Temerario GT3: Lamborghini's First In-House Race Car Debuts At Goodwood
Lamborghini pulled the wraps off the Temerario GT3 at the 2025 Goodwood Festival of Speed, showing it alongside the road-going Temerario it's based on. But this isn't just another track version of a road car. It's Lamborghini's first competition car to be fully designed, developed, and built in-house. Finished in a striking Tricolore paint job, the GT3 embraces its Italian racecar heritage. But it's not just about looks. The hybrid system is gone, the body is all business, and this is the car that will lead Lamborghini's GT3 racing efforts starting in 2026.
View the 4 images of this gallery on the original article
Powering the GT3 is the same 4.0-liter twin-turbo V8 found in the road car. But to meet GT3 regulations, Lamborghini removed the electric motors and fitted smaller turbochargers. That drops power produced by the gas-fed engine from 800 hp to around 550 hp, but it also slashes weight. The redline still sits at an ear-piercing 10,000 rpm, and a custom Capristo exhaust makes sure it sounds the part. The dual-clutch transmission is gone too. In its place is a six-speed transverse gearbox, designed to take the abuse of endurance racing.
View the 3 images of this gallery on the original article Lamborghini's Centro Stile and Squadra Corse teams worked together to sculpt the GT3's bodywork. It's made from carbon composite materials and shaped to find the perfect balance between downforce and drag. But it also had to be practical. The front and rear body sections are single-piece units for quick removal in the pits, and even the headlights are fitted with quick-release connectors. Cooling has also been improved to keep everything stable during long runs, especially the two turbochargers. Underneath it all is a modified aluminum spaceframe, fitted with a fully removable rear subframe and an integrated roll cage that meets FIA GT3 safety standards.
View the 2 images of this gallery on the original article
In traditional race car fashion, the Temerario GT3's interior has been completely gutted, and only the necessities make an appearance. There's a custom race steering wheel, simplified switchgear, and a new data logging system to help teams monitor performance. The suspension is all-new, too. The GT3 rides on six-way adjustable KW dampers and features a longer wheelbase and wider track than the outgoing Huracán GT3. In theory, that should give it more grip and better balance, especially through high-speed corners. It has some big shoes to fill, though. The Huracán GT3 won 96 titles in a racing career that spanned nearly a decade.
View the 3 images of this gallery on the original article
Temerario GT3: Lamborghini's First In-House Race Car Debuts At Goodwood first appeared on Autoblog on Jul 14, 2025
This story was originally reported by Autoblog on Jul 14, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Motor 1
2 hours ago
- Motor 1
A Rippin' Green Stick-Shift Machine: This Is the Modern M3 I've Waited For
Most auto writers are quite hard on BMW. Especially when it comes to the M3. It's impossible to shake our preconceived notions of what a 'real' M3 represents, though there's hardly consensus. Ask a middle-aged dork like me and I'll tell you: Peak M3 arrived in 1987. Every M3 should reflect the dogmatic principles that the E30 established. I'd know, because I owned an E30 M3 when they were cheap enough to run ragged, well before the Bring-A-Trailer crowd turned them into bubble cars. BMW E30 M3 Photo by: Petrolicious In 2025, however, E30 M3s start at $50,000, and the new breed of owners are far less likely to drive them as Paul Rosche/God intended. So the younger members of Motor1's staff idolize 2001's E46 M3. To them, the E30 is mostly just buzzy and slow. And they're correct on both counts. No doubt, if you're reading this in the distant future when I'm long dead, the staff of this very publication will idolize whichever M3 is currently about 20 years old. So it goes. This nostalgia, which frames every conversation about what the M3 should be, often clouds the conversation about what it actually is. And what the M3 is—right now—is a class-leading bruiser of a sedan that's finally found the right mix of absolute pace and a sort of effortless, relentless quality to the way it drives. It's the first modern M3 I love. Yes, this is a screencap from BMW's Individual configurator. Yes, I forgot to take good photos of this M3. Photo by: BMW Those first turbo-six M3s (and then-new M4) were perhaps too sharp, equipped with a stiffly sprung chassis and a set of tires overwhelmed by the engine's punch of midrange torque. I once nearly looped an M3 Competition in the middle of an innocuous Ann Arbor, Michigan, intersection after turning the traction control off (as one does) by habit after starting the car. Later, I accelerated to catch a yellow light and ended up grabbing an arm full of countersteer to keep me from spinning into oncoming traffic. I couldn't have been driving more than 35 miles per hour before gently punching the throttle. To that end, there's a better balance to this modern package than those early turbo M3s, and that balance informs every contact point a driver touches. Of course, the most important contact point sits right in the middle of this M3: The stick. Photo by: Jeff Perez / Motor1 My younger colleagues complain