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The Jaguar C-X75 supercar.
Which won’t be finished and won’t be sold. And yet in 2013, the year of the
supercar, it was all set to turn the triumvirate confluence of LaFerrari,
McLaren P1 and Porsche 918 Spyder into the most awesome foursome that the car
world has ever known.
The Jaguar now looks destined
to become the forgotten giant, after a decision taken by the company in
December 2012 not to put the extended-range petrol-electric two-seater into
production after all.
Even in the rain, the C-X75
feels every bit as fast as they say it is – up to a point. Up to about 120mph,
to be precise - to the top of fourth gear, until which point it could probably
run with a Veyron. At least very close to one
Matt Saunders | Road test
editor
The irony is that it might
have signalled much more than a million-pound Ferrari or McLaren: newfound
ambition for a once world-beating British marque again willing to compete right
at the top of the food chain. A marque once again looking to take a guiding
hand in the development of the state of the automotive art. Something of a
renaissance, in other words.
More’s the pity. As things
stand, Gaydon’s supercar experiment is over. Five working prototypes exist, and
there are no plans to make more. Whispers persist that a few of them may be
auctioned, but nothing’s confirmed. Strange circumstances for a first drive –
but, in this case, we’ll take ‘em.
In supercar terms, the C-X75
moved from apparently fanciful show car to fully operational validation
prototype very quickly – and changed quite a lot on route.
Those who last read about this
car after its unveiling as a concept at the Paris motor show of 2010 will be
wondering where its tiny jet turbine power generators have gone. Somewhere
along the line, Jaguar concluded – just as Ferrari, McLaren and Porsche did –
that the supercar isn’t quite ready to part with reciprocating pistons just
yet.
What was decided, in May 2011,
was that the buzz surrounding the C-X75 concept car was too great to ignore.
The car would go forwards, engineered in partnership with Williams Advanced
Engineering.
But, like the show car, it
couldn’t be just another supercar. It had to be as fast as a Bugatti Veyron. It
had to emit less carbon than a Toyota Prius - sub-90g/km, as things stood back
then. It needed a zero-emissions range as good as a Chevrolet Volt. And it
needed to look like the original show car.
It wouldn’t be enough for this
car to breach the bounds of possibility in just one direction – the familiar
direction: speed. The C-X75 had to push the envelope in opposing directions
simultaneously, on performance and fuel efficiency.
In place of the Bladon Jets
omnivore turbines came a primary powerplant that would set Jaguar’s engineers a
similar challenge on cooling, and allow it similar freedoms on packaging.
Developed in-house by Jaguar, the C-X75’s 1.6-litre petrol four-pot is
all-aluminium, and is like no small-capacity engine ever intended for the road.
Fitted with both a
supercharger and a turbocharger, it produces unbelievable power for its size:
an astounding peak 502bhp at 10,000rpm. And because the C-X75 is a plug-in
hybrid, that engine’s only half the story.
Immediately behind the driver
– who’s positioned almost perfectly between the front and rear axles – there’s
a 19kWh lithium ion battery pack capable of supplying a continuous 300kW of
power.
The car’s electric motors are
Jaguar’s own. They’re the size of cake tins, there’s one for each axle, and
they produce 194bhp and 295lb ft each. They also only weigh 20kg, making them
more efficient, judged on output per kg, than any electric motor Jaguar could
buy in.
The one up front drives the
wheels directly through reduction gearing; the one at the rear runs in parallel
with the engine, sending power through a seven-speed automated manual gearbox to
the rear wheels.
And so, running at full chat,
the C-X75 produces in excess of 850bhp, and has 738lb ft of torque. It’ll
accelerate to 60mph in less than 3.0sec, to 100mph in less than 6.0sec, and go
on way beyond 200mph.
Scarcely believably, it also
produces less than 89g/km on an NEDC emissions test, and drives for 40 miles on
battery power alone. And it looks incredible – more like the rightful heir to
Malcolm Sayer’s C- and D-types, and the elegant XJ13, than either the XJ220 or
the XJR-15 ever seemed.
You could fill textbooks
explaining the innovative engineering in this car. The all-carbonfibre
construction makes for torsional rigidity of 60,000Nm per degree – three times
greater than a Lamborghini MurciƩlago.
Every major mechanical and
electrical component is positioned within the wheelbase, with the exception of
the seven-speed gearbox – which goes in sideways to minimise the overhang
behind the rear axle.
In the pouring rain at its
Gaydon UK headquarters, Jaguar gave us limited opportunity to get familiar with
its technical prodigy. Some passenger laps on the twisty inner handling circuit
suggested the C-X75 has supremely manageable limit handling for a supercar. “We
went to a lot of trouble to give the car Jaguar feel,” says driver and Williams
chassis chief Simon Newton. And you know what he means.
The car does skids. “The
normal power split in EV mode is 70 percent biased for the rear wheels, and we
limit power at the front wheels when cornering because it tends to bring on
understeer. We’ve also worked out a few tricks with the E-Diff to add some
throttle-steer, and – when it’s on – the ESP functions similarly to McLaren’s
‘brakesteer’ to keep the nose tucked in on corner entry."
In electric mode, the
performance level feels strong – if limited. Instant, torque-dominated: a bit
like a turbo hot hatch but entirely without the lag. I can’t tell you what the
electric motors sound like, because they’re drowned out by the C-X75’s sound
synthesiser, which fills the cabin with an electronic noise somewhere between a
whistle and a loud whine. It’s not unpleasant, and maybe it does make the
electric mode feel more dramatic. You’d never mistake it for ‘real’ noise,
though.
My turn at the wheel. Engaging
full-fat hybrid mode and moving off, that inline four suddenly announces
itself. It’s all chattering gear-driven cams and bad-tempered low-rpm grumble
to begin with, but the accelerator pedal’s tamely progressive thanks to that
supercharger.
Might as well flatten it then.
We’re in third gear, on the high-speed circuit of Jaguar’s Gaydon HQ, where
mile-long straights allow some close inspection of the C-X75’s outright speed –
specifically, of the potency of that powertrain. At 3500rpm the barp of exhaust
begins to emerge over all that chatter.
Because, while it may not
quite be the fastest car in the world, the C-X75 is still a modern, daring kind
of machine. A hypercar, really – if such a term were ever truly justified by a
supercar that does more.

















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