Pagani to reveal hardcore Huayra BC in Geneva
Pagani has big plans for 2016. The Huayra BC will be at the Geneva Motor Show, and the new Roadster is coming by the end of the year.
Pagani has big plans for 2016. The Huayra BC will be at the Geneva Motor Show, and the new Roadster is coming by the end of the year.
Pagani released this teaser image of a hardcore version of the Huayra, accompanied by the promise that it will be revealed sometime this year.
Pagani appears to be at work on a track-focused, hardcore Huayra, and this new spy video shows a car featuring a huge rear wing and colossal diffuser.
The 2015 Gordon McCall's Motorworks Revival launches Monterey Car Week in its usually splendid fashion. Among this year's assemblage of planes and high-end vehicles is an array of Ford GTs. Plus, companies like Singer and Shelby American staged introductions there.
The new Pagani Huayra Roadster promises to be even more extreme than the outgoing coupe.
Pagani is currently working to complete the remaining 29 Huayras and its new factory before it's ready to release the Huayra Roadster... and maybe another surprise.
If you have been saving to buy a new Huayra, we've got bad news for you: Pagani has sold them all. But the exotic automaker might still have some things in the works.
As the year comes to a close, our editors are all taking time to reflect on the machinery that made 2014 so special, with one simple, open-ended question as the guide: "What's the best car you drove this year?"
UPDATE: Pagani already has a local dealer in Hong Kong which covers that local market. The text below has been updated accordingly.
Earlier today, we brought you west coast editor Michael Harley's review of the absolutely stunning Pagani Huayra – a "fascinating, imperfect machine" that our author sums up with one word: "intoxicating." And now that you've read his text and ogled the gorgeous accompanying photos shot by our own Drew Phillips, we've got one more treat for yo
As I pilot the Pagani Huayra down a busy Los Angeles freeway, I can't help but grow increasingly concerned about my psychological state – I've got a sneaking suspicion that I'm going a bit mad.
With production numbering in the hundreds, not thousands, the prospect of seeing any Pagani on the road or track is a rare one, to be sure. But even in such rarified company, some Paganis are rarer than others. Like the Zonda Revolucion.
As big as the North American market is, it's hard for a small-scale European automaker to make it over here. The cost of pursuing certification both in Europe and in the United States is just too high for a small outfit to absorb. That's why Pagani, for example, never brought the Zonda to North America. But when it came to the newer Hua
When Pagani introduced the Huayra in 2011, it was supposed to supplant the Zonda entirely. But two and a half years later, we're still seeing new versions of the Zonda rolling out of the factory in Modena, like the latest 760 X edition recently c
Over the course of fourteen years of production, Pagani made more special editions and versions of the Zonda than we would care to count. But over the past three years since its debut, we've only seen the one version of the Huayra.
The $1.2-million, rear-wheel-drive Pagani Huayra is fitted with a twin-turbocharged V12, rated at 720 horsepower, which is capable of launching its 3,100-pound curb weight to 60 miles per hour in about three seconds flat. Hold its oval aluminum accelerator pedal to its stops on a proper stretch of pavement and it won't run out of steam until it touches 230 mph. It is, by all measures, a handful for all but the most skilled drivers.
Remember when Pagani rolled out its final special-edition Zonda? It's happened about six times now. Not that we're complaining – it's hard to tire of supercars, especially weapons-grade devices like the entire Zonda franchise. This new Revolucion moves the game on even more, with its AMG-sourced, 800-horsepower, 6.0-liter V12 bolted to a carbon-titanium monocoque. Weighing just 2,358
You'd imagine that as the founder of Pagani, Horacio Pagani would be in the most ridiculous car his company produces. A new Huayra, or perhaps a Zonda F Roadster, right? Nope. Instead, Mr. Pagani's personal car is a Brandon Turkus
If you ever wondered what goes on in the mind of someone that builds hypercars for a living, or what inspired them to get into that line of work in the first place, you'll want to watch this video from XCar. It's a long one, at 30 minutes, and it's exclusively in Italian so you'll be reading subtitles, but this interview with Pagani founder Brandon Turkus
Since Evo first got its hands on a Pagani Huayra for testing, about a year after the hypercar debuted, Horacio Pagani's pride and joy has made a few video appearances – once in the hands of Chris Harris and once with a man who Damon Lowney