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Lamborghini Urus Performante delivers on the track or in the dirt


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Picture: Lamborghini

“So the track is a bit chilly this morning, we’ll do a few laps to warm up before actually opening the car,” Matteo, my driving instructor for the day, warned me before he led me out. beyond our first session. This is the kind of instruction I expect to hear on a race day in October, but it’s not the kind I’ve heard before climbing into an SUV.

Of course, this is not your average SUV. It’s the new Lamborghini Urus Performante, a Technicolor expression of redundant four-wheelers. After all, why 657 horsepower, $229,495 Urus WILL when you could spend $260,676 on a stiffer, sharper, 104-pound lighter Performante?

(Full disclosure: Lamborghini wanted me to drive the Urus Performante, so much so that they took me to Rome, put me in a luxury hotel, then dropped me off on a closed track plus a dirt track.)

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Picture: Lamborghini

On paper, 104 pounds shaved off a 4,740 pound SUV sounds ridiculous, but we don’t drive cars like this on paper. Some of the best Lamborghinis are ridiculous – that’s what makes them great. Why keep any vestiges of logical thought against this?

The Performante’s 657-HP comes out of the same, four-liter, turbocharged V8 that powers the standard Urus S (as well as the Audi Q8.) The Performante, though, sings through a new, titanium exhaust that looks lovely in its unmistakable matte hue. Good as it sounds, the exhaust’s real advantage is weight, saving 23 pounds over the standard car.

The rest of the 104-pound weight savings comes courtesy of extensive carbon fiber on the hood, fenders and (optionally) the roof, plus lighter interior materials and 14-pound lighter wheels. Lamborghini told me the little wing hanging off the rear hatch, the more aggressive front facia and numerous other aerodynamic tweaks provides the Performante with 38 percent more downforce over the Urus S.

Image for article titled The Lamborghini Urus Performante Delivers on the Track or in the Dirt

Image: Lamborghini

I felt like I needed all the extra aerodynamic encouragement I could get as I hurtled through the first few, tricky turns at Vallelunga Circuit, just outside of Rome. With successive turns hidden behind a series of crests, it’s one of those high-speed corner sequences where I brushed the brakes, turn in, get back on the gas, and hope that I’ve led a true and virtuous life.

In the first few sessions, I kept missing the important turn-two apex because I didn’t feel like the Performante had enough grip to get me down there. But it did, and probably plenty more grip to boot. It was my brain that wasn’t up to the task.

Despite the new, steel-springed suspension that lowers the car by 20mm, the Performante still sits a fair bit higher than the average track toy. It rolls more, too, and that roll was really messing with my perception. I had to reprogram myself to realize that, even though I was being pitched high above the roll center, the car still had plenty of grip left in its sticky Pirelli Trofeo R tires.

Image for article titled The Lamborghini Urus Performante Delivers on the Track or in the Dirt

Image: Lamborghini

And so, lap after lap, as those near-slicks got warmer I grew more confident. By my third session I was having a ridiculously good time, dashing through the exhilarating first corner sequence and hitting 135 mph on the short straight before diving on the carbon-ceramic brakes. The Performante’s rear-end danced around under hard braking but the nose always sliced cleanly into the next turn.

As fun as it was on the track, the best part of the day was taking another Urus Performante out on the dirt. Lamborghini set up a short rallycross course on a bit of spare pasture land adjacent to the race track. Ignoring the dirty looks I got from the displaced cattle as I walked across the grass, I strapped myself in and was basically told to do my worst on a tight, narrow gravel lane.

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Image: Lamborghini

The Performante was wildly good on the loose stuff. The new Rally driving mode softens the active dampers and commands a little more rearward thrust from the Performante’s new, Torsen center-differential. It also allows extra slip from the rear tires before the traction control cuts in. However, I quickly learned the system doesn’t like counter steering, as it dramatically reduced the power output whenever I tried to correct a slide. Let the car’s stability control and torque vectoring handle the hard work, however, and I was kicking up rooster tails like a pro.

How many people are really going to take their $260,000 super-sports SUV to rallycross? Roughly as many as will take theirs to a track day, which is to say extremely few. Even pondering those questions again means bringing too logical a line of thinking to this car. In an evocative product like this, it’s all about what it can do, and this is an SUV that can do some incredible things.

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