Lamborghini Sesto Elemento


The Lamborghini Sesto Elemento is a high-performance limited edition car produced by the Italian automobile manufacturer Lamborghini, which debuted at the 2010 Paris Motor Show. The Sesto Elemento's name is a reference to the atomic number of carbon, referring to the carbon fibre used in its construction.

Design and specifications

The Sesto Elemento is equipped with Lamborghini's 6-speed "e-gear" automated manual transmission and an all-wheel-drive system, mated to a 5.2 litre V10 engine borrowed from the Gallardo Superleggera, producing and of torque. Lamborghini says that eighty percent of the Sesto Elemento is carbon fiber, including the chassis, body, drive shafts, wheels and suspension components, reducing the overall weight to, a weight comparable to subcompact cars. The Sesto Elemento was the first car to use forged carbon fibre, a new type of carbon composite developed by Lamborghini and Callaway Golf Company.
The engine is cooled through 10 distinctive hexagonal holes in the engine cover, while two intakes funnel cool air into the mid-mounted engine compartment and the exhaust pipes are positioned behind the base of the rear wing. Lamborghini claims a acceleration time of 2.5 seconds, time of 8.0 seconds, and a top speed of.
The interior of the Sesto Elemento is generally bare without vehicle comforts such as air-conditioning and stereo. The Sesto Elemento also lacks separate seats, instead having foam padding directly adhered to the carbon fibre chassis.

Production

Lamborghini announced plans to produce 20 cars for track use only in mid-2011 with each car costing US$2.92 million. At that time, the Sesto Elemento was the most expensive Lamborghini ever made, until the Veneno was launched. Due to a reported lack of interest for such an expensive car that was not road legal, it is believed by some that Lamborghini ended up producing just 10 Sesto Elementos, rather than the planned 20. This is corroborated through the record keeping of vehicle identification numbers, but has not been admitted publicly by Lamborghini.
Singapore was the recipient of more cars than any other country with four cars arriving in 2014, though some have since left the country. The United States of America received no Sesto Elementos, though a demonstration chassis resides at the Boeing Everett Factory occasionally on display, as Boeing aided Lamborghini in their carbon fibre development.