Dan Neil/The Wall Street Journal 帕加尼風神
帕 加
尼汽車公司(Pagani Automobili)有點奇怪,,它位于意大利超級跑車之鄉(xiāng)摩德納(Modena)的Via
dell'Artigianato大街(如果我沒理解錯,意思應該是“工藝之街”),,規(guī)模只有捷飛絡(Jiffy
Lube)汽車快速保養(yǎng)連鎖服務店那么大,。我在帕加尼的工場呆了兩天,看到的人加起來不超過20個:有負責媒體宣傳的盧卡(Luca),,幾個前臺人員,,幾
名工人,幾個小孩,,還有就是經(jīng)常穿著尖得能踢死人的米蘭高跟鞋啪嗒啪嗒地走過打蠟地板的帕加尼太太(Mrs.
Pagani),。公司其他的人都上哪兒去了?
Dan Neil/The Wall Street Journal 圖片:天價杰作帕加尼Huayra 其
他的人其實只有一個,,那就是奧拉西歐·帕加尼(Horacio
Pagani),,一位56歲、性情溫和的阿根廷設計師,、碳復合材料專家以及某領域的學者,,至于是哪種領域,恕我實在是描述不出來,。事實上,,我倒是想跟臨床
神經(jīng)學家好好談談帕加尼這個案例:他沒有接受過空氣動力學和工程學的正規(guī)教育,是一個不會說英語的歐洲商人,,一個不知道PDF為何物的設計師,,卻能憑空設
計出一款名為“帕加尼風神”(Pagani
Huayra)的售價120萬美元的鷗翼超級跑車,,一臺彷佛從漫畫書中走出來的表現(xiàn)驚人的藝術(shù)杰作,一架飛行高度為零的空中戰(zhàn)機,。它從靜止到時速225英
里(362公里)的加速過程,,是我從未在其他任何一輛車上體驗過的。
如果允許我舊詞新用的話,,風神(Huayra的發(fā)音為WHY-ra,,意指“安第斯風之神”)堪稱是一款“氣墊汽車”(aeromobile)。
帕
加尼作品的大名對粉絲來說可謂如雷貫耳,。他設計的第一臺跑車“風之子”(Zonda)一戰(zhàn)成名,,該車搭載手工打造的奔馳(Mercedes-
Benz)AMG V12中置發(fā)動機,利用碳纖維,、鈦金屬和鋁合金制造出超輕車身,。最終版的“風之子”R
Evolution配備7.3升發(fā)動機,馬力高達800匹,,公司一直將其作為一款俱樂部賽車,,最近在21公里的紐博格林(Nurburgring)賽道上
跑出6分47秒的驚人成績,比法拉利Enzo賽車還要快37秒,。
Dan Neil/The Wall Street Journal 與
“風之子”相比,,“風神”是另一種猛獸。它重約3,100磅(1.4噸),,馬力700+,,扭矩737磅英尺(約1000牛頓米),從靜止加速到每小時
186英里(約300公里)只需18秒左右,。讓人著迷的是兩款車之間的美學跨越,。“風之子”看上去就像一臺法國勒芒(Le
Mans)賽道上的原型賽車的居家版,,一位束著碳纖維緊身內(nèi)衣的耀眼交際花,,車身線條就像刺客手中致命的鋼琴線,狂野不羈而不是美麗動人,?!帮L神”則外形
優(yōu)美和諧、雕塑感十足,、光彩奪目,、具有風精靈一般的氣質(zhì)。然而,,外在的視覺盛宴并沒有損及“風神”的任何內(nèi)在機械品質(zhì),,也沒有給時速200英里(322公
里)的技術(shù)要求帶來任何不利影響。很顯然,“風神”的外型幾乎是從帕加尼的腦袋里直接蹦出來的,,增之一分則多,減之一分則少,。
1983
年,,帕加尼來到意大利,在蘭博基尼汽車公司(Lamborghini)當技師,,他十分崇拜達芬奇(Leonardo da
Vinci),。當然,達芬奇的優(yōu)勢在于他知道自己設計的直升機不可能被造出來,,至少有生之年不可能去駕駛它,;但帕加尼不同,他得讓自己設計的閃亮汽車通過
美國交通部(U.S. Department of Transportation)的審核,。
你要知道,,我見過許多百萬美元級的手工打造
的超級跑車,見識過V12發(fā)動機的全力爆發(fā),,聽過雙渦輪引擎的超音速嘶吼,,見過整齊劃一排列的激光刻字鈦金屬螺栓,見過碳化鈦底盤結(jié)構(gòu),、鍍金鋁合金推桿懸
架臂,、黑姆阻燃聚酯纖維接頭的鉻鉬合金發(fā)動機托架,以及如鐘表制作般一絲不茍的精密機械加工,。布加迪EB110 (Bugatti
EB110),、科尼賽克(Koenigsegg)、世爵(Spyker)等超級跑車,,我都領略過其風采,。
然而,所有這些汽車都無法達到
“風神”的高度,。聽聽這個:通過由四臺電腦控制的電子驅(qū)動飛行控制界面──即位于汽車后緣,、楔形車鼻以及前輪罩之間的升降機──“風神”能實現(xiàn)氣動自平穩(wěn)
功能。各控制界面可獨立運行,,也可協(xié)同配合,,迎角可變,前側(cè)可達20度,,后側(cè)可達40度,,動態(tài)調(diào)整汽車的空氣動力平衡,減少前后顛簸,、左右搖晃,、頭尾擺動
和高速豎起等異動現(xiàn)象。
這意味著什么?也就是說,,當你在意大利鄉(xiāng)間像逃竄的銀行劫匪一樣開車狂奔時,,“風神”的渦輪排氣控制閥全力咆哮,
震耳欲聾的氣門爆炸聲好似天使在空中相撞,,但車子彷佛被一根看不見的靈巧手指牢牢按在地面上,,毫無顛簸之感。你急速上山,,來到一個角度很大的右彎,,頻點剎
車,緊握方向盤,,減速通過,,此時右側(cè)平衡器開始工作,給車身右側(cè)的Pirellis寬幅輪胎施加更多的下壓力,。給油,,呼嘯……非常好,1.5G的側(cè)向加速
