The Porsche transmission - attached to the LS3 with an aftermarket adapter plate - is perfectly matched to the task, engaging with ease and without ambiguity, even though the shift lever is a little longer than we’d like (this part is tuned for a balance between feel and effort, so the lever length is the best compromise for the task at hand). The TIG-welded chromemoly tube chassis is likewise about as solid as Drakan could make it. It’s adjustable, so you can tighten it down for track days. The sophisticated pushrod suspension is generally very solid, with only a little whanging over the bigger bumps. It was soft enough to absorb most bumps and potholes, but still stiff enough to allow precise turn-in. The suspension on our car was set up more for a real road, too, which was nice. Accelerating out of a corner, for instance, the rear comes out a little, then the diff locks a little thunkishly, then the car stays right in line as you ease more onto the throttle. You can swing the rear end around - stably and predictably - like some sort of dune buggy or maybe a Porsche rally car. The result is a rather rear-heavy 40/60 weight bias which you feel when you push the car in corners. “All my customers kept asking about a V8 just like their Corvettes or Vipers (which has a V10 but you know what I mean),” Mapleton said. A powertrain like this weighs about 250 pounds more than a typical four-cylinder unit, but it was a tradeoff worth trading off. Most cars like this - Caterhams, Ariel Atoms - have four-cylinder engines, but Drakan customers kept demanding a V8, so that’s what they got. In the Drakan it works out to an amazing 4.7 pounds per hp, good for a claimed, and undoubted, 0-60 time of 3.2 seconds and a top speed of 165 mph. That’s in a car that weighs 1,300 pounds less than the C6 Corvette that shared the same engine. The 6.2-liter GM Performance Parts LS3 E-Rod makes 430 hp and 424 lb-ft of torque. The engine is pretty much amazing in this car. You get used to it quickly and start to really like it after only a short drive. Brakes are unboosted, too, but give similarly excellent feel. Since the steering is completely unboosted, it’s pretty heavy at slow speeds but lightens up once you get underway. The forward seat positioning really makes it feel like a race car. Even though the hip point is about amidships, you feel like you’re sitting farther forward in the Spyder than you do in the Ariel Atom or BAC Mono. Immediately you can tell this is a very well-sorted car. Then just pop the wheel back on, fire the big V8 and you’re off. Mapleton had earlier adjusted the pedals to fit our ungainly leg length (it’s always a good sign when a carmaker asks for your inseam). You remove the steering wheel, step in over the frame, slide down into the seat and - fwooomp! - you’re in place for the six-point belt. Preview: 2020 Ariel Atom 4 arrives with Civic Type R power, $74,750 price tag.After one day in the Drakan (on great roads), we can say it drives every bit as well as its spec sheet promises. The Atom V8 goes on sale early next year, priced at £150,000. at Virginia International Raceway in Alton, Virginia…. The Ariel Atom is a road legal high performance open-wheel car made by the Ariel Motor Company based in Crewkerne, Somerset, England, and under license in North America by TMI Autotech, Inc. Street-legal open-wheel cars, such as the Ariel Atom, are very scarce as they are often impractical for everyday use…. Open-wheel cars are built both for road racing and oval track racing. The Atom V8 uses a US-built, 3.0-litre, 32-valve Hartley V8 engine, originally developed from two Suzuki motorcycle engines grafted together, but much developed since. The Atom 500 is road-legal, but heavily oriented towards the race track, both in terms of gearing from its Sadev six-speed sequential gearbox and that insane power-to-weight ratio. The engine is a 3.0-liter flat-plane crank unit built by Hartley, formed by combining two Suzuki Hayabusa motors together. Just 25 examples of the Atom 500 were built, each carrying a price tag over $200,000. Aside from being one of the quickest-accelerating cars on the planet, it also sounds wonderful.
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