Automotive

Donkervoort releases "the world's first 2G production supercar"

Donkervoort releases "the world's first 2G production supercar"
Dutch company Donkervoort has released its fastest car ever – and the hardest-cornering production street car on the market
Dutch company Donkervoort has released its fastest car ever – and the hardest-cornering production street car on the market
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Moving to a side exhaust has given Donkervoort space to beef up the underbody diffusers for some 80kg more downforce at speed
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Moving to a side exhaust has given Donkervoort space to beef up the underbody diffusers
New louvres behind the front wheels add another 50 kg of downforce
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New louvres behind the front wheels add another 50 kg of downforce
If you're spending that much, you're definitely hoping the doors go up
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If you're spending that much, you're definitely hoping the doors go up
Carbon seats
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Carbon seats
Quick-release steering wheel
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Quick-release steering wheel
No infotainment touchscreen here, it's basic gauges all round
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No infotainment touchscreen here, it's basic gauges all round
Tarox 6-piston brakes on wavy discs and super-grippy tires
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Tarox 6-piston brakes on wavy discs and super-grippy tires
Long and low, like a sandal on wheels
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Long and low, like a sandal on wheels
Nankang AR-1 tires
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Nankang AR-1 tires
Intrax 3-way adjustable dampers
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Intrax 3-way adjustable dampers
The back end is all business
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The back end is all business
The 2.5-liter, 5-cylinder Audi motor is now tuned for 415 horsepower
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The 2.5-liter, 5-cylinder Audi motor is now tuned for 415 horsepower
A street car with 2 g of lateral acceleration ... That's a lot
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A street car with 2 g of lateral acceleration ... That's a lot
Weighing just 680 kg (1500 lb), this thing is a weapon in the corners and no slouch in a straight line
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Weighing just 680 kg (1500 lb), this thing is a weapon in the corners and no slouch in a straight line
Dutch company Donkervoort has released its fastest car ever – and the hardest-cornering production street car on the market
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Dutch company Donkervoort has released its fastest car ever – and the hardest-cornering production street car on the market
View gallery - 15 images

That's 2 g, as in you can wrench the steering wheel sideways at speed and the new D8 GTO JD70 will grip the road so hard it'll smoosh your face against the side windows with twice the force of gravity. It's also the most powerful Donker ever made.

This Dutch company has been building super-lightweight, road-registrable track destroyers since the late 1970s. The D8 series has been around since 1992, and proved itself the baddest street car on the planet in 2004 when it demolished the Nurburgring Nordschliefe lap record by a very comprehensive 15 seconds, putting in a 7:14-second lap that's still nothing to sneeze at.

The new JD70 version squeezes 415 horsepower out of its 2.5-liter, five-cylinder Audi engine, which is a healthy amount of power for a regular family SUV, but an avalanche of thrust when stuffed into a 680-kg (1,500-lb), carbon-bodied shoebox like this. It'll hit 100 km/h (62 mph) from a standing start in 2.7 seconds, or 200 km/h (124 mph) in 7.7 seconds, peaking at a maximum of 1.2 g of rear-wheel-drive acceleration on the way to a limited top speed of 280 km/h (174 mph).

Weighing just 680 kg (1500 lb), this thing is a weapon in the corners and no slouch in a straight line
Weighing just 680 kg (1500 lb), this thing is a weapon in the corners and no slouch in a straight line

Top speed, of course, is not the point. Out-cornering all other street cars by a significant margin is the point. To put the JD70's 2 g of lateral acceleration in context, you might want to take a look at this list of the top 100 "Grip Kings" around a skidpad. The Porsche 911 GT3 RS is on top, measuring at 1.24 g.

So 2 g is a lot. We're not talking a lot in terms of race cars; F1 car drivers are beefing up their neck muscles to deal with loads up to 6.5 g these days. But for a road car it's absolutely savage. Donkervoort achieves this level of grip using ultra-lightweight power steering, upgraded double-wishbone coil-spring suspension with Intrax adjustable damping, and Nankang AR-1 tires: 245/40s on the rear and 235/45s hanging out semi-open at the front.

Downforce plays a key role too, despite the lack of a fat back wing, which Donkervoort says would cause unacceptable drag at high speed. By moving to a side-mounted exhaust, the team has freed up some space at the back of the car, and it's used that space to beef up the carbon underbody diffusers for an extra 80 kg (176 lb) of downforce at speed. Then, there's new carbon louvres behind the front wheels, which squeeze an extra 50 kg (110 lb) of downforce out of the front end as well.

New louvres behind the front wheels add another 50 kg of downforce
New louvres behind the front wheels add another 50 kg of downforce

Despite the JD70's light weight, the chassis isn't a carbon monocoque. Indeed, it uses a few steel tubes, as well as carbon and aluminum. Brakes are Tarox six-piston jobs on wavy discs, and there's traction control and optional Bosch race ABS as well as a Tremec 5-speed manual gearbox with rev-matching on the downshifts.

Access to this kind of cornering madness is not cheap. At a base price of €198,000 (US$223,000), you're paying more than four times the retail on an Ariel Atom 4 and getting well up past the kind of toy budget most of us could get past the accountant. Still, you can pay a ton more for supercars that this thing would happily leave behind in the tight stuff, and with the horsepower war getting into frankly silly numbers in recent years we could definitely get behind cornering g-loads as a new thing for car companies to fight each other over.

Check out a video below, in which the JD70 does very little in the way of high-g cornering.

Donkervoort D8 GTO-JD70 // The First 2G Super Sports Car

Source: Donkervoort

View gallery - 15 images
7 comments
7 comments
guzmanchinky
Incredible engineering, but it would be a brave person indeed who shells out that much for something that ugly.
nick101
Kind of looks like a Lotus-7, but an original Lotus-7 or a Caterham Lotus-7 is way cooler, and way cheaper, and you can pretend you're the 'New Number 6'!
MemoriaTechnica
Love-or-hate looks aside; I'd drive the piss out of it if somebody handed me the keys to one...
WB
the new tesla roadster will outperform this toy in acceleration and cornering with spacex thrusters... looks less strange and is more usable and costs roughly the same
The deerhunter
Yes WB. And we won't even compare the fuel bills if you drive it every day and have solar panels o the roof at home. (For those on a budget)
Martin Hone
Cannot see how pressing a few louvres into the front guards can provide any downforce, much less 15 kg worth. Any explanation ?
ljaques
Wow, olive drab AND a racing stripe? Highly unique. Adore the thought of 2G cornering. My old '70 Javelin felt like that in the curves. (WB, you made my day with your post. LOL)