Autocar BBDC 2016 (Long Post--Very Long Post)


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Britain's Best Driver's Car - the contenders
Our annual Britain's Best Driver's Car contest is here once again - meet this year's hopefuls

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It’s that time again. That test again. Now in its 28th running, Autocar’s Britain’s Best Driver’s Car (BBDC) competition has been the ultimate arbiter of greatness among new sports cars as varied as the original Lotus Elise and Honda NSX, theLamborghini Murciélago and the Porsche 968 Club Sport.

It is the original big magazine annual ‘supertest’ and its format has been copied and adapted many times, but its endorsement is no less meaningful to sports car buyers today, and no less coveted by car manufacturers.

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This year it was to the sublime roads of north Wales and then the spectacular Anglesey Circuit that we headed for the occasion. The weather couldn’t have been better (as the images you’re about to see should attest), nor the welcome warmer. Huge thanks are owed to all at Trac Mon for their hospitality. And for the at-the-wheel thrills, we’re about to award the most glorious and glittering credit we can muster to the cars you’re busting to read about: the Aston Martin Vantage GT8, Porsche 911 R, McLaren 675LT Spider, BMW M4 GTS, Honda NSX, Jaguar F-Type SVR and more.

Strap in, then, as we recount the tale of two flat-out days of driving, judging, documenting and arguing, conducted on both road and track, from behind the wheel of our reigning BBDC champion – the awesome Ferrari 488 GTB – and the 10 newcomers seeking to roar off with its crown.

ON THE ROAD

I am driving an Aston Martin Vantage GT8 to Wales. Initially, I thought I should have been in a DB11 – it is the most significant Aston in decades, after all – but my colleague Matt Saunders has dissuaded me. “We want a GT8, not a DB11, in this contest,” he says, having driven both. “It’s a driver’s car. Trust me.” So I do.

And he’s right. Some car companies talk about a ‘50-metre test’. That’s all the distance your brain needs to assimilate the messages it’s receiving through your hands, feet, eyes and ears after you first get into a car. It begins to let you know whether you’re in the presence of something special, or not. The GT8 wants about a tenth of that distance. In its case, the only thing you need 50m for is protecting your ears from the noise of its 440bhp 4.7-litre V8. In 2008 I raced a V8 Vantage and I swear it wasn’t as loud as this one.

It is one of the last big naturally aspirated engines and next year it’ll be replaced by a new Vantage’s Mercedes-AMG V8, which will have two turbos. If, with the GT8, Aston was letting loose all the 4.7-litre naturally aspirated unit could do, it couldn’t have picked a more magnificent send-off.

In Wales, the Aston will meet the nine other best driver’s cars of this year, plus Ferrari’s 488 GTB, which returns as defending champion. We will spend a day on some glorious roads and a day at the extremely wonderful Anglesey Circuit. By the end of it, each car will have amassed up to 300 points, a maximum of 25 each on road and track per judge.

The idea is not to be any kinder, per se, than with our usual ranking, in which something is placed first, something 11th. A car will still come first and another will still come last. But, we figure, with a maximum of 300 points on offer per car, there is less chance of a tie, and you get a better idea of the tone here: these are our favourite new cars of the year to drive and we would gladly take any single one of them away for the next 12 months. Plus having separate and equal ‘road’ and ‘track’ scores means nobody can get too carried away and award points on a car’s ability to squeal tyres alone…

The Aston, as it turns out, has well and truly won me over on the route up to north Wales. There’s a solid chassis and driveline to back up the sound. The V8 has the slight zingy, elastic throttle response at lower revs that it has always had, but it drives through a six-speed manual gearbox, has “excellent pedal positioning for heel and toe downchanges”, according to Andrew Frankel, plus steering that’s “still among the best here”.

It certainly is that: the hydraulic set-up offers loads of road feel, and although there’s a little too much corruption, the GT8 is an overwhelmingly involving car to drive on the road. When I tell you that despite its myriad charms, the Aston places only sixth on the road, with 119 points out of a possible 150, that tells you quite a lot about the strength of the competition here.

