The Transformers
Evo|September 2016

There are some cars that should never see the tarmac of a public highway, but someone forgot to tell a handful of Aston Martin Vulcan owners that. Step inside the workshop of RML, the firm that is making the track day monster street-legal.

Richard Meaden
The Transformers

It’s a fact of life that if you tell someone they can’t have something, that something is immediately what they want more than anything in the whole world. If you happen to be one of the 24 lucky souls who managed to secure one ofAstonMartin’s £1.8million and very definitely track-only Vulcans, that ‘something’ is the possibility to drive it on the road.

You’d think threading the 820bhp, slick-shod, down force-drenched monster into Eau Rouge, or howling round the floodlit fantasy world of AbuDhabi’s Yas Marina Circuit would be more than enough fun, but we should never underestimate the importance of being able to drive to the pub and impress your mates.

And so, by popular demand, and despite never being designed with road use in mind, the Vulcan is being made road legal by RML Group, based in Welling borough, North amptonshire. If you’re into your racing you’ll know RML is steeped in motor sport history, but there’s another side to the company: a lesser-known but no less impressive skill set for making apparently impossible one-off cars for a select band of brilliantly nuts customers. Perhaps the best known of these is the Juke-R–Nissan’s noble project to turn its plug-ugly crossover into a thug-tastic 200mph beast that concealed the drive train of a GT-R.

Two were built for Nissan as promotional vehicles, and that was supposed to be the end of it. At least until three people with £300,000 to blow wouldn’t take no for an answer, at which point Nissan bent some rules and allowed RML to build them.TheVulcanproject is a little different in that its starting point is one of the world’s most expensive and exciting hyper cars, but the goal is one and the same, namely making the impossible possible.

この記事は Evo の September 2016 版に掲載されています。

7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。

この記事は Evo の September 2016 版に掲載されています。

7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。

EVOのその他の記事すべて表示
BMW M135 xDrive
Evo UK

BMW M135 xDrive

The M135 has lost an and gained chassis revisions and a restyle. Is it enough to make it a benchmark hot hatch?

time-read
4 分  |
January 2025
Audi S5
Evo UK

Audi S5

S5 by name, S4 by nature, is Audi's new mid-size petrol-powered saloon a step in the right direction?

time-read
4 分  |
January 2025
Lamborghini Urus SE
Evo UK

Lamborghini Urus SE

Lambo's super-SUV gets a major mid-life overhaul, going hybrid in the process. Has it become any easier to like?

time-read
5 分  |
January 2025
HALL evo OF FAME
Evo UK

HALL evo OF FAME

The evo Hall of Fame was established to recognise the great and the good of our corner of the universe. Prepare to welcome this year's inductees

time-read
10+ 分  |
January 2025
CIRCUIT DAY
Evo UK

CIRCUIT DAY

After three days of assessing their behaviour on the road, it's time to head to the Circuito de Navarra to find out how our nine contenders respond when their handling limits are explored

time-read
10+ 分  |
January 2025
EVO CAR OF THE YEAR 2024
Evo UK

EVO CAR OF THE YEAR 2024

Nine brilliant cars, from flyweight roadsters to bombastic supercars to a be-stickered estate(!), do battle on some of Europe's finest and most spectacular roads. Which will emerge victorious? Place your bets now.

time-read
10+ 分  |
January 2025
Porsche Panamera GTS
Evo UK

Porsche Panamera GTS

It lacks the raw power of its hybrid rivals, but does the new GTS’s more traditional approach give it its USP?

time-read
4 分  |
January 2025
Alpine A290 GTS
Evo UK

Alpine A290 GTS

The new electric Renault 5 has won plenty of plaudits. Is the hotter Alpine version a car to win petrolheads' hearts too?

time-read
8 分  |
January 2025
BEST BUYS BMW M CARS
Evo UK

BEST BUYS BMW M CARS

THE PERFORMANCE CAR LANDSCAPE WOULD HAVE looked very different over the last five decades without BMW. Its M division, founded in 1972, has produced some of the best driver’s cars ever to hit the road, and in the process has provided a stream of benchmark models for its rivals to chase. In recent years, stricter emissions regulations, downsizing and electrification have seen some of those rival cars falter, yet by and large BMW’s M machines have remained strong. In fact, some rank among the greatest the department has made think of the eCoty-winning M2 CS and M5 CS while others are the only options worth recommending in their respective segments. Price tags have risen with performance, however, putting those latest offerings out of reach for many, but the marque’s popularity means there are numerous earlier M models available on the second-hand market for far more attainable figures. Here are four of our favourites.

time-read
9 分  |
November 2024
TYRE 2024 TEST
Evo UK

TYRE 2024 TEST

Want to fit the very best tyres to your performance car? The annual evo Tyre Test identifies the cream of the current crop

time-read
3 分  |
November 2024