McLaren 12C Spider – 1st Six Months

McLaren 12C Spider – Ownership Report 1st 6 Months

McLaren 12C Spider – Ownership Report 1st 6 Months

As we are in our 6th month with the McLaren 12C Spider I thought it would be a good time to reflect on how life with the car has been so far.  In a word, terrific.  It is easily the most “livable” supercar we have owned to date.  It handles a wide range of conditions with confidence and is the first supercar that we both enjoy driving on a regular basis.  This adds to the versatility and certainly increases the amount of road time the 12C Spider sees.  It is also the first supercar that I really don’t mind driving in the rain.  While I have driven plenty of different supercars in just about every condition imaginable, the 12C Spider is the first that delivers zero added stress when the weather gets nasty.  Being able to drop the rear window a bit with the roof up in liquid sunshine is a quite cool feature.

The 12C Spider’s versatility is highly impressive.  Getting caught in traffic and having to crawl is not the temperature gauge watching stress test of prior generations of supercars.  Visibility is excellent once one learns the sightlines from the different mirrors and the front corners are easy to place.   The three settings on both the gearbox and suspension allow for a huge range of different set ups.  We have three combinations we use most often; hers, cruising, and go.  On a clear twisty road the 12C Spider is brilliant.  Getting in sync with the car happens very naturally and the confidence to push and push on builds naturally.  It is not a car you need to fight with, wrestle, or manhandle to get the best from it.  Calm and cool are two words that I would use to describe the McLaren.  In some supercars, you always have the feeling that it could all end suddenly and very badly.  In the McLaren you have the distinct feeling that the cars abilities far out exceed the drivers and as long as you don’t do anything silly, you will be fine.

In terms of reliability and running costs so far it has all pretty much been as expected.  Drive it with vigor and gas mileage is not great.  Cruise on the highway in 7th gear and the 12C Spider sips gently from the tank.  Oil consumption has been zero and checking the level is very easy compared to a few of the others I own.  The tyres hold pressure well and so far have not needed to be topped off.  Iris works fine but I have to admit we don’t use it that much.  When we need a Sat Nav, I tend to bring the Garmin along as it has the live traffic updates.  The 12C Spider did throw a minor temper tantrum once with a low oil pressure warning message.  We let the car sit for a few minutes, checked the oil level, restarted the engine and the warning message has never returned.  A quick call to McLaren Service confirmed that it was mostly likely a sensor fault and they would replace it at the next service.

After living with the car for multiple months now, there are a few things I would add or change.  First and foremost on the list would be longer paddles, preferably made from carbon fiber.  These should be standard.  I would also fit a larger fuel tank.  Range really is not that great and a 100 liter tank should be standard.  Final one on this list is a small pocket on the driver’s side door where you could drop your wallet, keys, or phone.  Other than this very short list, I would not touch a thing.

When we acquired the McLaren 12C Spider we had very high expectations.  To date the car has certainly delivered.  The original rough idea was to keep the 12C Spider until the P1 arrived.  New plan is to keep it, period.

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December 2017

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Bentley Bentayga

Weekend with a Bentley Bentayga

Weekend With A Bentley Bentayga

We recently spent 36 hours living with a Bentley Bentayga.  Our loaner car was a pearly white and instantly earned the nickname “Beluga”.  Going in, it was a car I wanted to hate.  It represents just about everything I try to avoid when choosing a preferred mode of transportation.  It is huge, heavy, and about as subtle as a Kardashian. At the end of 36 hours, Mrs. SSO and I were giving the acquisition of the giant Bentley serious consideration.

Climbing into the driver’s seat of the Bentley Motor’s tactical attempt to siphon off a piece of the highly profitable SUV segment is akin to falling into a Louis Vuitton handbag.  Autos simply do not come any better screwed together than the “Beluga”.  The quilted leather is superb and the wood trim perfect.  The view across the dashboard and out over the hood instilled an instant “Titan of Industry” feeling and an immediate stiffening of the backbone.  The infotainment system was fairly intuitive to set up and the handling settings easy to navigate.  The seats are immensely comfortable and legroom all around is more than generous. Luggage space is better than that in a Porsche Cayenne but far from the vastness offered in the average large American SUV.

One prod of the highly polished starter button and the massive W12 purrs obediently to life.  The ride and handling are actually better than expected.  The big Bentley doesn’t have that “detached from the road, floatness” that the Mulsanne exhibits and the steering wheel feels like it is directly linked to the front wheels.  While not exactly a sports car, the Bentayga does go where you point it and for something the size of yacht, is fairly easy to place on the road.  Where it really impresses though is in what happens when you flex your right ankle.  Mash the accelerator and it goes like an elephant shot out of a cannon.  I tried this at a traffic light with an unsuspecting Corvette pulled up alongside and literary left him inhaling Beluga exhaust with quite the stunned look on his face.  If the Porsche Cayenne Turbo is the silly fast standard for a SUV, the Bentley is not far off the pace.

What Bentley has accomplished with the Bentayga is hugely impressive.  It is enjoyable to drive, pleasant just to spend time in, and with a build quality that is unsurpassed.  The fact that it can go like stink and handles well for a car half its size is icing on the cake.

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November 2017

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