evo UK – September 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

056 http://www.evo.co.uk


What’s troubling me is the realisation that the Evo


doesn’t offer the amusingly termed Ego mode as seen


in the Aventador S and SVJ, and also the Urus: in other


words, anindividualmode inwhich I can tailor the car to


how I want it, when I want. I’m already wondering if this


will be a real issue, because with so many fundamental


elements of the car’s dynamics governed by LDVI – not


just, for example, the ride quality – an inability to match


car with road could have significant ramifications.


In Sport mode, the deep-chested growl of the V10 at


cruising revs gets a little wearing after a while,boring, as


it does, somewhere deep in your skull. More to the point,


the damping is definitely on the firm side, particularly


if the surface isn’t great, where you really notice the


abrupt rebound by the way your body is jiggled around.


Returning to Strada gives me the reasonably compliant


damping, and the quiet exhaust, but it also gives me light


and weirdly disconnected steering; it’s not bad once on


lock, but the weighting away from the straight-ahead is


very artificial, as is the self-centring (Sport and Corsa


are more direct, witha better build-up of weight, but still


offer no feel whatsoever). Furthermore, as the M56 starts


to give way to more scenic, verdant A-roads, I miss the


snappy gearshifts of Sport, having to make do withslurred,


less definite changes instead.


Time to try Sport again, then. However, it soon becomes


clear that it makes the exhaust note simply too loud to be


used often. Yes, I feel like that’s an astonishingly un-evo


thing to say, but this is a car where people can hear you


coming from quite literally miles away, and this isn’t Sicily


in the 1960s, with a swarthy chap wearing baggy slacks


and a flat cap making wind-her-up motions with his arm


by the roadside: this is the UK in 2019, and driving quickly,


responsibly, albeit potentially not quite to the letter of the


law, for fun, needs to be approached with a more sensitive


mindset if it’s not inevitably to end in at the very least


confrontation and open hostility. The ironic postscript to


allof this is that withthis exhaust, there’s no way the Evo is


going to make it onto any trackday in the UK.


Once we’re in the Peaks, the roads become really tough.


They’re often quite narrow, which immediately puts the


Evo on the defensive, because it always feels a big, chunky

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