The Pagani Huayra, a successor to the
Pagani Zonda, was initially revealed online in a press release on 25 January 2011. It was officially revealed at the 2011
Geneva Motor Show. The car is named after the
Quechua god of wind,
Huayra-tata. The engine is a 6.0-litre
twin-turbo M158 V12 engine from
Mercedes-AMG producing and of torque.
Huayra BC An extreme, track-focused version of the Huayra called the Huayra BC was unveiled at the 2016
Geneva Motor Show. The Huayra BC is named after the late
Benny Caiola, a friend of Horacio Pagani, and the first Pagani customer. The Huayra BC has an improved version of the standard Huayra's engine, producing and of torque. The weight is reduced by to just , thanks to the use of an all-new material called 'carbon-triax' in the car which Pagani claims is 50% lighter and 20% stronger than regular carbon fibre, giving the car a
power-to-weight ratio of per
horsepower. The Huayra BC uses a lightweight titanium exhaust system, new aluminum alloy wheels, and a stripped-out interior. The tyres are
Pirelli P-Zero Corsa tires that feature 12 different rubber compounds, and the suspension and wishbones are made of aeronautical grade aluminum, known as Avional. The Huayra BC also has a new front bumper with a front splitter and winglets, deeper side skirts, and an air diffuser that stretches the entire width of the rear bumper along with a large rear wing. The car uses an
Xtrac 7-speed
sequential manual transmission and has an electro-hydraulic actuation system. Pagani has stuck with a single-clutch gearbox because it weighs 40% less than
double-clutch gearboxes. 30 units of the Huayra BC were made, despite the claim by Pagani that the model was limited to 20 units. Each unit cost in excess of €2.1 million (2.21 million US$). Later, Pagani unveiled the Huayra Roadster BC and produced 40 units.
Huayra Roadster After 2 years of development, the Huayra Roadster was officially unveiled in the 2017
Geneva Motor Show. The design of the car underwent several changes, with the most noticeable being the rear, with updated eyelid-like fixed flaps that continued with the design and eventually ended on the rear lights. Vents were included on the rear engine cover for efficient cooling of the engine, and the wheels were updated specifically for the car along with
Pirelli P-Zero tires, along with the addition of a spoiler at the front. The car has conventional doors instead of the
Gull-wing doors used in the coupé as such doors cannot be fitted to an open top car. The car has the same
twin-turbo V12 engine as the coupé but with the power upgraded to at 6,200 rpm and of torque at 2,400 rpm. The power is delivered to the rear wheels via a
Xtrac 7-speed
sequential manual transmission which is 40% lighter than its coupé counterpart. The car was constructed by a material developed by Pagani called 'carbon triax', which is a combination of tri-axis
fibre glass with
carbon fibre. This allowed the car to weigh less than its coupé counterpart, for a total of , making it the first roadster lighter than the coupé. Only 100 were made, all of which were sold even before production ended.
Bespoke editions Continuing its tradition with the Zonda, Pagani produced several bespoke Huayras. • Huayra Carbon Edition (bare carbon exterior) • Huayra White Edition (snow white exterior with carbon fibre bits) • Huayra La Monza Lisa (bare carbon exterior with tri-colore pinstriping, inspired by the Zonda R) – commissioned by Kris Singh • Huayra 730 S "Da Vinci" (tinted blue carbon exterior with gold accents and wheels, inspired by the Zonda tri-colore) – originally commissioned by Alejandro Salomon • Huayra BC Kingtasma (tinted red carbon exterior with tri-colore pinstriping and gold crowns beneath the two rear flaps featuring a roof scoop) • Huayra Pearl (tinted blue carbon exterior with a split rear wing inspired by the Zonda C12 and a roof scoop inspired by the Zonda Cinque) • Huayra Dinastia (three special edition bespoke cars produced for the Chinese market inspired by Chinese traditions) • Huayra II Ultimo (final Pagani Huayra coupé featuring the optional pacchetto tempesta aero package along with a bespoke roof scoop and rear wing with a paint job inspired by Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton's F1 car) • Huayra Hermes Edition (a 1 of 1 custom Coach-Built Pagani Huayra with interior/exterior detailing by Hermes. The car is owned and was partly customised by Iranian-American entrepreneur; Manny Khoshbin) • Huayra Pieagoni TPG (black and white carbon exterior) commissioned by a Dallas based watch dealer and car collector. • Huayra Codalunga (a 1 of 5 longtail version of the Huayra) == Pagani Utopia ==