I’ve mentioned that the Aston is one of the most engaging cars on the road, so let’s talk about one of the least. Ford’s Focus RS is a five-star road test car, but in this company, it “shows its working class roots”, says Matt Saunders. I’m confident no other hot hatchback would have had the RS’s ability – we did consider the Volkswagen Golf GTI Clubsport S – but ultimately the RS was the victim of the cambers of “Welsh A-roads that brought a few undesirable tendencies out of the steering”. The Focus is, although capable, not a car that grabs you by the lapels and demands your attention.

Still, with 92 points from a possible 150, it isn’t in last place on the road. That dubious honour falls to the BMW M4 GTS. If you’re prepared to get much busier than we had time for with a box of spanners, it’s possible to take the track-focused GTS and tune its dampers for the location you find yourself at. There’s a Nürburgring-specific set-up listed in the handbook, for example.

But however bumpy the Nordschleife is, it is not north Wales on a Monday morning. “Exciting, like being shot at,” says Mike Duff, who finds it “much too harsh and seemingly at war with its stability control.” You can tell there are hints of goodness in here. It’s reminiscent of the old M3 GTS, another track refugee. But the chassis is unremittingly stiff and the turbocharged straight six rarely gets a chance to give its best. I suspect more will come on the track. At least, I hope so.

A standard M4 would sit quite nicely next to a Porsche 718 Cayman S, but compared with the M4 GTS, the Cayman is night and day different. The BMW takes 73 points, whereas the Cayman scores 129, making it the fourth most likeable car on the road. “More than ever, the Cayman is all about the way it handles and steers,” says Allan Muir, ably nailing the most impressive thing about the Porsche. Where the BMW shimmies and skips, the Cayman’s suppleness allows it to flick away surface imperfections with ease, while its steering – although less feelsome than it was years ago when it was hydraulically assisted – has been finessed and honed to a differently appealing state. “So hard to criticise,” says Frankel, diplomatically overlooking the engine. “Apart from the engine, of course.” Oh.

Moving on, then, to another would-be rival to the Cayman. The BMW M2 has an engine of six cylinders. “I love the engine and performance level,” says Saunders. “I love the punchy manual gearchange.” Me, too, mate. When Porsche released the Cayman GT4, the engineers said it was “old-school, but not old-fashioned”. The M2 doesn’t mind seeming old-fashioned in its “route one” (Saunders) set-up. It’s an honest, straightforward, front-engined, rear-driven coupé. Less sophisticated in the chassis department than a Cayman, for sure, but still “probably the car I’d take home if I were going to live with it every day”, says Muir. And you can understand why.

The roads around north Wales are quiet, lumpy and open, but no matter how open and well sighted a road is, when there’s a limit of 60mph, you have to select a car carefully that’ll let you enjoy yourself up to that point. With the remaining cars we have to deal with, you have to wonder whether they’ll manage it, so far will you be from their respective limits.

The Jaguar F-Type SVR does, at least, have the whole grand tourer thing going on, to distract you from perceiving it as a pure driver’s machine, in case it fails to satisfy. It would be easier to make excuses for it, in other words – not that you need to, as it turns out. “Would be in the top half if we’d been voting on the road alone,” says Saunders. “So much better damped, more fluid riding and composed than an F-Type R.”

The SVR’s rocketship of a supercharged engine – “honking, powerboat-style silliness”, says Nic Cackett – is a league above the F-Type R’s, but its chassis sophistication is something I hadn’t expected. It steers well, too: firmly and with good road feel. A slightly tippy-toed, high-riding feel marks it down consistently, plus the fact that, when all’s said and done, it’s a near two-tonne GT car, but if your daily commute was on these roads, the SVR would be a hard car to beat.

On the road, with 110 points to the Jaguar’s 104, the Honda NSXonly just beats it. Ah, the Honda. We’ve a lot of time for this car. “Would dearly love to have placed it higher, if only for sentimental reasons,” says Saunders before adding its “imperfect ride and sheer width on narrow B-roads are my reservations”, both fair points. “The NSX is set up with the same kind of sturdy, direct and foolproof style as an Audi R8,” says Cackett. We’re confident the NSX would have eased out the R8 had one been here, but you get the idea that, in this toughest of environments, the NSX will do no better than hold its own, on the road, at least.

