The seat of my pants tells me even the 650bhp setting will be enough to see off most rivals, provided you’re deft enough with your clutch and gearchange work. This is no Honda S2000-style rifle-bolt gearchange requiring mere flicks of the wrist. Instead you need to manhandle the alloy knob from one ratio to the next as shifts are neither light nor quick (but perhaps the new linkages alluded to earlier would help).
The engine’s power delivery is relatively smooth and progressive – there’s no alarming peaks or troughs – but the blown V8 doesn’t particularly enjoying lugging at low speeds in high gear. This, plus the stubbornness of the manual gearbox, suggests the six-speed paddle-shift sequential – made by Xtrac – will be the better choice for most.
In no-holds-barred 1104bhp mode the ST1 is virtually as quick as anything I’ve ever driven – Bugatti Veyron included. However, where the Bugatti cossets you and insulates you from much of the violence taking place in the engine room, the Zenvo assaults you with an aural and physical battering.
Unleashing the full quota of power is partially achieved by opening up flaps in the exhaust, which means noise levels instantly escalate to conversation-killing levels, and full-throttle gearshifts are accompanied by a slight twitch from the chassis as 1055lb ft of twisting force does its best to unstick the steamroller rear tyres from the bitumen.
The brakes are massive Brembos (380mm at the front and 355mm at the rear), but given that I’m being intensely scrutinised by Vollersten, who’s riding shotgun, I resist the urge to stomp all over them.
Ride quality is somewhere between firm and rock-hard, but the production car will have a choice of three settings – comfort, normal and sport. Vollersten says shock-absorber specialist Öhlins could provide up to 30 settings for their dampers, but this would be just too much choice for most owners.
Should I buy one?
See more Zenvo ST1 pictures
The key question: is the Zenvo special enough to warrant its exorbitant price tag? To be honest, I can’t quite see £750,000 worth of value in the car, but perhaps the lure of being one of only 15 people to own an ST1 will be the clincher for some. Those that miss the boat will have to hold out for the ST2.
Gautam Sharma
Pictures by Bahr Al-Alum Karim First drive data
How much?
Price as tested TBA
Price as tested £750,000
How fast?
0-62 mph 3 sec
Max speed 233 mph
How big?
Weight 1376 kg
How thirsty?
Combined no data
CO2 emissions no data
Engine
Layout V8
Max power no data at 6900 rpm
Max torque no data at 4500 rpm

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Marty Howard
2011 NASA SE Factory Five Challenge Champion
Track Events Logistics Coordinator - TZC/THSCC
2007 Factory Five Challenge Car.
http://www.mh-motorsports.com