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The Miura Was Born of Young Engineers Going Wild

Photo credit: Lamborghini
Photo credit: Lamborghini

From Road & Track

In the early days of Lamborghini, engineers Gian Paolo Dallara, Paolo Stanzani, and Bob Wallace wanted to build a race car. Feruccio Lamborghini wasn't interested, but he gave the engineers, all in their late 20s and early 30s, permission to build a sort of race car for the street. The result was a gamechanger that singlehandedly set the template for the modern supercar.

The Miura, as Harry Metcalfe of Harry's Garage details, is what happens when you give a bunch of visionary designers and engineers the freedom to build something without restraint. That freedom led the team to experiment with things like a transverse mid-engine layout, a wild reinterpretation of the transverse engine design used in the Mini.

Photo credit: Klemantaski Collection - Getty Images
Photo credit: Klemantaski Collection - Getty Images

Its styling was the work of a young designer too: Marcello Gandini of Bertone, who was just 28 when the Miura debuted in 1966. It looked like nothing else on earth when it hit the scene. It's still striking today.

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But as groundbreaking as the Miura was, it's not without problems. The transverse engine layout made packaging the gearbox and differential quite difficult, and its shape creates pronounced front-end lift at speed. Metcalfe also notes that the Miura has an inclination to catch fire.

But as soon as he revs the 4.0-liter V12 in this Miura S, all of those problems disappear. Driving a Miura is an all-encompassing experience, requiring all of your mental and physical facilities. It seems like a brilliant way to spend time.

It's hard to comprehend what the Miura did for the performance-car world in its day. Flawed? You bet, but a revolutionary car nevertheless.

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