Which leaves the really quick stuff – the stuff that will have to work even harder to impress at road speeds, given the limits of the McLarens 570S and 675LT, the Ferrari 488 GTB and the Porsche 911 R.

That I’m including the McLaren 570S among these despite it having less power than the NSX is a measure of its sheer ability, but if McLaren – still this young, agile company – has learned anything, it’s how to make its cars engaging at sensible speeds. The 570S rides with a deftness that it shouldn’t have, given that it lacks the hydraulically linked suspension of its bigger brother, and it steers – hydraulically rather than electrically assisted – with extraordinary panache. “Steering lovely; never less than pin sharp,” says Cackett, and Muir finds he’s “able to drive it harder and with more confidence than the 675LT, therefore taking more pleasure out of every mile”.

Muir almost makes the Toyota GT86/Morgan 3 Wheeler argument, there: the slower the car, the more likely you are to be able to get on top of it. But still, the difference between the lesser McLaren’s 562bhp and the Longtail’s 666bhp is hardly the difference between a VW Beetle and a Porsche 917. These are still both blisteringly fast cars, but it’s true that the 570 feels that touch more manageable on the road. Frankel finds it “better on road than track” – more on which in a moment – but at the end of a day’s road driving and score-totting, it’s no surprise that the 570S is the second-favourite car here.

Only a few points behind it is the 675LT, which, despite probably the most astonishing level of performance here, still manages to give stacks of feedback and engagement and fun even if you’re barely touching its phenomenal ability.

And then there are the two from the biggest names in the business.

Porsche’s 911 R feels like the GT3 we always wanted and, in a way, most of the time it’s not too fast – because, given that it is naturally aspirated, you have to be entirely up for it to access its full performance. “You have to work for it,” says Muir.

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That’s not true of the Ferrari 488 GTB, whose turbocharged engine is incredibly responsive for a blown unit but also makes absurd torque in any gear, at any road revs. When we finish our day’s driving, though, it’s Porsche and McLaren that would sit smuggest, were their representatives joining us for dinner.

TRACK TIME

I don’t know how, but we went to north-west Wales for three days in early October – two for testing, the third for photos – and the sun shone on every single one of them. I’m certain there is no more picturesque race track in Britain than Anglesey, and the list of those that are more entertaining is pretty short, too.

As is typical in a situation like this, at a time of the morning when a cup of tea is still as appealing a lap of a circuit, people tend to start in the slow stuff. Get to know the circuit. Get a handle on things. Build up to a pace.

Trouble is, even in the relatively modest Focus RS, you’re still talking about a car that has 345bhp and a four-wheel drive system that is the equal of a Nissan GT-R’s. “You have to drive it like a lunatic to get the best out of it,” says Muir, which leaves the Focus feeling cold on the road but wins it some plaudits on the circuit. If you set the drive mode right (Drift), and the stability control right (off), the Focus will move around in cool ways, although rarely for more than a second or two at a time – unsettling its back end on turn-in and pushing into oversteer if you’re determined with the throttle on the way out of a corner, before drive resumes at the front and it pulls itself straight again. The power shuffling always risks making it more effective than ultimately enjoyable.

Not so the M2, which, of all cars here, is perfect for learning a circuit yet also highly entertaining – and that’s how it comes to have mullered its brakes only a few hours into the day. “My favourite M car in longer than I care to recall,” says Frankel of an M car that has a really sweet front-engined, rear-driven handling balance and just the right amount of power to exploit it. You can drift an M2, but you have to want to, and it’s enjoyable even if you don’t. “Secure, and yet happy to play the hooligan,” says Duff.