度完美呈現(xiàn),。當車身擺正,,速度提升,方向盤自動矯正以減少拖拽偏移,。這輛車兇猛異常,,能帶來如勒芒賽道般真實的賽車感受,讓我的脖子緊張得都幾乎僵硬,。
此外,,“風神”有一個液壓啟動的動態(tài)車身高度調(diào)節(jié)系統(tǒng),能在急剎車時抬高車子前端,,減少重量轉(zhuǎn)移的影響,,給前翼子板帶來更多的懸置空間以增加下壓力。
當
然,,我還有很多問題不明白,。飛行控制CPU、緊急啟動裝置和前端車身調(diào)節(jié)器等系統(tǒng)能否及時處理來自汽車加速表,、傳感器和平衡程序的各種信號,?氣動調(diào)節(jié)裝置
在時速50-175英里(80-282公里)的區(qū)間運行,此時一切都在瞬間發(fā)生,,系統(tǒng)的一點點滯后都可能導致汽車失去平衡,。是誰寫的程序算法,是否經(jīng)過嚴
格徹底的檢驗,?搭載氣動調(diào)整裝置就其復雜性和重量因素而言是否值得,?為證明“風神”沒有夸大其辭,,我需要大量的實驗數(shù)據(jù),并在法國藍色海岸(Cote
d'Azur)至少呆上一個月潛心研究,。
帕加尼說,,“風神”的原型車目前即將完成100萬公里的測試和驗證周期,計劃于2013年中在美國上市,。
讓我們假設這輛車的性能一如廣告宣傳所述,,那么這意味著兩個客觀可能性:一、“風神”是汽車近代歷史上最偉大的創(chuàng)新之舉,,應該寫進認知科學的教科書中;二,、“風神”是一個溝通方面的杰作,。
不
管怎么說,帕加尼并非獨自一個人完成“風神”的設計工作,。發(fā)動機和液壓成型的MHG
Fahrzeugtechnik鈦合金排氣裝置在德國制造,,七速橫置單碟Xtrac手自一體雙離合器變速箱在英國制造,除底盤和車身以外,,幾乎每一個零部
件都來自于摩德納100公里以內(nèi)的供應商,,如阿維昂納爾鋁合金(Avional)鍛造而成的懸架搖臂,外型奇特如同單簧管的合金氣候模式切換裝置,,定制的
Pirellis輪胎,,座位間的銑削鋁合金序列變速門等。帕加尼對這些零部件供應商的依賴度非常高,。
Dan Neil/The Wall Street Journal 帕加尼風神局部 不
過,,帕加尼連電子郵件都不太愛用,而是要求跟供應商和習慣用鼠標的工程師們直接面對面?zhèn)鬟_自己的想法,,他的有些主意看起來一定很不尋常,,甚至有些奇怪,比
如橢圓形的Pagani商標在車內(nèi)各個細部呈現(xiàn)和再呈現(xiàn)的方式,,懷舊式未來科幻感的古怪儀表盤,,看起來就像是從電影《飛俠哥頓》(Flash
Gordon)中邪惡角色“無情的明”(Ming the Merciless)的超級摩托艇上直接搬過來的。
不過,,最終打造出的“風神”如此獨一無二,,如此魅力十足,如此特立獨行,,帕加尼已經(jīng)不像是在設計一臺車,,而像是在導演一部令人浮想聯(lián)翩的電影。
要造出這樣一臺車,,似乎需要一支龐大的軍隊,;但你環(huán)顧四周,,看到的只有帕加尼本人。
帕加尼“風神”
價格:120萬美元
動力系統(tǒng):中置,、雙渦輪增壓,、中冷、干油池式潤滑系統(tǒng),、48閥,、6.0升、汽缸夾角60度,、配備可變凸輪軸相位正時系統(tǒng)的V12引擎,,帶翹板變速開關和序列變速門的7速橫置單碟手自一體變速箱,帶限滑差速器的后輪式驅(qū)動,。
馬力/扭矩:馬力700+ / 扭矩737磅英尺(約1,000牛頓米)
長度/重量:長181.2英寸(4.6米)/ 重3,100磅(1.4噸)
軸距:110.0英寸(2.794米)
0加速至60英里/小時(96公里/小時):3秒(估計值)
0加速至186英里/小時(300公里/小時):18秒(估計值)
極速:225英里/小時(362公里/小時)(估計值)
美國環(huán)境保護署(EPA)燃油經(jīng)濟性:10/14(百公里油耗約23.5升/16.8升)(估計值)
后備箱容積:3立方英尺(合0.085立方米)(估計值)
Gear & Gadgets: Pagani Huayra: If Da Vinci Made A Sports CarSomething strange is going on at Pagani Automobili. This is an outfit
about the size of a Jiffy Lube, doing business on the Via
dell'Artigianato -- 'the street of artisanal craftsmanship,' if I parse
it right -- in Modena, the heart of Italian supercar country. In my two
days at atelier Pagani, I did not see 20 souls. There's Luca, the press
guy; a couple of receptionists; a few workers here, a couple of sons
there; and Mrs. Pagani, who clicks across the polished floors in
Milanese death heels. Where the hell is everybody?
Everybody
else turns out to be one guy, Horacio Pagani, a mild, 56-year-old
