Gallery: Review: McLaren 570S
McLaren01McLaren 570S Coupe Launch 2015 Portimao
In this new world order where sports cars and supercars rub elbows, the baby 570S, starting at $184,900, enters that nebulous area with trickle-down styling that recalls its big brothers, the 650S and P1.
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McLaren (humbly) rectifies the disparity by calling the 570S a “Sport” model, as opposed to its the Super Series designation of its 650S/675LT models or the “Ultimate” series P1.
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Though it offers a less lavish, more compact presence on the road, the 570S isn’t necessarily a compromised 650S.
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It delivers a potent power-to-weight ratio, a top speed of 204 mph, and combined EU cycle fuel economy figures of 26.6 mpg—good enough to avoid the gas guzzler tax.
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The company’s monocell carbon fiber chassis, used across its lineup, has been modified with narrower sills easier entry and exit.
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Once inside, the mood is decidedly functional, with generous Napa leather surfaces but otherwise spartan expanses of space.
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There’s a tad more friendliness to this interior, with tiny water bottle-sized cubbies in the doors, more accommodating seats, and McLaren’s inaugural use of vanity mirrors.
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Knobs and switches actuate with reassuring clicks, and even the turn signal stalks—ergonomically curved slivers of aluminum—deliver a sense of tactile satisfaction.
McLaren09McLaren 570S Coupe Launch 2015 Portimao
With its squinty face, sonorous exhaust and jarring color palate, the 570S carves through town with the subtlety of a freight train.
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At the core is the latest iteration of McLaren’s carbon fiber chassis, which weighs only 165 pounds and keeps the 570S to a svelte 3,186 pounds.
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The 570S’s athleticism seems oversized on public roads, like wielding a saber to slice a grape.
McLaren12McLaren 570S Coupe Launch 2015 Portimao
The $3,860 sport exhaust makes the car’s intentions audibly clear, both inside the cabin and to anyone within earshot.
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More than once, the long-winded wind-up made me giggle out loud, just like I used to while power sliding my Big Wheel.
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The optimal track setting requires Dynamic mode, which sends the nanny home for the day, facilitating satisfying tail slides and drifts.
McLaren15McLaren 570S Coupe Launch 2015 Portimao
The ability to rotate the car more freely enables a level of artistry to track driving, allowing you pitch the nose and tail with ease by stabbing the brakes or jabbing the throttle.
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The tight hug of wind increases the volume of air that enters the engine’s cooling ducts, and subsequently keeps the overall openings smaller, enabling a more diminutive footprint.
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The 570S lacks the active aerodynamics of its 650S, so the chassis wiggles a bit on hard braking.
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The brakes, massive carbon ceramic rotors, with vise-like calipers, are more than up to the task of hauling you down from speed.
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Sharp, lightweight, and oozing with seat-of-the-pants feedback, the 570S is built for drivers, not poseurs.
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McLaren may deny it, but the 570S is a supercar to us.
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