Automotive

1,000-hp Nilu hypercar screams a love song to purists at 11,000 rpm

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The Nilu in all its glory
Nilu27
The Nilu in all its glory
Nilu27
The Nilu's gullwing doors look like it could take flight at any moment
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The Nilu gives off Speed Racer's Mach 5 vibes from this angle
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I'm not entirely sure if I've ever seen a better looking car profile than this one. The white Michelin lettering really makes it pop
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The Nilu's open air rear not only looks angry, but it shows off how pretty the double wishbone pushrod suspension setup is
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The Nilu looks a little odd in top-down Matchbox-car view
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Nilu27's newest addition to hypercars
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Those venturis are massive on the Nilu
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Sticky Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubbers on each corner
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It's hard to tell if the Nilu is smiling or grimacing. Either way, it looks good
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We can't wait to see what kind of speeds this thing is capable of
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The vent in front of the rear wheel has Testarossa vibes
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The Nilu looks like it can't be much taller than the GT40
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The gullwing doors perfectly match the design of the car
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The Nilu looks very much like it could be a full scale Hot Wheels future concept car from the 80s
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Every component, from the centerlock wheels, to the big Brembo caliper peeking out, to the carbon ceramic rotor look absolutely dreamy .. and also really hard to keep clean
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The minimalistic interior leaves nothing to be desired, unless you desire comfort or entertainment
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As far as we can tell, neither the seats move nor do the pedals ... meaning you must be the ideal height to ride this ride
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The steering wheel was designedd to be perfectly round for the optimal driving experience
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There are no buttons or knobs on the steering wheel, keeping it free from distraction. The gauges are all analog and big and simple to read so you can focus on the tarmac ahead
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The shifter knob looks slightly out of place compared to the rest of the design, but certainly a forgivable offence
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The reverse lockout switch is absolutely beautiful
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Every switch in the Nilu interior is bespoke, billet aluminum
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No paddle shifters here. Just the raw, old school three-pedal
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"The snakepit" ... 12 cylinders of Hartley magic with a dreadlock of sculpted Inconel exhaust
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The Hartley v12 powerplant mated to the 7 speed manual gearbox
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The 12 into 1 exhaust looks like art and is 3d printed from Inconel
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A closeup of the Hartley power plant with transparent valve covers
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individual throttle bodies adorn each cyclinder as you can see the internals of the Hartley v12
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You can see all the moving parts that are inside the Hartley V12 motor, including the gear driven cams.
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Close up of the valves inside the Hartley V12
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Sasha Selipanov's sketch of the Nilu's exterior
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Sasha Selipanov's sketch of the Nilu's cockpit
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View gallery - 33 images

In an automotive era where safety, sanity, sustainability, and responsible eco-friendliness have taken center stage, enter Nilu27, stage far-right. America's newest V12 hypercar is designed explicitly to have no frills, no digital, no driver aids, and a lot of heavy metal in mind.

The frontman behind the Nilu is Russia's Sasha Selipanov, an automotive visionary with some staggering exterior designs in his portfolio, including the Koenigsegg Gemera, Lamborghini Huracán and Bugatti Chiron.

But as pretty as the Nilu might be, this car may best be defied by what's missing. Selipanov says no to electric motors, to hybrid engines, to batteries and to traction control. No to active wings and suspension. No to stability control, navigation, driving modes, and even no to such feeble luxuries as an AM/FM radio.

We can't wait to see what kind of speeds this thing is capable of
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Instead, he says yes to carbon fiber monocoques, to aluminum subframes, to big analog gauges. Yes to shift gates and to steering wheels without any knobs on them. Yes to the days when reaching up to adjust your side view mirror to see or reaching across to the passenger side to hand crank the window was the only way.

Yes, then, to the raw feel of driving a barely-controllable hypercar as fast as humanly possible – this machine is a viscerally stripped-back appeal to the desires of our lizard brains. Selipanov has designed the most bare-bones work of high-functioning automotive art we've seen in a long time.

