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Roomy?
Barely. Practical? Hardly. Sensible? Not at all. Sexy? Oh, yes!
Its not all that brightly lit, but there is enough light to make out that
gorgeous silhouette. That smooth flowing line, starting way down at shin
level, travelling up, with a slight indent that hints at that scoop defining
the headlamp, moving over those chunky front wheels, sweeping down slightly
to a not-so-pinched waist, then one line diverting up to meet the roof
in an arch, another sweeping over the hump that describes the rear wheels,
ending on to a stubby tail with a slight upturn, the hint of a spoiler.
This yellow car wasn’t the only one: there are so many other fabulous
cars, Bugattis, Ferraris, AC Cobras, others. But this yellow car is the
one that has caught my attention, more than any other. Look at the door
and there is no obvious handle. But I know where it is: those louvers
along the pillar, the bottom louver, that's the handle. Pull it and the
door opens, the louvered section opening out with it. The door opens very
wide, and though the seat is less than a feet off the ground, getting
in is not difficult. Just drop your butt onto the seat and pull your legs
in after.
That
three-spoke steering wheel is low, and you have to slide your legs in
underneath, but that's easy and before you know you are ensconced in a
low bucket seat that fits you perfectly, legs stretched out flat, hands
out straight holding the near-vertical steering wheel. I had read about
the Italianate ape driving position – suiting the short legged,
long armed types – but it seemed to be fine for me. Okay, so I'm
an Indian ape…
And I must have been grinning like one, caressing that leather-wrapped
steering wheel, small and neat, through which I could see two big white-on-black
dials, the speedo on the left, the tacho on the right. The speedo reads
320kph. There are six other minor dials on the centre console, and from
where you are sitting, they are difficult to read. Look up and into the
headlining, along the centre you see a gaggle of toggle switches aircraft-style,
apparently for the lights, fans, and else, but they are unmarked. As are
the switches along the gearshift gate, which is a square aluminium piece
with six fingers, five slots for the five forward speeds, one for reverse.
Despite
the tight confines of the cabin, I have enough space to move my feet around.
The pedals rise straight from the floor, and you have to tilt your foot
backwards to feed in the clutch, which is, HEAVY. As is the gear-shift
action. After a couple of attempts, I give up, and ease the wooden-topped
lever into neutral. I have been told what to do, not once, but twice,
and so I follow instructions carefully.
I turn the key and wait a moment. Then I stab the throttle a couple of
times, and wait some more. Then I turn the key again. There is a WHUP,
a WHUP again, then nothing. Outside people are gesticulating, asking me
to turn the key again. I do. And the car erupts. Okay, not the car really,
the engine.
There
is this huge noise, just aft of the shoulder, a cacophony, a mix of shrieks,
rumbles, whines, thunder, that settle into the meshing of machines, of
chains working, valves popping, camshafts whirling. Frightening, yet fantastic.
Stab the throttle and the noise becomes a crescendo, a shriek that turns
into a banshee wail. 350 rampaging horses, all ready to gallop out.
But that won't be possible. The car is a part of a museum, and I am already
privileged in having been allowed to sit in it and turn that engine on,
hear that sound, but nothing more. The car cannot leave the premises.
Maybe, some other time?
It's been seven long years since then, that museum – the Centre
International de l'Automobile, near Paris – has shut down, and that
yellow Lamborghini Miura has moved on, god knows where. And I have yet
to drive a Miura. I have driven other Lambos, but the most coveted of
the lot is still a dream. But it's the Miura's 40th anniversary, time
is running out, I have not driven one, and neither have I met its designer,
Marcello Gandini. And Anu, our art editor, has designed these gorgeous
pages. So, one has to write 1855 words.
This
is about, what I believe, is the most beautiful car in the world, the
most gorgeous form that ever crouched between four wheels. A car that
is an automotive orchid on the outside, a watch-like precision of intricate
engineering inside, a car that is the perfect synthesis of beauty and
beast, of silk and steel, of art and science. A car that epitomises how
an infinite series of exquisite details, that together, can create an
effect of total harmony. Of how details like the slightly bulging air
intakes on the B-pillar, along with the wide, almost bumper-less front
chin, merges perfectly with the horizontal slats on the rear window and
the hexagonal grille of the rear.
"The Miura stands for a kind of beauty that lies in merging opposites,"
says Marcello Gandini (no, I haven't still met him, but that's an e-mail
exchange through his daughter, Marzia). "It is a body with lots of
muscles, but they are the muscles of a beautiful woman, not a male body
builder. It is wicked, but with some gentle touches. It has lots of edges
but all the curves in the right places. The stare is aggressive, but tempting,
the car is intimidating, but attractive." And, may I add, impossible
to resist.

