Project One will use the same hybrid powertrain as the current, all-conquering Mercedes F1 car, with some necessary alterations. Following a teaser glimpse during CES, Mercedes has also released the first official image of the car, which clearly shows a roof-mounted central air intake, large vents and cooling slats on the rear, and an ultra-wide rear track. It will also feature a central fin, which promises unprecedented aerodynamic downforce on a road car.
Fascinatingly, the new AMG elevates high-end, high-performance cars to a level above even the likes of the McLaren P1, LaFerrari, Porsche 918, and Bugatti Chiron. As well as vying for supremacy on the world’s race tracks, Mercedes and Red Bull are now also locked in a battle to deliver the most authentic F1-influenced road car, Project One going head-to-head with the Adrian Newey-designed, Aston Martin-designed AM-RB001 that was announced last summer. There are major differences, though, as AMG boss Tobias Moers told TG.com when we caught up with him during the Detroit show for an exclusive progress update. The Aston-Red Bull car is stunning, I noted, but I can’t see how they can achieve the aero they’re chasing while packaging a normally aspirated V12 in that body. “Me neither,” Moers says with a sly smile. So when and why was the decision made to embark on Project One?
“Five years ago the brand was not capable of doing [a hypercar]. Now we are,” Moers says (AMG sold 99,235 cars in 2016, and has tripled its volume in three years). “It was very clear to us that it could not be a V8 or V12 hybrid car. It should be something really special. Who else, other than us, could try to bring a Formula One engine to the street? I called Andy [Cowell, MD of Mercedes High Performance Powertrains] and said, ‘have a think about it. Can you do it?’ He said, ‘give me two months’. He came back and said, ‘yep, we can do it.’
“The feasibility study started at the end of October 2015, and that lasted until the end of February last year. Then we had a clear understanding of how we could achieve it. Where are we up to? The exterior design is frozen. We’re currently finalising the interior. We fired up the first engine last year.”
We’ve taken what we’ve learned on the Black Series cars and the GT R and applied that to the F1 endurance simulation
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