Everybody likes the M2 a great deal, which is more than can be said for the M4 GTS, which polarises opinion even though it should arguably be in its element on a circuit. Frankel finds it “has too much understeer in slow corners and is still jinking around in really quick curves”, although Saunders thinks it has “a sense of connectedness few could get close to”. I think it’s sensational too. To me, it feels like a race car: the roll cage squeaks, running over kerbs vibrates the whole body, and if you put the steering into its lightest mode, it’s easy to wind opposite lock on yet still be given bags of feel. It’s comfortably inside my top four but no one else’s, bar one of our hired hands, who once set a world drift record. I knew it would be. Yes, you have to manage the entry speed a little, but once you do, it has a sublimely adjustable balance, and I think you could happily spend days making the best of it. Leave me this circuit and only one car for a year and I might well pick this one.

The Vantage GT8 is another car that frustrates some of our testers on the circuit. The 4.7-litre V8 is still impeccably charming – although on track it finds itself wound around to the redline, where it sounds like a GT4 car, rather than taken to 4500rpm and double declutched for the fun of it as you might on the road, because it sounds the spit of Steve McQueen’s Ford Mustang in Bullitt. “Definitely more mouth than trousers,” concludes Duff after a stint. Oddly, its front tyres go off first. For all its noise, it doesn’t have sufficient oomph to overwhelm the rears on demand, either. It’s a loveable car but is happier being roguish on the road, where its eagerness can be exploited and its limits aren’t exposed.

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I don’t expect the F-Type SVR to be much better, big, heavy GT car as it is. But it puts in a surprisingly good shift. Strangely, as did the Focus, it feels slightly tall and stilted and it leans too much early in corners. But, as Duff says, its “torque makes it effortless. It has tireless brakes and great rear-biased handling, with the all-wheel drive stepping in when the rear starts to slide”. Others find the fun slightly spoilt by the front drive cutting in – as if you’ve still got the stability control on – but it performs better on a track than it has a right to.

And so to the NSX, such a ‘nearly’ car on the road and, in truth, a nearly car on track as well. The ingredients are there: the mid-engined balance, the power and the grip. “It’s very well balanced and disguises its weight preposterously well,” says Frankel. It steers well, too, and at less than two turns lock to lock, it’s almost as fast as the Ferrari’s rack, although it’s considerably less nervous. But its electronics never quite kick out, and with an electric motor at the back and two less powerful ones at the front augmenting the twinturbo V6, there is rather a lot of calibration for it to do. Overstep its mark and it rather clumsily pulls itself back into line, but there is a sweet spot – a very small sweet spot – at about eight or nine-tenths, where you steer it in gently at just the right speed, trail the brakes just the right amount and get back on the power just enough, where it steers on the throttle mildly and becomes curiously satisfying and quick. “Definitely a PG-13 kind of supercar,” says Frankel, who is not alone when he concludes: “It’s a car that impresses more than it amuses.”

Its nearest rival – in the marketplace and in our test – holds itself back rather less. The 570S is restrained only by the standards of its 675LT brother. The facets that made it so appealing on the road are, undoubtedly, present on track, too: the fabulous steering and a sense of great agility, due to the fact that it’s more than 300kg lighter than the NSX. However, “I’ll admit to preferring it on the road”, says Cackett, where the 570S’s absence of a limited-slip differential makes precious little difference to the way it drives – perhaps improves it. But on a circuit, its brake-steer technology and the fact that it’s only truly mobile in corners that give you the opportunity to trail the brakes in mean “it’s just easier to fall deeper in love with the adjustability of the 911 or 488”, Cackett says. They have better engines, too.

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What could also do with a more characterful engine? It’s the 718 Cayman S, according to Saunders, who is also recording lap times in all the cars. The 718’s turbo four “gives much more instant torque and grunt than the 911”, he says, “and could keep up with anything else here thanks to that handling.” And that, in a nutshell, is the Cayman denuded. Everything that makes it a superb road car also makes it a wonderful track car: its fluid steering, tight body movements and perfect balance. It’s so good that it could do with another 50bhp to fully exploit its chassis but, as Saunders says, its “lap time underlines its dynamic brilliance. It felt perfectly geared for Anglesey and had cornering composure to spare.

