Automotive

In photos: Supercars and sports cars scorch the floor of Frankfurt

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The Aspark Owl is on show at the Frankfurt Motor Show 
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The Lamborghini Aventador S Roadster has rear-wheel steering 
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The Aventador S Roadster is powered by a naturally-aspirated V12 engine
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The low, carbon splitter on the Aventador S Roadster 
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The Aventador S Roadster is meant to be a meaner, faster bull with rear-wheel steering
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The Huracan Performante bends the air with a clever active aerodynamics system 
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The Lamborghini Huracan Performante is the most track-focused Huracan yet
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The Aventador S Roadster doesn't struggle for presence 
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Hyundai is pushing its World Rally Championship program hard
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This isn't your average Hyundai i20 
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This Hyundai i30N competed at the Nurburgring 
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A throughly battered Hyundai i30 N development car
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The N is the hottest Hyundai hatch to be created 
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Audi is known for creating subtle cars, but this R8 V10 Plus is anything but
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The rear of the incredible Mercedes-AMG Project One 
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The AMG Project One is a proper F1 car for the road
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The Project One is powered by a Formula 1 powertrain 
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The fin on the rear of the Project One is another F1-inspired touch 
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The Project One has four electric motors on board 
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The nose of the Project One is low and wide 
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Up close and personal with the Mercedes-AMG Project One
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The turbocharged Ferrari 488 GTB 
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The Ferrari Portofino is a bit more special than the average "entry-level" car 
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The Portofino replaces the California 
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Ferrari has slotted a twin-turbo V8 into the Portofino's nose 
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The Maserati GranTurismo MC
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Inside the Maserati GranCabrio Sport
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The interior of the Maserati GranCabrio Sport is comically outdated, but it's very pretty
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Maserati is sticking with its naturally aspirated V8 in the GranCabrio
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The Maserati GranTurismo MC 
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The Maserati Levante is designed to take the Italian flair of the Maserati brand 
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Maserati knows how to do a slinky four-door 
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Ford celebrates its legendary Le Mans wins with the new GT '67 Heritage special edition 
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The Ford GT has finally been put into production, but it still looks like a concept car
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The Ford GT '67 Heritage looks brilliant in photos, but it's something else in person
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The Jaguar F-Type SVR looks mean in frozen silver
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The F-Type SVR will hit 200 mph
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The F-Type SVR has a fixed rear wing
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The silver blade on the nose of the Megane RS is designed to evoke Formula 1
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The chequered flag motif on the nose of the Megane RS is popping up across the performance Renault range 
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The new Renault Megane RS will be offered with a dual-clutch gearbox 
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Renault has still managed to squeeze its central exhaust onto the new Megane RS 
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The RoboRace car looks like a wheeled dog-bone 
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The Megane RS is powered by a 1.8-liter turbo engine 
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RoboRace will be supporting Formula E 
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Aspark is making some pretty impressive claims about the Owl 
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The Aspark Owl will hit 100 km/h in under two seconds 
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The Owl comes from a relatively unknown Japanese brand
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The Owl certainly doesn't lack for presence, with those wide lights and big wing 
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The Aspark Owl is powered by a clever electric powertrain
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The Aspark Owl is just a prototype at the moment 
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The Aspark Owl is on show at the Frankfurt Motor Show 
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Small McLaren or big box?
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The Acura NSX GT3 looks meaner than the road car, complete with that giant rear wing 
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The NSX GT3 isn't a hybrid, but it should be very, very fast
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The rear diffuser on the Acura NSX GT3 looks like it could cut people off at the ankles 
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The Mercedes-AMG Project One 
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Mercedes-AMG has its full range on show in Frankfurt 
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Mercedes has seen some brilliant success in F1 recently, and now it wants to transition that experience to the road 
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Mercedes has led the F1 pack since the new FIA regulations regarding turbo-V6 and electric powertrains came in
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Mercedes is pulling out of DTM to focus on Formula E shortly 
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The Mercedes-AMG Project One has more than 1,000 hp
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There were some classics on show at Frankfurt, too 
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A look at just how much supercar interiors have changed 
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This is the Bugatti Chiron that hit 400 km/h and stopped dead in just 42 seconds 
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The Chiron went from 0-400-0 km/h in just 42 seconds 
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Bugatti celebrates its 0-400-0 km/h record at IAA 2017
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The star of the show was undoubtedly the Mercedes-AMG Project One
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The Project One has a low, wide nose 
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After much teasing, the Mercedes-AMG Project One was fully revealed in Frankfurt 
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There's no doubt the Project One has plenty of presence 
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The Mercedes-AMG Project One 
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McLaren had a serious presence at the Frankfurt Motor Show 
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The Frankfurt Motor Show played host to the McLaren 720S 
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The McLaren 570S looks like a scaled-down Super Series car 
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The McLaren 570GT is a softer take on the McLaren formula 
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The 570GT has a glass hatch where the 570S has an engine cover 
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The McLaren 570GT on show in Frankfurt 
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The Porsche 911 GT3 with Touring Package is a pared-back version of the full-motorsport GT3
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The GT3 with Touring Package has a six-speed manual 
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The GT3 with Touring Package has no rear wing 
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The Porsche GT2 RS is mean, lean and ready to live up to the widowmaker name 
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the GT2 RS is a seriously lean, mean 911 
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Inside the Porsche 911 GT2 RS 
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The Skoda Fabia WRC car 
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Skoda is pumping up its little hatchbacks for a tilt at rally glory
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The new Bentley Continental GT on show in Frankfurt 
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The new Continental GT is a luxurious, powerful GT like its predecessor 
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The new Bentley Continental GT on show in Frankfurt 
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The rear of the new Continental GT was clearly inspired by the EXP-10 concept 
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The oval motif is strong on the rear of the Bentley Continental GT 
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Audi has turned to rear-wheel drive in the R8 V10 RWS 
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The R8 V10 RWS is a new type of supercar for Audi 
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The naturally aspirated V10 in the R8 RWS 
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Behind the wheel of the Audi R8 V10 RWS
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View gallery - 94 images

