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This is our latest look of the McLaren P1. It's one of the most anticipated hypercars
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in recent memory, and faces stiff competition from the likes of the Porsche 918 Spyder and
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LaFerrari. First, the headlines. The P1 is a technical
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tour de force and is powered by a 3.8-litre twin turbo charged V8 engine in conjunction
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with an electric motor, producing a combined output of 903bhp.
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That means the P1 is able to accelerate to 62mph in under three seconds and
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onto a top speed of 217mph. It can also be a very green car, managing an
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official 34mpg on a combined cycle and emitting 194g/km of CO2. The P1 is built around a carbonfibre
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tub known as the Mono Cage. This tub weighs 90 kilos and includes space
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for all of the P1's electrical systems, as well as its battery.
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McLaren has been obsessed with saving weight in the P1, so much so that the windscreen
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has been planed down to become just 3.2mm thick, 1mm thinner than that
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used on the 12C and 3.5 kilos lighter. The diet continues inside, where each seat weighs
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just 10.5 kilos. It's joined by a carbonfibre trim, which does without its top layer of
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resin. McLaren says this gives a more natural look
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and crucially saves another 1.5 kilos.
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Don't think of the P1 as only being for the track, however.
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McLaren tells us it's engineered the hypercar to ride as
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well around town as it does on the circuit. Its
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suspension system is again based on the 12C, but uses special hydraulic adjustment to control
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ride height and vertical stiffness. In some cases, the space-age technology showcased
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on the P1 really is from space. A silicone carbide coating, used to get the carbon ceramic
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brakes their stopping power generating up to 2g in places
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was first used on the Ariane space rocket.
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At £866,000 each, the P1 is likely to be a rare and exclusive machine. Just 375 models
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will be produced in total, all of which have already sold out.