Never missed an apex and never clipped a catseye. For the money – incredible”. If you’re wondering how high the bar in this competition is, consider that the Cayman has one of the finest sports car chassis ever made and yet its combined total – 255 points out of a possible 300 – was only good enough for fifth place in this company. Even the 11th and 10th-placed cars – the M4 GTS, whose track ability couldn’t lift its overall score higher than the Focus RS’s – were good for 185 and 192 points apiece. Everyone even loved the F-Type, M2, NSX, and Vantage GT8 – ninth to sixth. And beyond the Cayman, the 570S finishes fourth, making a top five occupied by two Porsches, two McLarens and one Ferrari. Which leaves only three cars left to talk about, then: the 675LT, 911 R and the returning champion, the 488 GTB. Precisely how they fill the top three positions is a story I leave to Andrew Frankel.

Check back tomorrow for the final 3 shootout.
 
Britain's Best Driver's Car - the final three
Eight strong contenders have fallen. Just these three titans remain

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This was never a given. We’re not supposed to divulge secrets at this stage of the proceedings, but I can perhaps share with you the fact that had this contest taken place on road alone, there’d be two McLarens in the top three, with the 570Soutpointing the 675LT.

By contrast, the Ferrari would have been beaten by not just both McLarens, but both Porsches, too. Then again, had we gone to only the track, well… I can’t give that particular game away this early, but suffice to say there’d be rather greater cause for celebration in Maranello.

Nor should you escape with the idea that these three made it through to the final shootout by being the quickest, most exotic cars here. This is not, nor has it ever been, a contest to find the fastest car, nor the one most capable of generating the most cheek-rippling lateral g. Which is why, in years gone by, cars as modest as the Toyota GT86 and Mazda MX-5 have beaten many far faster cars to the crown. Yes, the winner must be exciting to drive, but also willing to involve the driver and provide him or her with the confidence to push right up to and, on the track, straight past the limit safe in the knowledge that even in the face of preposterous provocation, it will never, ever bite back. As you might imagine, such qualities are somewhat easier to provide in a modestly tyred, frontengined Mazda than a McLaren, Ferrari or highly specialist Porsche.

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So be advised before we get to the details that this is the most fundamental and extraordinary quality that all three share. These three cars – the slowest of which would lap quicker than the fastest hypercars from just 10 years ago and the fastest of which would scare the hell out of the quickest hypercar made today – are the absolute opposite of the truculent, tricky prima donnas you might imagine. For all their speed, exotic specifications and mid or rear-engined layouts, what these cars do best of all is provide face-splitting, guffaw-inducing, awe-inspiring fun. And that’s what makes our world go round.

Where better to start than with a Ferrari, especially after its bravura performance last year? Regulars will remember that, in a wide range of conditions, the 488 GTB eclipsed all comers. True, logistical issues meant McLaren was unable to be there in 2015, but the 488 still beat the Porsche 911 GT3 RS in one of the bigger upsets we can recall in the history of these events. So even though cars rarely mount successful defences of their titles in this contest, none of us was under any illusion about how hard the Ferrari would be to beat in north Wales.

And so it proved. Prior, in particular, was dumbfounded by the car all over again and found barely believable not that it had such brutal punch but what you could do with it. More than once, he was found muttering “but you can drive it like a Mk3 Escort” to no one in particular. He was not alone in struggling all over again to process this fact. All three of these final contenders proved unreasonably accommodating when taken past their natural limits of adhesion but, as Cackett put it, “its chumminess, in the sense of approachability and let’s-go-together attitude in regard to beyond-limit handling, is in a league of one.”

Indeed, there is a moment in the 488 GTB when you finally park the natural reticence that comes with driving a Ferrari on a race track and it takes you to a place you’d never imagine any Ferrari, let alone a mid-engined 661bhp Ferrari, could reach. You’ve driven too fast into a medium-speed corner on a trailing throttle and the back has broken loose. You realise this is not a time for managing masses, considered inputs and silent prayer – crisis management, in other words – but for getting on the gas, winding off one lock, applying the other and blasting onto the straight beyond at any angle you like, from the unorthodox to the almost unbelievable. Truly, the biggest danger you face is binning it because you’re laughing too much.

