Skip to main content

Lamborghini Huracan Performante First Drive Review

2018 Lamborghini Huracan Performante
Miles Branman/Digital Trends

Where do you find inspiration? What triggers that moment of unchecked, perhaps even frenzied expression? Whether a place, a person, or a practice, the source is essential and the feeling is euphoric. It’s also temporary — at least for most of the world.

If aliens descended upon the earth and solicited a cheat sheet of humanity’s finest achievements, they would find Italy at the center of almost every right-brained endeavor. Fashion, art, and cuisine would be hollow shells without Italian influence. Gucci, Michelangelo, Gelato – society’s past and present indulgences are defined by Italian inspiration.

Related:

The creative brainstorm never seems to quell in belle Italia. We could credit the nation’s stunning countryside, beautiful citizens, or rich natural resources for its talent; I happen to believe it’s something less tangible.

Bologna was once the capital of the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy. Today, the city center is a confluence of cafes and Renaissance architecture – a perfect locale for sipping Amaro and dissecting culture. Nearby, in the northwestern commune of Sant’Agata, a bull-branded supercar manufacturer beats with the heart of Italian impulse.

54 years ago, Ferruccio Lamborghini took a sizeable leap from assembling tractors to building sports cars. By the late 1960s, Lamborghini and its elegant Miura P400 had sufficiently stirred the automotive community. The company has grown in size and sophistication since then, but it remains compelled by the same motivator: passion.

A Lamborghini is often heard before it is seen. Its naturally aspirated, high-output engine will end a conversation mid-sentence – as if a king has entered his court. Enchantment only intensifies when the car’s flared haunches, sharp creases, and low-slung physique prowl into view. This dazzling creature could only be the work of an inspired artisan, or in this case, hundreds of them.

While the greater automotive industry demands efficiencies and automated solutions to production bottlenecks, Lamborghini pursues man-made specialization. Hand-stitched interiors and hand-built powertrains are like tailored gifts from each Lamborghini employee to the car’s owner. Personalized touches are part of the automaker’s unique connection between man and machine.

At all levels of the corporate hierarchy, staff members wear the Lamborghini crest like a badge of honor, recognizing one another’s talents as essential to the organization’s success. It isn’t a stretch to relate them to a family, but instead of sharing blood, each employee shares a deep, edacious passion for automotive eminence.

As I lap the famed Autodromo di Imola circuit, piloting the all-new Huracan Performante, this passion is made real. Experiencing a Lamborghini from the outside, even watching its meticulous assembly, is only a hint of the immersive reality as a driver. The Performante communicates like a living organism. Downforce, steering feel, traction, and tire noise are the Performante’s chosen language, spoken at precisely the right moment to empower my inputs and fill me with confidence.

To Lamborghini, a car can both inspire and be the product of inspiration. The Huracan Performante was borne of a desire to revolutionize active aerodynamics, and the vehicle’s achievements (including a Nurburgring lap record) will continue to galvanize the Italian automaker for years to come.

The whole of Italy’s creative history seems to match Lamborghini’s model. Though the flavor and focus varies, passion is the unshakable bedrock of Italian culture. Che vita!

Editors' Recommendations

Miles Branman
Miles Branman developed a passion for cars early on thanks to a neighbor’s collection of rare and exotic vehicles. What…
How much does a Formula 1 car weigh?
F1 cars will be smaller and lighter in 2026
Max Verstappen driving a Red Bull F1 race car.

F1 racing is bound by strict rules from the FIA that set a minimum limit on how much a Formula 1 car weighs. Before each racing season, three volumes of FIA F1 Regulations set the parameters for technical, sporting, and financial operations for F1 teams, including the drivers and cars.

The minimum weight for F1 cars will change starting with the 2026 season (more on that below in this article), but for the F1 2024 and 2025 schedules, the official minimum weight for an F1 car is 798 kilograms (1,759.29 pounds). Read on to learn why the regulations list a minimum weight, not a maximum.
Why F1 car weight matters

Read more
CEO says Hennessey has to solve this issue before Venom F5 can win speed record
Hennessey's Venom F5 needs a venue for its speed record attempt
Jon Hennessey standing in front of a Venom F5

John Hennessey is one of the automotive world’s true characters, up there with the likes of Peter Wheeler and Enzo Ferrari when it comes to crazy, ambitious ideas that somehow keep panning out. His latest endeavor involves breaking the production vehicle speed record again. This time, Hennessey would like to do it in a car his company has designed from the ground up.

That car is the Venom F5, and it’s designed to do more than go fast in a straight line. Hennessey sees it as the “decathlete of hypercars,” so you can expect to see it setting the standard in all manner of events. Recently, it set the production car lap record at COTA -- beating a time set by the Czinger C21 and rounding the circuit a whole seven seconds faster than the McLaren P1.

Read more
How do you become a Formula 1 driver?
To earn their reported $13.4 million average salary, F1 drivers start young
Lewis Hamilton driving a Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 race car.

With hundreds of millions of dollars at stake for F1 teams each season, how do you become a Formula 1 driver? You have to be at least 18, according to the FIA F1 Rules and Regulations, but there is no upper age limit for F1 drivers. However, if it were easy, just showing up to apply for the job, F1 teams would be deluged with applications. But it's not easy at all. For an F1 team to invest in you and trust you with cars that have engines worth more than $10 million, there's much more to it. Let's take a look.
How does someone become an F1 driver?

Even before F1's recent popularity growth spurt in the U.S., F1 has long been considered the motorsports summit. Not every kid who buckles in to ride around a go-kart track is inspired to make it their life's work, but a surprisingly high number of F1 driver interviews start with stories of early prowess in organized kart racing. I've never heard of an F1 driver deciding in their late teens to start training for a seat in a Formula 1 race car.

Read more