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Evo Magazine - "Driven" Radical SR8
2nd February 2005
The Sheer excitement of nearly 400bhp
in 550 kilos and the wail of eight cylinders at 10,000rpm...
Not one but two Suzuki Hayabusa bike
engines fused together turn the SR3 into a V8 track rocket
At the heart of any great car is an engine that suits it surroundings.
The idea of a 12-cylinder Ferrari retrofitted with a Chevy V8 sounds
like, well, something that isn't quite right...But there are others,
even those that at first seem unlikely, that soon seem completely
normal. Think how the Suzuki Hayabusa bike engine has defined the
Radical SR3 Instant access to five-figure revs, immediate six-speed
sequential shift - it's an ambience now inseparable form the breed.
Radical has laboured hard to make the power unit work on four wheels,
even though it has a style not everyone likes. The lack of inertia
in the engine that helps it spin up also makes it die down very
quickly, and some find it difficult to drive smoothly. Others love
it because exactly those characteristics make it more like a purpose-built
race engine, like a Cosworth DFV.
It is also true that bike engines only grow to 1300cc or so (1500
when Radical has finished stretching the components) and that makes
for about 250bhp, or around the same as an ultimate K-series. That's
not enough to power a real grown-up prototype, so Radical's engine
specialist, Powertec, has grafted a pair of Suzuki Hayabusa top
ends on to a common crankcase to make a 2.6-litre V8. Without any
mods to the Suzuki pistons, rods,. cams, valvegear or heads, it
puts out 383bhp at about 10,000rpm - less than double the standard
bike's output but still impressive. This process is not simple -
there is dynamic balance, oil scavenge and so on to be tackled -
but the economic advantages of retaining plenty of standard hardware
are obvious
Meanwhile, a small V8 is a tantalising prospect, not just because
it might be like the seminal DFV and rev to 10, but because it is
so rare - and so affordable. Radical will sell engines - and the
six-speed sequential transmission that it has developed in conjunction
with Quaife - for around £20,000 and £6,000 respectively.
It will also sell you a complete car. The SR3 forms the basis for
the SR8, with new brakes, driveshafts and cooling system and new
upper bodywork, sidepods, bi-plane rear wing and aerodynamic undertrays
that develop two times more downforce. So you get a brand new sports
prototype powered by a 2.6-litre V8 mounted in-line and driving
through a six-speed 'box, ready to race for £55,000 or a trackday
version with a £5K discount.
Bruntingthorpe is damp and windy and the downforce created by the
new rear underbody has already proved too much for its mountings,
so this test isn't definitive. But there's still plenty of room
to check out the engine, which churns for a few moments on the starter
then bursts into life, settling to a slightly lumpy 1500rpm tickover.
Final mapping is not complete and Powertec has pulled some fuel
from the lower range to cut out the two-foot-long flames on the
overrun, but thereafter it is uncannily smooth and devoid of temperament.
Twin balancer shafts live opposite in the quartet of oil scavenge
pumps down in the crankcase which, together with rubber rather than
solid mountings in the chassis, makes for an extremely refined engine.
It is punchy too, pulling hard all the way from 3000rpm to the day's
max of 10,000 without a step or hiccup.
But the real thing is the sheer excitement of nearly 400bhp in 550
kilos and the wail from eight cylinders at 10,000rpm, which is something
you won't have heard, or felt, unless you get to drive a historic
Formula 1 car. It pokes the SR8 out of Bruntingthorpe's sweeping
corners with enough force to sling your head back, at the same time
kicking and slithering the tail wide in fourth gear and soaring
and shimmying the revs as a set of worn Dunlops picks out the puddles.
On through fifth and then sixth gear, I watch the digital speedo
on the need-to-know dash blinking a magic 160mph before the end
of the runway heaves into view.
It is a gait that finally proves too much for the front undertray,
which mimics the back and tears itself from its mountings, but not
before the car has lapped a second shy of the turbo version's best
on a dry road. The time comes almost exclusively from the engine,
which provides a huge amount of excitement with an absolute minimum
of individual drama. You don't have to pump at the gearlever and
see how many of the shift lights you can illuminate - you can leave
it in the gear above and ride the wide power-band, leaving you free
to drive. The true sign of a good engine. So far, it has been reliable,
too. In 100 hours of testing on dyno and rolling road, there have
been no serious problems.
A definitive test will have to wait. But Radical has ambitious plans
for both car and engine, including a doubled-up version of the 1500cc
Hayabusa, said to be capable of 450bhp. Meanwhile expect to see
more of the 2.6 - it may have a similar effect on the low-volume
market as the Rover K-Series. Ubiquitous, but more exciting.
Mark Hales
SPECIFICATION:
| Engine |
72 Deg V8, 2599cc |
| Max Power |
383bhp @ 10,000rpm |
| Max Torque |
207lb ft @ 6800rpm |
| Top Speed |
170mph+ |
| 0-60mph |
n/a |
| Price |
£58,515.00 |
| On Sale |
Now |
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| Evo Rating |
***** |
| + |
Light, high-revving, very hardcore |
| - |
Still more work needed on aerodynamicst |
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