relentlessly about BMW manuals. I don't understand the fuss. Mostly, I'm just happy there's a brand left among the German superpowers willing to chuck an honest shifter in between the front seats. There may be some rubberiness to this six-speed's action between the gates, but there's also a notchy assurance familiar to stick-shift BMW owners since about the early '90s. Crucially, there's no seventh gear to confuse your muscle memory like you'd find on the C7 'Vette or some modern Porsche 911s. Just an honest-to-Rosche six-speed. It is not a perfect shifter—only Honda does those anymore. But it's a critical component that elevates this modern M3. Take it for granted at your peril. The best stick on earth (right now)? It's the Civic Type R. Of course, each of the three pedals underfoot is calibrated for easygoing manners. Individually, each pedal responds in a less-feelsome and more-linear way than classic M3s, but takes less effort overall—and I mean actual physical effort—to modulate. That makes for breezy commuting, but also more bandwidth for operating around the car's enviable limits on a race track. The steering wheel is just about the right size and shape, transmitting the heft of the car in an honest way and revealing more road texture than I remember the five or six M3s I've driven in the past decade. Not perfect, but better. Progress. Kyalami Orange leather punches up the M3's rather spacious interior. My son's car seat fit behind the front passenger seat with a huge amount of room to spare, for both him and the person riding shotgun. That can't be taken for granted when competitors like the C63 AMG—with its complicated hybrid setup and underfloor batteries eating interior space—can't fit a folded stroller in the trunk and grudgingly accepts a car seat. This is a usable, handsome interior space. I dig it. But then there's the exterior. Photo by: BMW I may never love the gawping pig snout, but I've never seen a better-looking M3 of this generation. The all-black 'Shadowline' treatment does the bulk of the heavy lifting here, pushing aside the visual impact of that grille and letting the paint color literally and metaphorically shine. A brief moment to express my love for this paint. It's a BMW Individual color called 'Dark Emerald Metallic.' It's perfect. Dark enough that under overcast skies, the color backs away into a deep Noble-Fir green. In direct sunlight, a brilliant metallic finish reveals itself, highlighting the M3's aggressive body accents with a diamond's sparkle. Photo by: BMW BMW has consistently offered the best colors of any mainstream automaker for the better part of thirty years (fight me). Dark Emerald Metallic costs $4,500 on top of the M3's MSRP, and it's money well spent indeed. That option, among others, stacked about $25,000 onto the M3's $76,000 MSRP, totaling $101,875 (with the destination fee included). That's not peanuts, nor is it out of line with the car's on-paper performance and versatility. Only a CT5-V Blackwing would turn my head in the segment (the Caddy is arguably an M5 competitor, but I digress). I'd be plenty happy to ditch BMW's $15,000 carbon package, with its upgraded brakes and interior upgrades bundled in. I'd even give up the orange interior leather, but you can pry that green paint from my cold, dead fingertips. Photo by: BMW Call it eighty-ish grand then. For that price, the M3 will do a lot of things on paper that'll give fits to more-expensive cars, but I don't think that's a useful metric here: The M3 has never truly been a value statement. You buy one because you buy into whatever ethos the car represents at that moment. Now, in 2025, that means a car which neither reflects the E30's hardline stance nor the E46's handsome looks. This new M3 isn't as scrappy on throttle as its turbocharged predecessors, and its curb weight continues to balloon. But with three pedals, a good-enough stick, the best steering calibration in a generation, and a coat of the most gorgeous green I've ever seen, BMW finally built a modern M3 that sent me to the configurator with lust in my heart. I think that's worth celebrating. More On the BMW M3 The BMW M3 Touring Is Just Better Than the Sedan: Review We Drove Three of the Best BMW M3s Ever. One Stood Out Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Stellantis to Halt Investments in Hydrogen Joint Venture
Stellantis NV will withdraw its support for a joint hydrogen-vehicle venture with Michelin and Forvia SE as the automaker cuts its exposure to the fledgling technology, putting the project's future at risk. The maker of Fiat cars plans to stop investing in the Symbio business that specializes in hydrogen fuel cells by 2026, Forvia and Michelin said in separate statements in response to Bloomberg queries. Stellantis declined to comment.


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Stellantis Backs Out of Hydrogen Venture With Michelin, Forvia
Stellantis NV will withdraw its support for a joint hydrogen-vehicle venture with Michelin and Forvia SE as the automaker cuts its exposure to the fledgling technology, putting the project's future at risk. The maker of Fiat cars plans to stop investing in the Symbio business that specializes in hydrogen fuel cells by 2026, Forvia and Michelin said in separate statements in response to Bloomberg queries. Stellantis didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.