The problem with this approach is that you can’t really exploit this sublime quality on the public road. So although the 488 GTB proved as fast and effortless as ever over our punishing road route, it was unable to access the thing it does best of all and so started to slip down the ratings just a touch, bringing it within range of both the 675LT and 911 R. If it has a failing, it’s a familiar Ferrari trait: steering that’s a touch too light, too aggressive off-centre and not as concerned with providing feedback to the driver as those of its best rivals. Given that the car has the most communicative chassis of the lot, it’s curious that this talent has not transferred to the helm.

The issue facing the 911 R was more abstract in nature, but no less real for that. Because despite the oceans of ink expended on the current series of 911-based Porsche GT cars, the unavoidable truth is that the track-honed GT3 RS failed to win last year just as the GT3 failed to win the year before. Given that the Ferrari that beat the RS was back and that fresh to the competition came two deadly serious McLarens, how could the 911 R respond, armed with only the engine of the already vanquished RS and a chassis all but identical to that of the roundly beaten GT3?

But sometimes cars contrive to be greater than the sum of their parts, and the 911 R is one of them. In fact, if you remind yourself of the 911 R’s design brief – to be neither the quickest nor the most useful GT 911 but simply the best to drive – you should not then be too surprised to discover that, even by the lofty standards of Porsche GT cars, the 911 R finds itself more than usually suited to this competition.

In many ways, it is the odd one out of this trio. It is alone in being normally aspirated, alone in placing three pedals in its footwell. It’s the only one not to place the engine directly behind its driver, the only one with remotely compact dimensions. It has nothing like the pure, monstrous grunt of the Ferrari, nor the faintly surreal, aerodynamically enhanced grip of the McLaren. It is the slowest of the three and, by any objective assessment, should come comfortably third here.

But cars are driven by humans and we see and feel things differently. We love the additional degree of involvement provided by being forced to change gear ourselves and we adore the sound of the flat six as it soars beyond 8000rpm. And yes, although the McLaren and Ferrari engines are unbelievably responsive for turbo motors, the Porsche’s throttle mapping seems hardwired into your brain.

On the road, you can use more of the performance more of the time, partly because there’s less than that offered by its rivals, so you don’t travel from place to place feeling that quite so large a chunk of the car’s potential is going to waste, but mainly because the car is so much more compact. The 488 and 675LT are properly wide cars, and on the kinds of roads we’d choose to drive such cars, this is a limiting factor that’s just not there in the 911 R. This is why, point to point, and in public, the R is not just easier to drive but probably quicker, too.

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No surprises there: Porsche has made so much of the 911 R’s credentials as a street machine that it point blank refused to issue the traditional Nürburgring lap time for the car. The surprise is how little it loses on the track. “It seems to dance to the driver’s every whim, driver and machine in complete harmony” was Muir’s view of its performance on both road and track. The fact that it made every judge’s top three on the road and all bar one on the track is a quite startling illustration of the sheer breadth of the 911 R’s ability.

But you can’t sit back and let it all happen: you have to work brain and all four limbs to make sure you’re always in the right gear to let it do its thing, in a way that you just don’t in the Ferrari and McLaren. Squeezing almost 500bhp from just 4.0 litres of capacity was always going to lead to a certain peakiness, and if you’re caught off cam, the 911 R really isn’t that interested at all. Light it up, however, and it will entertain forever, the darker side of the GT3 RS’s character expunged entirely.

The 675LT is a little different from the Ferrari and Porsche. It’s not a car even reasonably skilled and experienced testers can just get in and start throwing around. Its composure on the road was such that it felt thoroughly under-utilised, easily its biggest problem being the car’s width and the way that it was exacerbated by the left-hand-drive layout of the test car. But give it the space it needs and yourself the time you need to get to grips fully with what it can do and, unless you know cars like the McLaren P1 and LaFerrarivery well indeed, it will alter your perception of road car capability.