We've taken a walk through some of the incredible concept cars launched in Frankfurt this year, but the madness doesn't stop there. Sports car manufacturers used the show to prove just how far hybrid technology has come as a way to lessen emissions and maximize power. From the Mercedes-AMG Project One to the neat-and-tidy 911 GT3 with Touring Package, here are the best sports cars from the Frankfurt Motor Show.

Mercedes-AMG Project One

The Mercedes-AMG Project One 
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This is an F1 car for the road, pure and simple. It's been described as the "most ambitious project" ever undertaken by AMG and looks unlike anything else we've seen from the team in Affalterbach.

Power comes from a hybrid powertrain, directly derived from that in the highly successful Mercedes F1 cars of the past few seasons. Internal combustion power comes from a 1600cc turbocharged six-cylinder, and there are four electric motors hidden under the body as well: a 90 kW unit integrated into the turbo, a 120 kW motor linked to the crankcase and two motors on the front axle. Pure electric range is 25 km (15.5 mi).

Total system output is north of 1,000 hp (740 kW), for a top speed in excess of 217 mph (350 km/h). Mercedes-AMG hasn't provided a 62 mph (100 km/h) sprint time, but we know the car will hit 124 mph (200 km/h) in less than six seconds.

Aspark Owl

Aspark is making some pretty impressive claims about the Owl 
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You probably haven't heard of Aspark – we certainly hadn't – but the company certainly turned some heads with the Owl at the Frankfurt Show. It's a prototype at the moment, but Aspark says it will hit 62 mph (100 km/h) in less than two seconds, and carry on to 174 mph (280 km/h). Hang on tight, kids, you're going to feel that.

Beyond the headline figures, details about the Owl are difficult to come by. We've reached out to the company for more details, so stay tuned for a deeper dive. In the meantime, we can tell you the car weighs around 1,900 lb (862 kg) and outputs 429 hp (320 kW). A report from Autoblog says the car stores power in capacitors for quicker discharge, helping deliver that neck-snapping acceleration.

Since the slick-looking Owl is still a prototype, we're taking the bold performance claims with a grain of salt. But if the car does make production, there will be a few nervous executives over at Rimac and NIO ...

Porsche 911 GT3 with Touring Package

The GT3 with Touring Package has no rear wing 
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Another year, another Porsche 911 to drool over. We know, it gets tiring. But the GT3 with Touring Package stands out among the ever-growing crowd of rear-engined racers from Stuttgart because it so elegantly blends outright performance with the kind of pared-back driver focus for which Porsche is famous.

Power comes from the same four-liter flat-six you get in the regular (991.2-generation) 911 GT3, but the car is only available with a six-speed manual gearbox. That's right, no double-clutch here. Gone is the towering rear wing from the standard car, and all the gloss black trim designed to signify the performance potential on the outside of the car is trimmed in shiny chrome. It's like a 911 R, but without the limited build run and sky-high prices.

Obviously, this is just a taste of what was on show in Frankfurt. Take a flick through our gallery for the full set of sports cars from the 2017 Frankfurt Motor Show, and check out the best concepts from the show once you're done.

View gallery - 94 images
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1 comment
guzmanchinky
Someday we will all be in self driving pods. Sportscars will be something we drive in VR.