.

NJJ

463 posts

87 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
If it was one of their models that I 'had' to choose, it would be the Spider version of the P1 they produced. Double wow !! But I'd also tolerate this too, you know kicking & screaming at the prospect. Sub zero cool.

Arsecati

2,502 posts

124 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
PHPH said:
Could someone please tell me what's the point of this thing other than to be drooled over.
£3+ mill. for a vanity object that will be bought but most likely never used by some supercar douche.

Why?


Some bloke paid $450.3 MILLION for this thing, and you have an issue with someone paying way less than 1% of that for an automotive work of art (one that you can also actually use as well as just look at)? Yeah, you may need a bit of perception adjustment there my good man.

Edited by Arsecati on Thursday 24th October 11:41

ChocolateFrog

28,712 posts

180 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
The wheels do not suit it, looks like a JDM import.


aazer89

545 posts

151 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Andy83n said:
Arsecati said:
Mother of sweet divine phuqing jaysus......... that is STUNNING!!!!! Wow, new top of the list for the Euromillions win - perfection.
The only problem is that you'd have to visit DK Engineering and would likely end up spending the whole of your winnings.

XK-SS Continuation and a pair of Carrera GTs?
Problem? I see no problem here at all, I'd happily give DK near enough all the winnings for the things they have in

Andy83n

451 posts

69 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Arsecati said:


Some bloke paid $450.3 MILLION for this thing, and you have an issue with someone paying way less than 10% of that for an automotive work of art (one that you can also actually use as well as just look at)? Yeah, you may need a bit of perception adjustment there my good man.
1%...