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| Expert Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Sweden
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| Evo'sLong Term Tests: Zonda S Pagani Zonda S Harry Metcalfe's Zonda gives him a rather unwelcome surprise. Oh dear. The last month with the Zonda hasn’t gone quite to plan. As I’d been on holiday for the best part of the whole of August, the Zonda hadn’t had a lot of use. Well, none at all to be precise. It’s not the best family-carrying device for a start, especially when you’re heading off to Devon, a county whose roads are narrow enough to challenge a supermini, let alone a supercar. So I’d been looking forward to my first day back at Evo Towers – a lot. Because ahead of me were 65 miles of pure Pagani silliness. Finally back in the Zonda’s glorious cabin, the starter engages with its familiar, frantic whirl. POW! The twelve cylinders explode into action. Oh, that sounds seriously good. Into reverse, then pause to plug the phone charger in. Strange. The little red LED isn’t on. Fiddle with the plug again and… Woah! The Zonda and me are involuntarily shot backwards out of the barn. I’ve still got the clutch pedal pressed fully down, yet drive is getting to the wheels. I’m frantically pressing the brakes, but the now locked front wheels are just skidding on the gravel – 7.3-litres of AMG muscle at a fast idle doesn’t stall too easily. Finally my brain engages and I twist the key to kill the engine. We’ve travelled about ten metres. What on earth just happened? The explanation comes when the clutch is inspected a few days later. The hydraulic mechanism, hidden deep inside the bell housing, had sprung a leak, causing the clutch to engage of its own accord – and me to gain some new grey hairs as a result. At least stripping a clutch out of a Zonda takes no time at all. Two bolts and the rear clamshell is off, another four and the underbelly is released, six more and the whole exhaust system can be removed, leaving the gearbox completely exposed. These are the sort of details you get when an engineer designs a car, not a stylist. It didn’t take long for Mr Pagani himself to find out what happened, and he was very concerned. Zondas don’t do this sort of thing. As a gesture of goodwill he has despatched upgraded components from the Zonda F, which is nice. It might mean waiting a little longer for my car to return, but I’ll end up with a lighter clutch action once it’s all fitted. What is it they say about every cloud having a silver lining? - ONLY REGISTERED AND ACTIVATED USERS CAN SEE ALL LINKS - CLICK HERE TO REGISTER |
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| Crazy Canadian ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: British Columbia
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Blog Entries: 2 | Re: Evo'sLong Term Tests: Zonda S A repost ![]() Here In the Pagani News thread ![]() No big deal, sad to hear about Metacafe's Zonda and while this problem is new to the Zonda I know Zonda's have always had quite a history with clutches', they seem to wear out fast (like Murcielago fast) and have had many unexplained problems. Although I might mention this Zonda was the same vehicle sent all around Great Britian, it's the performance hack. It was used it AutoCar's 2002 performance test and has been featured in EVO many times. It's holding up pretty damn well for a car of such, especially with those miles ![]() |
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| Shaolin Shadow Boxer ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Sweden Gothenburg
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| Re: Evo'sLong Term Tests: Zonda S very sad that this happend..but boring things like this happens to all the diffrence is that you dont get a better thing replaced..and an apology from the dude himself.. even if you buy a shit expensive exotic ![]() |
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