Friday, July 25, 2008

New Cars: Mexico To Build Super Car Italians Won't Build...

The Mastreta MXT is notable for being light weight, small, quick, and -relatively- cheap. It's also notable for being the first native born car from Mexico. It's a small sports car, though because it weighs only 900kg its performance is more super than sports, with 0-60mph taking under 5-seconds. It's not slow flat-out either, though 150mph is merely fast-hatch territory anymore. It may not be cute exactly, but its aggressive stance and chunky proportions aren't without appeal, but the way the front and rear halves come together at the roof needs attention.

If all this is beginning to sound just a bit like a Lotus Elise, you're really not that far off, at least in concept; and indeed, the MXT shares the little Lotus' features of a bonded aluminum chassis, and fibreglass body. It does without the Lotus' extreme take on the subject though, with an air conditioned, leather-trimmed cockpit. Add in its Ford Duratec power plant, and, too me, it reminds more of an Italian sports car of yore, the De Tomaso Vallelunga. And that can only be a good thing.

Ok, so I'm hoping that the new car does without the Vallelunga's ear-splitting noise levels, or it's flaky build quality. But if the car turns out to be half the handling paragon the littlest De Tomaso was, then Mexico will have done itself proud, especially as this is the kind of car for which Italy used to be famous, but which has been washed away in the past three decades beneath a wave of ever faster super cars.

Not a ton is known about the MXT at the moment, except that it will have 240bhp from a turbo-charged version of Ford's 2.0-liter Duratec four-cylinder, and that it should go at least as well as the company claims if that weight target is met. Should handle nicely too with manual rack and pinion, and double-wishbones at each corner.

Production will be limited as well with a mere 150 vehicles produced in the first year, with 80 of those being RHD. The price in Britain is expected to be around £40,000. Of course, US customers won't get the car at all as there are no current plans to certify it for sale in the market. I am though, really excited for this car, but I'm a bit concerned that the person shooting the video of the car testing could be bothered/afford to use a tripod... Still, it's a great start, and who knows, it may lead other sports car manufacturers in the right direction. Definitely one on which to keep an eye.

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