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The Lamborghini Gallardo (/ ɡ aɪ ˈ j ɑːr d oʊ /; Spanish: [ɡaˈʎaɾðo]) is a sports car built by the Italian automotive manufacturer Lamborghini from 2003 to 2013. It is Lamborghini's second car released under parent company Audi, and the best-selling model at the time with 14,022 built throughout its production run. [8]
The Lamborghini V10 is a ninety degree (90°) V10 petrol engine which was developed for the Lamborghini Gallardo automobile, first sold in 2003. Developed by Lamborghini , for use in the Gallardo, and the first engine developed for Lamborghini after they were acquired by Audi – part of the Volkswagen Group .
Lamborghini announced plans to produce 20 cars for track use only in mid-2011 with each car costing US$2.92 million. [2] [6] At that time, the Sesto Elemento was the most expensive Lamborghini ever made, until the Veneno was launched, with the price of the car as high as GB£4,162,150 (US$6.5 million).
As Volkswagen Group owns both Audi and Lamborghini (Automobili Lamborghini S.p.A.), some of the R8 is shared with the Lamborghini Gallardo, including some of the chassis and floorpan, door handle mechanisms, transmissions, and the revised V10 engine. The base R8 is made distinct by its German designed exterior styling, cabin, smaller V8 engine ...
The Lamborghini 5-95 Zagato is a limited production car based on a Lamborghini Gallardo LP 570-4. It was introduced by Zagato at the 2014 Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este for the coachbuilder's 95th and Lamborghini's 50th anniversaries. [ 3 ]
The Lamborghini Egoista is a concept car unveiled by Lamborghini in 2013 for the company's 50th anniversary. The fully functioning model is based on the Gallardo , and features a 5.2 L (317 cu in) V10 engine producing 600 hp (447 kW ; 608 PS ).
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This V8 engine was also used in two other models, the Lamborghini Silhouette in 1976–1977 in which it kept the 3.0-litre displacement, [2] and the slightly updated replacement in 1982, the Lamborghini Jalpa, which saw the engine increased in size to 3.5 litres, displacing 3,485 cc (212.7 cu in), [2] for ease in meeting ever-tighter emissions ...