Simply calculating relative powerto-weight ratios will show that the 675LT would be convincingly quickest in a straight line, but wearing a fresh set of the Pirelli Trofeo R tyres developed specifically for it, its advantage through the corners is greater still. This is one of very few road cars whose downforce can actually be felt in quick corners. It doesn’t feel quite as clamped to the track as does a P1 in Race mode, although it’s not just the extra speed you notice, but the precision, too. In fact, it is the most composed of the three on the limit, which, given how much higher that limit is, is profoundly impressive.

But perhaps not quite so impressive as its ability to do the other stuff, the smokey, slidey, sideways stuff beloved of car photographers and road testers alike. Because the car feels so very grown-up – even after the Ferrari and Porsche – it hardly seems possible that it, too, could be skidded around all day long without once even nipping back at its driver, but it can. And with the best steering of the three, it offered the most profound driving experience of all the cars that gathered in Wales for two days of testing to determine the identity of Britain’s Best Driver’s Car.

But the best? You'll find out soon...
 
Britain's Best Driver's Car - the winner
Starting with 11 of this year's best driver's cars, we've whittled it down to just one. The winner is...

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The winner is... The Porsche 911 R.

And so, after the toughest podium fight anyone could remember, what must have been the tightest margin of victory of any Britain’s Best Driver’s Car shootout was decided.

In a change to the usual scoring format intended to allow a fairer distribution of credit, our judges had up to 50 points to award to each car – 25 for a car’s showing on the road and 25 for the track. There was no restriction preventing them from awarding the same score to more than one car, but the total number of points on offer was intended to mitigate that possibility and to make a tie for any given place in the final rankings less likely.

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Even so, the 488 GTB and 675LT Spider couldn’t be separated for second place. Although two judges scored the Longtail highest overall, the 488 attracted praise more consistently.

Not as consistently, however, as this year’s BBDC champion: the brilliant 911 R. Nobody saw fit to deny the 911 more than three points of a perfect 25 for either its road or track performance, and it was the only car to score full marks from a judge.

With an astonishing array of talents, the 911 R’s driver appeal is at once multi-faceted and totally convincing. More tactile and communicative than the Ferrari, more theatrical and enigmatic than the McLaren, and wanting for absolutely nothing on dynamic composure or playful adjustability, the 911 R also builds on the qualities that have made 911s so popular for so long. Compact and confidence-inspiring on a narrow lane, it also has the track purpose and poise to mix it with the supercar set and the combustive sound and fury to live with almost any pace. The Porsche 911 R is this year’s bit of perfection for keen drivers everywhere, and our one regret is that only 991 owners will get to enjoy it.

LAP TIMES

Outright lap speed doesn’t win a Britain’s Best Driver’s Car contender any credit in our overall scores. How fast a car takes you tends to be a much better indicator of engine and braking power and of outright grip level than of how much fun may be available while you’re driving it. And yet the fact that the higher-rated cars in our scoring table were also the quicker ones around a 2.1-mile circuit does tend to confirm that the pace, grip, balance and precision that make a car fast also tend to make it exciting.

It was instructive to see the 718 Cayman S overachieve so plainly against the clock and disappointing that the NSX wasn’t as quick through the bends as it was in a straight line.

We leave it to manufacturers to decide on which particular tyre their cars are supplied, insisting that the rubber is either standard or optional fit. But, for the record, a good Cup tyre was probably worth 1-2sec a lap here — and the 675LT, 570S, 911 R, M4 GTS and Vantage GT8 all had ’em.

McLaren 675LT Spider 1min 35.7sec

Ferrari 488 GTB 1min 36.9sec

McLaren 570S 1min 37.9sec

Porsche 911 R 1min 38.7sec

BMW M4 GTS 1min 40.4sec

Porsche 718 Cayman S 1min 41.2sec

Jaguar F-Type SVR 1min 41.2sec

Honda NSX 1min 41.7sec

Aston Martin Vantage GT8 1min 42.9sec

BMW M2 1min 44.4sec

Ford Focus RS 1min 46.3sec
 
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Also, is it my imagination, or did the 570S set that time on Corsa Systems (see outer tread at 0.26 in video on fullscreen).
 

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