The Geneva Motor Show wouldn’t be the Geneva Motor
Show if it didn’t have some new European automaker promising the world with a
new hypercar. And this year it’s Corbellati’s turn. Building upon a decades-old fine art
and jewelry business, the family is now preparing to unveil the Corbellati
Missile.
The parameters boast of a 9.0-liter twin-turbo V8,
with an aluminum-alloy block, four valves per cylinder, a four overhead
camshafts. It targets an output of 1,800 horsepower – all of it channeled to
the rear wheels through a six-speed transaxle and a limited slip
differential.
With that much power in a carbon-fiber chassis (and
carbon-fiber bodywork), Corbellati wants the Missile to exceed 500 kilometers
per hour – or more than 310 miles per hour. An adaptive suspension and
carbon-ceramic brakes aim to keep it all in check.
That speed would be significantly faster than the
Hennessey Venom GT and Koenigsegg Agera RS – cars that have been clocked at
over 270 mph. Will Corbellati prove up to the task? We have our doubts, but
finding out won’t be a simple matter.
There are only a handful of places in the world with
uninterrupted, paved straights long enough to attempt such speeds. Who knows
where Corbellati will try to back up its claim, if it ever gets to that. Maybe
Porsche will rent them some time at the Nardo Ring in southern Italy. But we’re
probably getting way ahead of ourselves.