The Nilu looks like it can't be much taller than the GT40
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The exhaust, too, looks to be a sculpted work of art rather than merely a "hot-V" port to excise the combustion demons from the fiery belly of that 1,000-horsepower, 6.5L, big-bore, short-stroke, fire-breathing, naturally aspirated 80-degree V12, which was developed exclusively for the Nilu by Hartley Engines.

We'd reckon that'll be adequate to get the 2,645 lb (1,200 kg) chassis up and moving to its restricted top speed of 248 mph (400 kph).

"The snakepit" ... 12 cylinders of Hartley magic with a dreadlock of sculpted Inconel exhaust
Nilu27

Interestingly, the entire exhaust system is 3D-printed in Inconel, a nickel-chromium-based superalloy. On the head, the intake and exhaust have been swapped, allowing Hartley to create the 12-into-1 "snakepit" exhaust headers.

In the Hartley Engines design brief for the powerplant to be bolted into the Nilu, the focus was "be cool as f---", according to Nelson Hartley, founder and CEO. In a world where the exquisite performance engineering of most hypercar engines is wasted ferrying owners from yacht to casino in heavy traffic, "be cool as f---" might be about the most practical design brief you could give.

The Nilu looks a little odd in top-down Matchbox-car view
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One thing that is very much not cool as f--- is hypercar launch videos in which the sound has been overlaid, but sadly that's what the Nilu gets. That's a pity, since the sound promises to be absolutely epic.

Redlining north of 11,000 rpm, it very much sounds like a Formula 1 car in the video – two Formula 1 cars, in fact. If it sounds like that in the flesh, well, we imagine it'll call forth equal measures of joy, admiration, disdain and disgust, depending on which neighborhood it's being driven through, and at what hour.

Either way, it's likely to be the highest-revving street car ever produced that doesn't have Gordon Murray's name on it, and will surely be responsible for just as many squirts of adrenaline and cortisol outside the cabin as within it. Listen – but prepare to be disappointed:

On to practicalities. At each corner of the Nilu are Italian AppTech center lock wheels. 20" up front, 21" on the rear, all shod with sticky Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires. Behind those wheels are big 6-pot Brembo carbon-ceramic slow-downers.

Moving further up will land you at the Nilu's double wishbone, pushrod suspension. Very similar to Formula 1.

This big-horsepower rear-wheel-drive with a 7-speed manual gearbox has all the vibes of an old school muscle car – with a modern rear engine twist. And speaking of twist, the Nilu does have one concession to technology on board: a small screen in the cockpit that functions as a rear-view camera, since you can't see through the rear-mounted engine.

The minimalistic interior leaves nothing to be desired, unless you desire comfort or entertainment
Nilu27

It looks like the kind of car 8-year-old me would have mishmashed out on paper with all the best cues from all my favorite cars and bikes: the Ferrari F40, the McLaren F1, the GT40, Speed Racer's Mach 5, Colin McRae's Subaru STi 22B, the Corvette Stingray (circa 1975, of course), the Ducati 916 SPS... It's a design worthy of being hung proudly on the fridge.

Nilu27 will only produce 54 cars in all (27 is half of 54... I wonder what the significance is?) out of Irvine, CA. The car will make its public debut on August 15th on the ramp at Pebble Beach in Monterey, CA. Don't miss the image gallery on this one, folks, these are some of the best hypercar photos we've seen in a long time.

Rock on!

Source: Nilu27

View gallery - 33 images
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5 comments
RFM
The best looking ridiculously powerful hyper-car to date IMO
WillyDoodle
Just what the world doesn't need, yet another one of these. An affordable EV with decent range is far more of an engineering challenge and one these guys couldn't do in a million years.
Catweazle
Yeah, WD - but it sure ain't boring!
McDesign
The header design - not even close to equal-length primaries? Is that the "look cool" taking precedence over sound engineering?
JS
@McDesign - I'd thought something similar. Then I just guessed that maybe the sheer brute force of the motor made the losses minimal enough to not care. Plus, it sure does look pretty.