Pagani’s planned 100-car production run for the Huayra supercar will soon come to an end (all 100 build slots are already sold), after which the company will turn its attention to an open-top Huayra Roadster that will also be built in a limited run of 100 cars.
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But the Huayra Roadster, which arrives early next year, won’t be built at Pagani’s current workshop that forms part of its San Cesario sul Panaro headquarters in northern Italy; instead, the car will be built at a new, state-of-the-art factory located just 200 meters away. Speaking with Autovisie, a Pagani spokesman confirmed that the new factory will be completely in September. Pagani estimates that up to 300 cars could be built there annually but to retain exclusivity the company will cap production at just 45 cars per year for the time being. The U.S. is the single biggest market for the Huayra, accounting for 40 percent of all orders. This should be true also for the Huayra Roadster, which we’re expecting to be revealed at the 2016 Geneva Motor Show next March.
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Like the Zonda before it, the Huayra Roadster should be identical to its coupe sibling, with all of the same mechanical bits. That means a twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter V-12, producing at least 720 horsepower and 737 pound-feet of torque. The coupe's gull-wing doors will have to go, though. Pagani will likely give the Huayra Roadster a removable roof panel rather than an automated roof (just as it did with the previous Zonda Roadster), which means the curb weight should remain close to the coupe's 2,975-pound heft.





When you do, it becomes evident that chassis resources were not begrudgingly allocated in designing this seventh generation of Corvette. Grip is far beyond the limits of daily driving. The steering wheel, brakes, and seat bottom tell you more about current events than CNN. Power delivery is immediate, at any sane speed, in any of the first four gears. There is still raw aggression in the Corvette’s acceleration, but the chassis is no understudy to the powertrain. While the rev-matching seven-speed manual transaxle is our obvious preference, an eight-speed automatic is new for 2015. It offers crisp, quick shifts via steering-wheel-mounted paddles and makes two-pedal Corvettes more than just tolerable. Also new: the Performance Data Recorder, an onboard video technology serious enough that its full capabilities are not entirely legal in some states. Criticisms of Corvettes past have been addressed: A modern cockpit and supportive and comfortable seats testify to the thoroughness of Chevrolet’s mission (accomplished) in remaking the car. The C7 is the best-ever Corvette. Even in this, its second year on our list, C7s hypnotize, the convertible and coupe equally. Sitting in the lot among the other contenders, they stand out as if rendered on a Retina display while others are appearing on a CRT. You might think that our familiarity with its many facets and creases has bred boredom, and certainly other beguiling shapes, even a real Italian demi-supercar, vied for our attention this year. But the Stingray looks transplanted from childhood fantasy, an interstellar dragon. We hear it roar, smell the heat of the LT1 cooking its own polymer skin, and the Corvette turns such imaginings into reality.


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