
(Lamborghini Miura) P400 Jota
In 1970, Lamborghini development driver Bob Wallace created a test mule that would conform to the FIA’s Appendix J racing regulations. The car was appropriately named the Miura Jota (the pronunciation of the letter ‘J’ in Spanish). Wallace made extensive modifications to the standard Miura chassis and engine. Weight reductions included replacing steel chassis components and body panels with the lightweight aluminium alloy Avional and replacing side windows with plastic, with the resulting car weighing approximately 800 lb (360 kg) less than a production Miura. A front spoiler was added and the headlights were replaced with fixed, faired-in units. Wallace substituted two smaller, sill-mounted fuel tanks for the single larger original unit. The suspension was reworked and widened (9″ in the front, 12″ in the rear), and lightweight wheels were fitted. The engine was modified to produce 418?440 bhp (312?328 kW) at 8800 rpm, with an increased compression ratio, altered cams, electronic ignition, dry-sump lubrication and a less restrictive exhaust system. This single example was eventually sold to a private buyer after extensive testing. In April 1971, the car crashed on the yet-unopened ring road around the city of Brescia, and burned to the ground.
It was once widely believed that the Jota had the chassis number of #5084 (a number well out of sequence for the date in question), it has been clarified by Miura expert Joe Sackey in his book The Lamborghini Miura Bible that this is not the case, and that #5084 is in fact a factory modified SV to SVJ spec.
A recreation of the Jota was later undertaken by Chris Lawrence of Wymondham Engineering for Lamborghini owner Piet Pulford from the United Kingdom on chassis #3033. sports car background, gallardo, urus wallpaper, Lamborghini Miura wallpapers, supercars wallpaper
(Lamborghini Huracan)Performance
With a curb weight of 1,553 kg (3,424 lb), the Hurac?n LP610-4 has a power-to-weight ratio of 2.55 kg (5.62 lb) per horsepower.
Road test acceleration of LP 610-4 (measurements by automotive magazines)
0?97 km/h (60 mph): 2.5 seconds
0?300 km/h (186 mph): 27.6 seconds
0??1/4 mile: 10.4 seconds at 217 km/h (135 mph)
0?1 km (0.62 mi): 19.1 seconds at 272.20 km/h (169 mph)
Maximum speed: 341 km/h (212 mph) Lamborghini Huracan wallpapers#CarWallpapers #LamboMurcielago #LamboGallardo #SportsCars #gallardo