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852-HP Pagani Utopia Roadster Skips Hybrid Assist but Offers a Manual

  • The new Pagani Utopia Roadster is a convertible version of the Utopia coupe.
  • The droptop model isn’t any heavier than its coupe counterpart, and both have an 852-hp twin-turbo V-12 without hybrid assist—but with a manual option.
  • The Pagania Utopia Roadster costs around $3.4 million and only 130 copies will be sold around the globe.

Artistry and state-of-the-art automotive technology converge on the new Pagani Utopia Roadster. It’s the topless follow-up to the Utopia coupe that was revealed back in 2022, but Pagani didn’t just lop off the roof and reinforce the body. Instead, the Italian hypercar maker meticulously redesigned the Carbo-Titanium monocoque for maximum rigidity without adding weight. That means the Utopia Roadster isn’t any heavier than its coupe counterpart, which Pagani claims weighs a feathery 2822 pounds without any fluids.

A Topless Utopia

Like its fixed-roof sibling, the Utopia Roadster is among the few new hypercars that doesn’t have a hybrid powertrain. Another anomaly is that it caters to purists by offering a seven-speed manual transmission. The stick-shift setup routes power from the twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter V-12 to the rear wheels. Developed by Mercedes-AMG, the Utopia’s hand-assembled engine makes a hefty 852 horsepower at 6000 rpm and 811 pound-feet of torque from 2800–5900 rpm. You can also choose to skip the Utopia’s third pedal and opt for the seven-speed automatic, which allows paddle-shifted gearchanges. Pagani didn’t share any performance estimates, but it did quote the droptop’s electronically limited top speed of 217 mph.

The Utopia Roadster’s hardtop roof features a glass panel that helps keep the two-seater cockpit feeling airy. That top can also be removed and placed on a stand for safe keeping. What about when you’re out for a drive and bad weather unexpectedly strikes? Well, Pagani stores a supplementary soft top behind the seats. And when it comes to storing luggage, every Utopia includes two matching suitcases made of carbon fiber and leather that go in compartments on either side of the engine bay. The accessorizing doesn’t stop there as a separate set of matching garment bags live behind the headrests.

Pagani

As you’d expect from a roughly $3.4 million hypercar, the personalization options are virtually limitless. The Utopia Roadster pictured here is painted Habanero Red, and it allows the car’s carbon-fiber bodywork to show through. This specific car, which will make its public debut at the upcoming Monterey Car Week, is also equipped with the optional Sport package that includes exclusive bits made from Pagani’s Carbo-Titanium material. This applies to the convertible’s movable exterior flaps to the seat structures to the gear shifter.

Inside, the Utopia Roadster represents a simpler time when the gauges and switchgear were more mechanically complex. Besides the single digital display facing the driver, which allows access to the infotainment system, navigation, and backup camera, everything else in the cabin is appropriately ornate and appears to be wonderfully tactile, from the shifter’s exposed linkage to the toggles on the dash to the steering wheel. Pagani says the latter actually started life as a single piece of aluminum before it was milled for 28 hours into a steering wheel weighing just 3.5 pounds. We also dig the checkered pattern on the seat cushions, with Pagani calling this interior design Grecale and Huayra Signature leather. Interestingly, the Utopia’s key is shaped like the car itself and has a dedicated nook on the center console.

Release the leather straps that secure the Utopia’s rear hood and raise it skyward and the Roadster’s eye candy continues. The V-12 is dressed with bronze valve covers, carbon fiber, and other flashy bits, some of which can be seen from the outside via a small window. The Pagani’s distinctive quad-tipped center-exit exhaust also helps identify the car. The forged 21-inch front and 22-inch rear wheels offer a turbine-like design that’s said to help cool the brakes. Those Brembo stoppers include carbon-ceramic rotors that measure 16.1 inches in front and 15.4 inches in back and feature a set of monoblock six- and four-piston calipers, respectively.

Pagani also says the Utopia Roadster offers Pirelli’s Cyber tire that uses a sensor on the inside of the tread. The sensor then transmits data to the car’s electronic control units (i.e. ABS, stability control, and traction control). Along with a standard set of Pirelli P Zero Corsa and P Zero winter tires, the Utopia Roadster can be equipped with stickier Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS rubber.

The Pagani Utopia Roadster has been homologated for sale in the United States. However, with only 130 copies planned for global production, being filthy rich is by no means a guarantee that you can own one.

Eric Stafford’s automobile addiction began before he could walk, and it has fueled his passion to write news, reviews, and more for Car and Driver since 2016. His aspiration growing up was to become a millionaire with a Jay Leno–like car collection. Apparently, getting rich is harder than social-media influencers make it seem, so he avoided financial success entirely to become an automotive journalist and drive new cars for a living. After earning a journalism degree at Central Michigan University and working at a daily newspaper, the years of basically burning money on failed project cars and lemon-flavored jalopies finally paid off when Car and Driver hired him. His garage currently includes a 2010 Acura RDX, a manual ’97 Chevy Camaro Z/28, and a ’90 Honda CRX Si.


Source: Motor - aranddriver.com

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