RE: Manual Lamborghini Murcielago LP-640 for sale
RE: Manual Lamborghini Murcielago LP-640 for sale
Today

Manual Lamborghini Murcielago LP-640 for sale

One of only six right-hand-drive manual Murcis ever made. Makes the new Fenomeno look decidedly common...


It can’t be easy to stand out in the crowd at an event like Monterey Car Week. One minute, the wraps are coming off your brand-new, multi-million-pound carbon hypercar to a crowd of prospective buyers with money to burn. Then, as a sea of influencers collectively reach for their phones, Gordon Murray shows up with another V12 supercar and completely steals the show.

This is exactly the situation that befell Lamborghini just last week. Moments after taking the cover off its ultra-exclusive Fenomeno, a limited-run V12 hypercar that makes the Revuelto look a little tame, Gordon Murray rocked up with a modern interpretation of the F1 GTR and a fancy new long tail, which made everything else look a bit, well, forgettable. And it’s not like the Fenomeno is phenomenally exclusive, either. Lamborghini is building 29 of them, which is, admittedly, fewer than its Sian predecessor though the Centenario and Reventon were scarcer with 20 coupes apiece. But if you really want to make a splash at Monterey Car Week, you needn’t bother yourself with any of them - you should take this manual Muricelago LP-640 instead.

Any old LP-640 is going to draw a crowd. The Murcielago was Lamborghini’s first production car built from the ground up under the watchful eye of Audi, resulting in a V12 supercar that was considerably more accessible (and sturdy) yet was just as dramatic in the audio and visual department. All of the early cars came with a six-speed manual, but when an automated system was introduced a couple of years later, it quickly became the more popular of the two. Lamborghini, however, stuck by the trusty H-pattern for the LP-640 upgrade in 2006. But by this point, flappy-paddle fever had taken over the supercar world and demand for a V12 with three pedals was, shockingly, almost nonexistent. 

Emphasis on the ‘almost’, because Lamborghini did manage to find a handful of buyers willing to buck the trend for the more traditional option. Of the 1,250 LP-640 coupes that left Sant’Agata, 88 were optioned with a manual gearbox. And of those, just six are said to have been specced in right-hand drive, this Balloon White example being one of them.

That means you get all the benefits of the 6.5-litre naturally aspirated V12, uprated to 640hp (a whopping 60hp more than the original), without a jerky e-gear transmission getting in the way of things. The LP-640 also came with some subtle design tweaks, including a more aggressive front end and a single tailpipe, plus upgraded anti-roll bars, springs and dampers to sharpen up the handling. Carbon ceramic brakes were available as an optional extra, a box the original owner of this car ticked, so you’re really getting the full LP-640 experience here. 

It’s an experience that’ll set you back a fair bit, though. Not quite seven figures, but not a million miles off at £875,000. That’s the sort of money that buys you this LP670-4 SV and leaves you with £175k in change, or this e-gear LP-640 with enough cash to spare for a brand-new Revuelto if you fancy it. Heck, it’ll probably get you a good way towards the Fenomeno if the cash is burning a hole in your pocket, but it does make you wonder which would draw a bigger crowd. Lambo’s latest rarity or the 18-year-old Murci with a stick in the middle? I’d hedge my bets on the latter…


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Author
Discussion

Master Bean

Original Poster:

4,541 posts

136 months

Many pounds.

Cold

16,120 posts

106 months

Master Bean said:
Many pounds.
Around 4035 of them, I believe.

Resolutionary

1,419 posts

187 months

That V12 Vantage featured recently was special. This is more specialerer.
Dream garage fodder, unquestionably. Would have preferred purple over tan, but still.

el romeral

1,674 posts

153 months

That looks glorious and what an interior but, omg, how expensive they have become.

Oiyou

128 posts

122 months

Agree wow.

Different thoughts about that interior though, looks to my eyes like a kit car in there. The (all) quilting is also pretty naff. Wouldn't proportionally cost must to have it replaced with something that doesn't look like vinyl.

scenario8

7,217 posts

195 months

That’s rather a lot of money! A huge amount more than I would have guessed.

Can someone explain the value to me? Yes, I appreciate the very specifics of it make it a rare example but I’m intrigued that something of the age and mileage and probable servicing costs/general impracticality and so on is valued at anything like that. I can’t help thinking someone who fancies one, and has the means, has simply so many other options.

Would that be a very liquid market or might I find it turns out to be very difficult to shift?

Iamnotkloot

1,722 posts

163 months

In contrast to most cars, it needs more exhaust exits! One big drain pipe just reminds me of modified Scooby’s.

Glenn63

3,507 posts

100 months

Murci SV has been my dream poster car since I was a wee nipper, still want one now. Looks, noise, character, specialness, things that are lacking in modern supercars imo. Yes it probably drives terrible compared to new stuff but thats not why I want one.

andy43

11,784 posts

270 months

scenario8 said:
That’s rather a lot of money! A huge amount more than I would have guessed.

Can someone explain the value to me? Yes, I appreciate the very specifics of it make it a rare example but I’m intrigued that something of the age and mileage and probable servicing costs/general impracticality and so on is valued at anything like that. I can’t help thinking someone who fancies one, and has the means, has simply so many other options.

Would that be a very liquid market or might I find it turns out to be very difficult to shift?
It’s very expensive but it’s so rare I suppose. RHD add 100,000. Manual add 100,000. Adding both means an extra 500,000 by the looks of cheaper cars - there’s a grey one at Slades garage for £225,000
And yes, orange over something more interesting but I bet of the six cars those colours don’t exist.

GreatScott2016

1,926 posts

104 months

Resolutionary said:
That V12 Vantage featured recently was special. This is more specialerer.
Dream garage fodder, unquestionably. Would have preferred purple over tan, but still.
Interesting, I’d have that Vantage in my dream garage over this Lamborghini any day of the week. When you throw in the price of the Lamborghini too yikes

valiant

12,464 posts

176 months

And you thought the Stilo Abarth from the other week was expensive...

Murph7355

40,406 posts

272 months

The SV in the link is so much more desirable to my eyes.

sennasurgeon

75 posts

168 months

Telephone number price

C5_Steve

6,126 posts

119 months

Prices of manuals have been climbing for a while now so this isn't too shocking. Very special cars.

plfrench

3,698 posts

284 months

I did a driving experience round Thruxton many years ago in a 670 SV and a Ferrari 430 Scuderia. It’s actually the Ferrari which I remember more of. That was much more raw and exciting. The Lamborghini was still an experience mind and that engine was lovely.

WPA

12,223 posts

130 months

Murph7355 said:
The SV in the link is so much more desirable to my eyes.
Agreed, no matter how rare this is to me it seems overpriced against the SV

Red6

555 posts

72 months

The LP640 still looks production fresh. Love these.

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,417 posts

114 months

Looking at the dealers stock and pricing they're all rather optimistic...

georgeyboy12345

3,968 posts

51 months

Awful colour combo and too expensive

911Spanker

2,688 posts

32 months

The dealer is looking for his lottery win.

What a joker.