The Lamborghini Sesto Elemento, was unveiled at the 2010 Paris Auto Show this month. Star of the Italian maker’s Paris Motor Show stand is the astonishing Sesto Elemento. The Sesto Elemento Concept is a brutal sports car weighing just 999 kg. It’s Lamborghini’s first example of its new supersports car manifesto - same power but less weight.

“The  Lamborghini Sesto Elemento shows how the future of the super sports car  can look – extreme lightweight engineering, combined with extreme  performance results in extreme driving fun. We put all of our  technological competence into one stunning form to create the Sesto  Elemento,” said Stephan Winkelmann, President and CEO of Automobili  Lamborghini. “It is our abilities in carbon-fiber technology that have  facilitated such a forward-thinking concept, and we of course also  benefit from the undisputed lightweight expertise of Audi AG. Systematic  lightweight engineering is crucial for future super sports cars: for  the most dynamic performance, as well as for low emissions. We will  apply this technological advantage right across our model range. Every  future Lamborghini will be touched by the spirit of the Sesto Elemento.”

2010 Lamborghini Sport Cars Lamborghini Sesto Elemento Concept
Additional  100 percent by AUDI AG, the Italian car manufacturer also benefits from  the expertise that is not necessary from the German manufacturer when  it comes to light construction. With an amazing output of 570 hp, a  sensational power-to-weight ratio of just 1.75 kilograms per hp and 0 to  100 km / h (0-62 mph) acceleration of only 2.5 arcseconds, which  ensures unsurpassed Elemento Sesto aim fun .
The 2010 Lamborghini Sport Cars Lamborghini Sesto Elemento Concept  has a power-weight ratio of 1.75 kg/hp. It reaches 100 km/hr in just  2.5 seconds and has a top speed of “well over 300 km/hr”. It’s exactly  the kind of supercar innovation that Lamborghini should be investing in  and while carbon fibre has become famous, the company has also  experimented with other modern materials, such as Pyrosic for the  exhaust system (a new glass and ceramic composite material).

The  Lamborghini Advanced Composite Structures Laboratory (ACSL) at the  University of Washington in Seattle, USA, uses experimental tests to  define the mechanical behaviour of the different materials and  technologies using methodology from the aviation industry.

The  design is inspired by the limited-edition Reventòn supercar, but makes  more of a feature of its deep front end, while the V10 is open to the  elements. The Sesto Elemento isn’t road legal, but it is a running  prototype, so testing Lamborghini’s claims is a possibility.



 
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