Argentinian designer, carbon composites expert and savant of some kind,
though I'm at a loss to say which kind. In fact, I would like to discuss
Mr. Pagani's case with a clinical neuroscientist. Here is a man who,
without benefit of formal education in aerodynamics or engineering -- a
European businessman who doesn't speak English, a designer who can't
tell you what a PDF is -- has managed to pluck from the naked air of his
intellect this thing called the Pagani Huayra, a gull-winged, $1.2
million hypercar, a painterly masterpiece with comic book performance, a
zero-altitude fighter jet and about the most radical way to get from
Point A to 225 mph I've ever driven.
The Huayra (pronounced
WHY-ra, the name recalling an Andean wind spirit) is -- if I may
rehabilitate an old word -- an aeromobile.
Mr. Pagani's
work is well known to enthusiasts. His first car, the Zonda, set the
template, with a hand-built Mercedes-Benz AMG V12 situated amidships and
extreme weight savings driven by the use of carbon fiber, titanium and
aluminum. The final version of the Zonda, the 7.3-liter, 800-hp R
Evolution, which the company continues to build as a club racer,
recently lapped the 21-kilometer Nurburgring in 6:47 minutes (for
reference, 37 seconds faster than a Ferrari Enzo).
The
Huayra (about 3,100 pounds, 700+ hp, 737 pound-feet of torque, 0-186 mph
in about 18 seconds) is a very different creature, and among the things
I think are of neuroscientific interest is the leap in aesthetics
between the two cars. The Zonda looks like what it is, a domesticated Le
Mans prototype, a hard-eyed courtesan in a carbon-fiber corset laced
with an assassin's piano wire. Badass, not pretty. The Huayra is
beautiful, sculptural, harmonious, enlightened, as elemental as the air
for which it is named. Nothing upon which the eye may feast is
sacrificed to machine logic or the technical demands of 200-mph speeds.
And, apparently, the shape of the Huayra fell out of Mr. Pagani's head
almost fully formed. Mr. Pagani, who came to Italy in 1983 to
work as a technician for Lamborghini, idolizes Leonardo da Vinci. Yeah,
well, Leonardo had the advantage of knowing his helicopter would never
be built. At least he knew he wasn't going to fly it. Mr. Pagani, by
contrast, has to get his shimmering vision of a car past the U.S.