The
Lamborghini Miura wasn't the product of a grand plan, a master strategy.
It just kind of happened. Born a farmer, Ferruccio Lamborghini became
a millionaire industrialist, who when insulted by Enzo Ferrari, decided
to challenge the potentate of Maranello by making cars that would cock
a snook at the best from the stable of the Prancing Horse. The Lamborghini
350 GT, from 1964, was the result of that. More modern than contemporary
Ferraris and Maseratis, the 350GT was conventional in having its V12 in
the front, driving the rear, through a five-speed gearbox. A nice car.
But then Lamborghini, at that time, had the sharpest young automotive
talent in Europe. And harnessing them was difficult. The story goes that
engineers Gianpaolo Dallara and Paolo Stanzani conspired with development
test driver Bob Wallace (all averaging 25 years old) to create a revolutionary
chassis that they hoped would convince Ferruccio to allow them to go racing.
Emulating racing cars of the time, they took the Lambo V12 (which had
been designed by ex-Ferrari engineer Giotto Bizzarini) and located it
ahead of the rear wheels, but transversely, within a stunning perforated
sheet metal monocoque chassis. This prototype chassis-engine combo was
first shown at the Turin motor show of November 1965.
Coachbuilder
Bertone saw immense potential in the concept and proposed to clothe the
chassis. And he got his recent recruit Marcello Gandini – just 27
then – to carry out the project. In just four months, in time for
the Geneva motor show of 1966, the fully clothed car made its sensational
debut. Putting the engine behind the driver – race car style –
was special enough. Putting a hugely powerful and exquisitely crafted
V12 amidships was sensational. But that body, oh my god, that daring,
spirited, lithe, sexy piece of automotive sculpture was the ultimate icing
on the cake.
Ferruccio Lamborghini, born under the astrological sign of the Taurus,
adopted the charging bull as the emblem of his marque, taking on the prancing
horse of Ferrari, and adding a certain element of drama in the cars that
he made, cars that have always been strong, wilful, prideful beasts only
partly tamed. And the Miura was the first in a series that took the name
of a famous breed of fighting bulls from Spain.
So
here was a car that was everything: a car with a powerplant that was the
ultimate at its time (the Miura developed 350bhp, whereas Ferrari's best
at that time, the 275GTB managed only 315), an engine layout that was
a revolution, a styling that was a generation or two ahead of the rest,
a performance potential (max v of over 270kph) that was second to none,
and an appropriately poetic name.
And so people – the rich and the beautiful – lined up. Lamborghini
had thought that, at best, he would sell around 25 Miura P400s per year.
But demand was so huge that some 475 cars were sold in less than three
years. As the car went into production with very little development, there
were a whole lot of teething problems, and so, an extensively improved
model, the P400 S was launched in 1968. 140 of the S were made till 1971,
when a more potent version, the P400 SV was unveiled. With decidedly chunkier
rubbers – Pirelli Cinturatos specifically developed for the car
– a wider track and a more tweaked engine that took max power to
385bhp, the SV is the ultimate Miura. Just 150 of these were made till
1972, when Lamborghini prematurely pulled the plug and the Miura was withdrawn
from the market, apparently to make way for the Countach (which still
took another two years to make into production…).
With
one exception, all 765 Miuras were coupes. The exception was an open top
version proposed by Bertone and unveiled in 1968 as the P400 Roadster.
Though it did not have a top or side windows, the rest of the detailing
was serious and fastidious: the rear slats, for instance, were replaced
by a scooped out engine cover flanked by 'flying buttresses'. This particular
car was eventually sold to the Lead Zinc Research Organization who got
Bertone to turn the car into the Zn75, a rolling exhibit of possible automotive
applications for zinc and other metals. Now a part of a private collection
the metallic green Zn75 still turns heads, as evinced at the last Retromobile
show in Paris (see April '06 issue).
As do any Miuras, even today. Exactly 40 years ago, the Miura was radically
new, with innovative styling details, yet incorporating the culture and
the history of Italian sports cars of the '50s and the early '60s. And
it is still perfect today, having stood the test of time. And over the
years, others have laid claim to the design: Nuccio Bertone claiming that
he had more than just a proprietary eye on the design and Giorgetto Giugiaro
claiming that Gandini finished what he had actually started…The
last bit leaves a bit of a sour taste: somehow, the designer of the century
cannot come to terms with the fact that the design of the century isn't
his work. But c'est la vie. Yet he has insinuated several times that Gandini
took what were his initial sketches and finished the car, taking undue
credit. And unfortunately, some scribes who are fans of Giugiaro tend
to buy that argument. I don't. The Miura is undoubtedly the exciting work
(and one of several) of a very excited young genius. |