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DRIVEN: McLaren Oozes Perfection
There’s very little to fault about the MP4-12C, one of the coolest supercars ever built. OK, it’s not as pretty as a Ferrari 458.
AutoWeek  | http://www.autoweek.com/  |  Posted May 14, 2012   Fontana, CA

Select the normal mode for the suspension, click into gear, and you're off. The first thing you notice is that this car is very easy to drive. We could imagine driving it every day. It is easy to sit in, handles low-speed traffic slogging gracefully and doesn't wear you out. The dual-clutch transmission doesn't hesitate or clunk around town between traffic lights. A manual transmission was never really considered for two reasons. “Nobody'd want it,” said Sheriff. “And the car is tightly packaged around two pedals.”

Technicians at McLaren's new Production Centre in Woking, England, assemble MP4-12C sports cars. (Photo: McLaren Automotive)
Once we got a little more room to maneuver, we stepped on the right one, which instantly returned sonorous music and blinding speed in equal measure. We didn't clock our 0-to-60-mph time to see whether it matched McLaren's claimed 3.2 seconds, but it certainly felt that fast. There aren't many cars that will give you a 3.2, and fewer still can do it with so little work. A separate launch control does most of the complicated stuff for you. All you have to do is set it, launch, and keep steering.

Next, we moved the suspension to sport and headed up into the mountains on a four-lane twisting thoroughfare. The ProActive Chassis Control immediately went to work keeping the car flat in turns to maximize grip. McLaren's take on automatic suspension allows for a more livable amount of feedback to the driver than the Porsche system, which seems to filter out too much.

With a little bit of traffic in the hills, we didn't push it very hard. At half throttle, it was still a joy to drive.

We did push it on the track, though. Driving on the road course inside the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., requires not much more than a series of double-lane-change maneuvers that lack any artistry or rhythm. Nonetheless, the McLaren made the most of it.

McLaren plans to build 1,000 examples of the MP4-12C in its first production year. (Photo: Wouter Melissen)
The Pirelli P Zeros – 235/35 front and 305/30 rear, wrapped around 19-inch wheels in front and 20s in the rear – gave way easily and predictably. For more serious drivers, Pirelli Corsa rubber is available (which McLaren says improves 0-to-60-mph time to 3.0 seconds). As it was, we enjoyed sliding around a little in the turns. This would make a terrific drift car, we thought; just don't hit anything.

The difference between sport and track modes was less noticeable than between normal and sport, but it kept the car going and going fast. The short straights on the road course got us up into fourth gear and called for some heavy braking at each end. When you step on the brake at speed, the rear wing flips up to 90 degrees in a quarter of a second, not to slow the car but to stabilize it, moving the center of aerodynamic pressure rearward, like deploying feathers on an arrow.

Does any of this help you make the choice between the 458 and the 12C? Or the Lexus LF-A or even the Nissan GT-R? Maybe not. The 458 has slightly better steering, sending just a little more feedback to the wheel. And it's better-looking, making concessions to style over efficiency.

The McLaren is highly efficient, easy and fun to drive, even if it lacks the cachet of a Ferrari. The LFA is stable, fast and fun. The GT-R costs a lot less.

Buy them all, and then decide.

This story originally appeared at AutoWeek.com.
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