Department of Transportation. I want you to know I've seen a
lot of million-dollar artisanal hypercars. I've seen massively overblown
V12 engines before, heard the supersonic yelps of twin turbos in
perdition. I've seen laser-etched monogrammed titanium bolts all torqued
to face the same precise direction; I've seen carbon-titanium
monocoques, gold-anodized aluminum pushrod suspension links, chrome-moly
subframes with titanium heim-joints and obsessive, horological displays
of precision machining. Seen it. Bugatti EB110, Koenigsegg, Spyker, to
name a few. None of those cars does what this car does. Get
this: By virtue of four computer-controlled, electrically actuated
flight control surfaces -- elevators at the trailing edge of the car and
ailerons in the nose, between the front wheel wells -- the Huayra
aero-stabilizes. The control surfaces, acting independently or together
with a variable angle of attack of up to 20 degrees (front) and 40
degrees (rear), move the car's center of aerodynamic balance around to
compensate for the forces of pitch, roll, yaw and high-speed lift. What
does that mean? It means that when you're ripping around the Italian
countryside like a fleeing bank robber, with the Huayra's turbo
wastegates exploding, tearing the veil with the sound of angels having a
mid-air collision, there is somehow a deft, invisible finger holding
the car to the pavement. You come up hard to a tight right corner,
heading uphill. Brush the brakes and set the wheel and throttle. The
right-side aileron and stabilizer deploy, squeezing more downforce onto
the right-side, foot-wide Pirellis. Add gas. Huhhhh-h-h-h. . . . That's a
nice, tidy 1.5-g cornering right there. As the car straightens out and
gains speed, the airfoils automatically trim out to reduce drag. This
car generates real, live, Le Mans-quality ground effects, and it is
ferocious. My neck may never walk again. Additionally, the
Huayra has a hydraulically actuated, dynamic front ride-height system
that raises the nose of the car during extreme braking, compensating for
the weight transfer and giving the front wings more range of suspension
travel through which to exert downforce. Of course, I have
many questions. How fast can these systems -- the flight-control CPU and
actuators, the active front ride-height -- react to the welter of
signals coming in from the car's various accelerometers, sensors and
stability programming? The active aero works in a range between 50-175
mph, where things happen pretty fast. Even a small degree of system
hysteresis -- lag, in other words -- could potentially unbalance the
car. Who wrote these algorithms and how thoroughly have they been
tested? Is the dynamic aero hardware worth its cost in complication and
weight? In order to verify the Huayra's claims, I would need a lot of
instrumented data and at least a month in the Cote d'Azur. Mr.
Pagani says that Huayra prototypes are currently wrapping up a
million-kilometer testing and validation cycle before the car comes to
the U.S. midyear, 2013. But let's assume it all works as
advertised. That presents two clinical possibilities: One, the Huayra is
the greatest feat of intuitive engineering in the recent history of
automobiles and it should be written up in some textbook of cognitive
science. Or else it represents a masterpiece of communication. After
all, Mr. Pagani did not design this car alone. The engine and
hydroformed titanium exhaust (MHG Fahrzeugtechnik) are built in Germany,
the gearbox (transverse-mounted, single-clutch, seven-speed Xtrac
automated manual) is built in Britain. Outside of the carbon chassis and
body panels, virtually every piece of the car -- from the forged
Avional suspension rockers to the crazy, clarinet-like alloy climate
switches; from the custom-built Pirellis to the exposed, milled-aluminum
sequential shiftgate between the seats -- comes from suppliers within
about 100 kilometers of Modena, and Mr. Pagani has leaned on them
heavily. Still, Mr. Pagani, who is not even comfortable with
email, had to convey exactly what he wanted to his suppliers and his
mouse-wielding engineers, and some of his ideas must have seemed
unusual, even odd. Note the way the thin ellipsoid of the Pagani logo is
stated and re-stated in the cabin details, leading to the curious
retro-sci-fi instrument panel, which looks like it was pried off of Ming
The Merciless's jet ski. And yet, the resulting car is so
singular, so charismatic, so uncompromised, it seems less about Mr.
Pagani's draftsmanship than his ability to direct and inspire. It should have taken an army to build this car. But when you look around, all you see is the man himself.
PAGANI HUAYRA Price, as tested: $1.2 million Powertrain:
mid-mounted twin-turbocharged, inter-cooled, dry-sump, 48-valve,
6.0-liter, 60-degree V12 with variable cam phasing; transverse-mounted,
single-clutch seven-speed automated manual transmission with paddle
shifters and sequential shift gate; rear wheel drive with limited slip
differential. Horsepower/torque: 700+ hp/737 pound-feet Length/weight: 181.2 inches/3,100 pounds Wheelbase: 110.0 inches 0-60 mph: 3 seconds (est.) 0-186 mph: 18 seconds (est.) Top speed: 225 mph (est.) EPA fuel economy: 10/14 (est.) Cargo capacity: 3 cubic feet (est.)
Dan Neil
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