Top 10 best supercars 2024

But if the 720S was the supercar of the 2010s perfected, and sweated for every detail, the 750S is… well, it’s broadly the same thing. Wonderful in all the same ways; but existing in the era of the 800-horsepower, electrified plug-in hybrid supercar, something of a particular prospect with a whiff of antiquatedness about it.

When Woking revised this car last year, it tweaked the exterior styling. Engineering-wise, it quickened the car’s steering rack a little here, stiffened some engine mountings there, fitted new dampers and wheels, and a new braking system. But it updated details, rather than making wholesale changes where they weren’t needed.

And the 750S is still sensational to drive – though perhaps not as technically alluring as it once was.

Read our McLaren 750S review

6. Ferrari SF90 Stradale and SF90 XX Stradale

Pros: savage outright performance plus huge downforce means eye-popping laptime potential

Cons: it’s eye-poppingly expensive, and the hybrid system still doesn’t deliver perfect limit handling balance

This successor of sorts to the LaFerrari hypercar is the most powerful road car in Ferrari’s history; or, at least, it was until the even more powerful XX version came along in 2023, which has now set the quickest lap time for a production car around the firm’s Fiorano test track. Oh, and it’s a plug-in hybrid that can travel for up to 15 miles on electricity alone.

The SF90 Stradale is a very different kind of Ferrari, then. It makes use of a heavily reworked version of the 488 Pista’s twin-turbocharged 3.9-litre V8 engine, which is complemented by a trio of electric motors that raise the Ferrari’s total power output to a staggering 986bhp, allowing for a 0-62mph time of 2.5sec.

It’s a technological tour de force, for sure. Yet despite the additional weight that powertrain brings, it’s still just as grippy and devastatingly quick as you would expect a mid-engined Ferrari to be. However, be warned that you will need to have your Weetabix before turning off the stability control systems, because the knife-edge SF90 demands respect and concentration when exploring the area between grip and slip.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *