Cyan Racing has reimagined the classic Volvo P1800 as a rabid, 414bhp road‑racer – with a £450,000 price tag
The shutter
clatters slowly upward on a nondescript industrial unit near Silverstone
circuit to reveal a vast, near-empty expanse of shiny concrete floor and a
small, shockingly blue car – of which I know little – sitting in the
middle of it. I’d vaguely noted a press release that had arrived from Cyan
Racing about its new Volvo P1800-based restomod, and thought then
how tasty it looked, but it was a busy week, and when the subsequent email came
through inviting us to drive it at short notice I thought it best to say ‘yes’
first and ask questions later.
To be
honest, I’m not exactly a fount of knowledge when it comes to Volvo’s P1800. It
was already a classic when I was still in short trousers, and often seemed to
be mentioned in the same breath as Roger Moore – who the young Towler simply
knew as James Bond – because he’d driven one in a ’60s crime caper that people
occasionally mentioned in passing and that by then already seemed as though it
hailed from a different planet, let alone decade.
I do know
that the standard P1800 is a sports car that trades on the lighter side of
‘sport’ but nevertheless has a huge following through its sense of style and
individuality, and that one example also holds the record for the most miles
driven by one car (over three million). It’s not an overstatement to say that
the P1800 is an icon of the Swedish motor industry, and one that generates a
good deal of pride.
What I’m
about to understand is that the P1800 in front of me really isn’t like a P1800
at all, and that while that in itself makes it a fascinating project, executed
with appreciable skill and expertise, it also makes a more profound statement
about what the enthusiast cars of the future might be like, and how they might
drive. As the world grows increasingly bored with £1million‑plus, 300mph
hypercars that often don’t even get built, bespoke, low- volume restomods (or
whatever you want to call them) that fuse some of the most evocative car
styling of all time with genuine driver interaction and modern-era performance
seem increasingly appealing if you’ve the means to indulge.
The Cyan
P1800 was born out of necessity as much as anything else. Cyan Racing, you may
be aware, was once known as Polestar, before the Polestar name was acquired by
Volvo (Polestar had raced Volvos on behalf of Volvo for a long time, and with
great success). Initially Polestar branding was applied to Volvo’s road-going
performance upgrades, but latterly the whole operation was acquired, parent
company Geely then repurposing it as its all-electric brand. Do try and keep up
at the back…
When the
TCR rules came into force for the 2018 touring car season, the sport went
from being a serious works team endeavour to a lowest-common-denominator
engineering exercise with the focus on cost-cutting. Cyan had won the World
Touring Car Championship with Volvo in 2017 (it won it in 2019 and 2020, too,
with other manufacturers) but around 60 engineers, typically used to developing
new parts for every race, were suddenly sitting on their hands with little to
do. Enter project P1800.
You
wouldn’t know at a glance, but what you’re looking at actually shares very
little with a P1800 and arguably much more with a top-flight touring car racer.
Most of the classic original can be found in the centre section of the car,
which in effect has become almost a ‘tub’, with spaceframe structures at the
front and rear. The centre section has been vastly strengthened with triangular
box-sections for the sills, while the floorpan and transmission tunnel are some
of the few original components; just 50kg of metal is left over from the
original car. Even more clever is that the body is made completely from
carbonfibre and is bonded to the structure in such a way that it also takes
some of the loads. How it’s attached is fascinating. Mounting points are glued
to the metal chassis, then the complete chassis is placed on a milling machine
and these points are milled to precise dimensions to fit the carbon panels. The
panels, shaped on the underside to fit these points, are then stuck on, with
the touching surfaces also glued. Not only is the fit totally precise, but it
also strengthens the body considerably.
The entire
running gear of the car is bespoke, with double wishbones at the rear replacing
the archaic live axle set-up, while a new rack-and-pinion steering design
replaces the old steering box. There is no ABS, no ESP, no traction control or
even a brake servo, but the brakes are massive AP Racing items and one
concession to modernity is an electric power assistance system for the steering
to take away the heft at parking speeds. Its effect decreases as the speed
rises.
The
powertrain is no less special, while retaining a pleasing family link with
Volvo. You’d never guess from the photos, but that’s the current VEA 2-litre
modular four- cylinder engine as found in every modern Volvo, whether petrol-
or diesel-powered. Now, you may feel, like me, a certain sinking sensation at
this point; in my experience the VEA, vying with BMW’s modular four-cylinder
lump in this regard, is one of the most boring internal combustion engines
known to man. Then again, on the positive side, Cyan was racing this engine
long before it appeared in a road car: Cyan’s Hans Baarth tells me that for the
2011 season the team raced with one of the first 25 blocks ever cast of what
would become such an important engine for Volvo, further proof of the close
cooperation between the two companies then and now.
Naturally,
this isn’t an XC90-spec VEA born to shuffle gently from private school to
stable yard. For a start, Cyan has done everything it can to make it blend
aesthetically in the 1800’s engine bay, even hiding the turbo down low out of
sight. So redolent of the ’60s does its cam cover look that I’m told even the
VEA’s original designer didn’t recognise his own engine when shown it in the
car. The other significantly good news is that it’s producing a walloping 414bhp
and 336lb ft in this guise, more than enough grunt when you also consider that
one result of all the careful engineering is that the Cyan P1800 weighs less
than a ton. Cyan has built these engines with over 500bhp, but in this state of
tune has concentrated on calibrating it with as authentic a power and torque
delivery as it can, in keeping with the retro vibe.
The engine
is hooked up to a Holinger five-speed manual transmission with a dog-leg first
gear, the thought of which gets me almost as excited as the headline power
figure, and is then deployed through a Wavetrac Torsen-type LSD. Those stunning
wheels are shod with Mercedes-spec Pirellis, Cyan having found the ‘Porsche’
ones to be too grippy, then too sudden in their breakaway. Incidentally, you don’t
have to have the blown wheelarch extensions; you could keep it narrow, fit a
chrome luggage rack and still go for 414bhp. You can have absolutely anything
you want, if you’re paying the bill…
I thread
myself rather inelegantly down into the 1800 and take in the view: a gorgeous
ensemble of cosy sportiness and evocative details, perfectly encapsulated by
the contents of the instrument binnacle. Even with my lack of Swedish, olja and
vatter temperature gauges seem obvious, and the way traditional features and
modern equipment such as the titanium half-roll-cage have been integrated
really gets you in the mood for driving.
The same
can be said once the car comes to life. Cyan is deep into a test and
development programme, and Hans stresses that drivetrain refinement is
something the team are still working on. It’s obvious what he’s referring to
from the first few yards of travel by the way the transmission makes some
pretty industrial noises, but part of me loves the raucous turbo whistle and
touring car-esque gear whine. It’s most definitely not boring.
I am also
rapidly getting a handle on what Hans meant by careful engine calibration.
Shift up at 5000rpm and it’s a seriously quick car, but let the engine continue
to rev out and it keeps building power so that by 7000rpm the little Volvo is
absolutely flying. It feels brutally, intimidatingly fast, believe me, in a
wild and utterly fabulous way, and, of course, being devoid of any nannying
shackles intensifies the whole experience. In very quick order my concentration
levels have shot through the carbonfibre roof: the weather is foul today in the
Peak District and I’m well aware that it’s just my hands and feet that will
keep this P1800 on the streaming wet road – or see it careering off down a
grassy hillside that will inevitably end with a sickening crunch of very
expensive carbonfibre.
That,
though, is the essence of the thrill of driving. Here’s a light, very powerful
car that requires driver input at all times – it’s an unambiguous proposition.
In return it offers, for example, a gearshift as precise and mechanical in feel
as any I have ever experienced. Its operation reminds me of the ‘rocket’ ’box I
once tried in a friend’s beautifully restored Ford Escort Mexico, and there’s
no restriction on how fast you can slice through the gate to the next gear.
Currently the bushing is metal-on-metal below the gaiter, and on the overrun
the wand-like lever rattles like loose change in the bottom of a tin can,
although even that’s drowned out by a curious and deafening hum at certain
frequencies that seems to be coming from the gearbox area. As the man
said, it’s work in progress.
Another
major plus is the chassis set-up. As it stands, it’s remarkably impressive,
particularly in the way it rides bumps and manages to put the exertions of that
frothy-mouthed rabid animal of a turbo four-pot down to the road’s surface. The
car is supremely agile, but there’s enough body roll to get an intrinsic feel
for the grip on offer, and even on really badly maintained B-roads it never
feels clumsy or as if it’s working beyond the limits of its suspension. That’s
a surprise, frankly, because for some reason I thought it might be all grip and
no finesse, but not so at all.
What still
needs a little work is the electric power steering, adopted because the
low-speed effort required of the unassisted set-up was thought to be a little
too strenuous with the wide rubber fitted to this car. I’ve no issue with the
steering now being on the light side, but rather that there’s a moment’s pause
before the assistance seems to have an effect. Get beyond that slightly
unnerving dead zone and the car’s nose turns very quickly, with little weight
once you’ve got beyond that initial point, but more linearity would definitely
breed more confidence, particularly in slippery conditions. Imagine the
steering plot on a graph and the line would be a gentle slope for a surprisingly
long time and then suddenly kick upwards. We’re told this current set-up is
‘out of the box’, and that fine tuning will now commence; if that’s successful,
the dynamics will be very impressive indeed.
There are
so many delightful details to be found all over the Cyan P1800 that it feels
almost like a bonus to discover that it’s actually tremendous fun to drive as
well. Then again, at £375,000-ish before taxes, you’d hope it would be.
Undeniably, that’s a very large sum of money, but given the completely bespoke
nature of every P1800 that Cyan will build (around ten a year is the plan), its
ability to swivel heads like few other cars I can remember, and the sheer
enjoyment and challenge of driving the thing, it suddenly doesn’t seem like an
outrageous ask at all. If you’re in the market for a similarly priced supercar,
ask yourself which one you would prefer. I think I know my answer.
Source: Evo
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