Well even after nearly 6 years of ownership this little pocket rocket still surprises me.
I know how quick it is on a B road, but in a straight line i always thought it slightly underpowered to take on the great and good of Germany's finest but boy was I wrong.
100 octane racing fuel on board and after 1200km of driving, only 4 cars and two bikes were able to leave us (only one of those embarrassed the little clio).
The cars: GT2 911, 911 turbo s, Bentley continental (the one that left us standing at 150mph) and a AC Schnitzer 5 series.
Now don't get me wrong - i know the speedo on the car is out when at max velocity. 160 on the speedo is actually 152mph I can now report... two separate gps tracking devices had us standing at 149mph on numerous occasions. Porsche Cayennes, 911's and Boxsters, numerous VW's (although i have a new respect for the R32 golf), mercs, bm's and other exotica tried and failed.
Every time we got to play with the big boys we'd tussle for a few km then slow to be thanked and congratulated by our respectful german hosts...
I've never had call, other than on track, to slam the car into 5th doing 120mph before but the urgency of the acceleration at that speed was staggering, it would pull and pull to around 145mph until eecking out mph after mph...
Suffice to say I now love germany, their country, drivers and petrol stations (who also probably like the sight of me now), why doesn't Shell sell this 100 octane fuel over here???
Just like something out of a Rocky film, the underdog fights like it's it fighting for it's life, knocking out some killer punches and although ending up very battered and bruised (I don't think the bodywork likes being buffeted by 150 mph wind, as the designer tape holding the windscreen in now shows) it comes out with it's honour intact and with a lot of respect.. My doubting passenger is now a convert.. he was begging me to take the 540 but I'm sure even that would would have felt slow after spanking a few of them over there...
The northerly Nuremburg and more southerly Stuggart and Munich areas were the best hunting ground for duels although I must point out that this was no UK boy racer scene, the driving was impeccable, lane discipline and safety always foremost in everyone's minds... We need to learn a lesson in this country as to how to drive.
1200km on German roads = not one car blocked our path, even on congested stretches.
300 miles back in Britain and I was embarrassed at the low standards we have in this country. Lane hogging and not using the inside lane is common place.
You can actually spot the few good drivers on British roads. In Germany and Austria the minority are the poor drivers.
My last word is to complain about the roads in Belgium... We hit a pot hole the size of something you'd find after a meteor has hit on a main autoroute doing 130kph... How can one country get it so right and it's neighbours so wrong?
I know how quick it is on a B road, but in a straight line i always thought it slightly underpowered to take on the great and good of Germany's finest but boy was I wrong.
100 octane racing fuel on board and after 1200km of driving, only 4 cars and two bikes were able to leave us (only one of those embarrassed the little clio).
The cars: GT2 911, 911 turbo s, Bentley continental (the one that left us standing at 150mph) and a AC Schnitzer 5 series.
Now don't get me wrong - i know the speedo on the car is out when at max velocity. 160 on the speedo is actually 152mph I can now report... two separate gps tracking devices had us standing at 149mph on numerous occasions. Porsche Cayennes, 911's and Boxsters, numerous VW's (although i have a new respect for the R32 golf), mercs, bm's and other exotica tried and failed.
Every time we got to play with the big boys we'd tussle for a few km then slow to be thanked and congratulated by our respectful german hosts...
I've never had call, other than on track, to slam the car into 5th doing 120mph before but the urgency of the acceleration at that speed was staggering, it would pull and pull to around 145mph until eecking out mph after mph...
Suffice to say I now love germany, their country, drivers and petrol stations (who also probably like the sight of me now), why doesn't Shell sell this 100 octane fuel over here???
Just like something out of a Rocky film, the underdog fights like it's it fighting for it's life, knocking out some killer punches and although ending up very battered and bruised (I don't think the bodywork likes being buffeted by 150 mph wind, as the designer tape holding the windscreen in now shows) it comes out with it's honour intact and with a lot of respect.. My doubting passenger is now a convert.. he was begging me to take the 540 but I'm sure even that would would have felt slow after spanking a few of them over there...
The northerly Nuremburg and more southerly Stuggart and Munich areas were the best hunting ground for duels although I must point out that this was no UK boy racer scene, the driving was impeccable, lane discipline and safety always foremost in everyone's minds... We need to learn a lesson in this country as to how to drive.
1200km on German roads = not one car blocked our path, even on congested stretches.
300 miles back in Britain and I was embarrassed at the low standards we have in this country. Lane hogging and not using the inside lane is common place.
You can actually spot the few good drivers on British roads. In Germany and Austria the minority are the poor drivers.
My last word is to complain about the roads in Belgium... We hit a pot hole the size of something you'd find after a meteor has hit on a main autoroute doing 130kph... How can one country get it so right and it's neighbours so wrong?