Currently reading: How to customise your McLaren Senna
Having read our track test of the McLaren Senna, you’ll likely want one. But what spec to choose? We savour the prospect at McLaren’s customisation suite

Walking into McLaren’s customisation suite is, I expect, a little like entering the Batcave.

Housed on McLaren’s high-tech campus in Woking, the room is accessed by a flourish of the hand. There are no buttons or handles to get in, just high-gloss white walls all around. Open sesame, and you find yourself in a simplistic room with high-gloss white furniture full of car options, a large screen to showcase how your customised car looks in CGI and, the pièce de résistance, a real-life Senna, McLaren’s latest hypercar.

Named after Ayrton Senna, the car was revealed at the Geneva motor show in March and the first of 500 customer cars will be delivered in July. So McLaren is well under way entertaining the first round of Senna buyers, showing them endless options: paints, carbonfibre, seats, seatbelt harnesses and push-to-drink systems complete with carbonfibre bottle (yes,really). The ultimate goal (other than money-making) is to ensure no two Sennas are the same.

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“We’ve seen 150 clients so far and each typically spends a couple of hours with us,” says Jamie Weir, McLaren Special Operations bespoke sales manager responsible for helping people customise their Ultimate Series hypercars. “Most clients come here for their session, but for global Senna customers, we’ve already travelled to Japan, Switzerland, the US and more.

“They know all about the technical aspects of the car already. This is more about sitting in the car, getting an idea of the proportions.”

It’s not just existing McLaren owners who get a chance to buy a Senna, either. “It’s a good way of pulling people in,” says Weir. “It’s 70% existing customers and 30% new.”

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We’re here to specify our own Senna, although sadly it won’t become a reality. The possibilities are overwhelming, which is why McLaren has created five key themes for the Senna to help people along their way.

There are also five livery options, but really the sky’s the limit.

The most popular options are the lower and upper glass panels on the door (£5000), a Bowers & Wilkins sound system (£5500) – without it, there are no speakers in the car – and the telemetry pack (£3600). There are plenty of no-cost options, too, as you’d hope in a £750,000 car: for example, a touring seat that gives you an extra 45mm of hip room, three different wheel finishes and an exhaust heat shield. You can also lose the air-con to save weight. “No customer has done that yet. We advise them not to,” says Weir.

The most expensive option? The £170,000 carbonfibre finish for the entire body. A carbonfibre finish is standard on parts of the car, including the wing, front splitter, rear bumper and side skirts, but if you want it all over, it’s a different ball game.

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“A customer from Geneva wants a visible carbon fibre stripe around the car, so we need to do the entire car in carbonfibre finish, then do the paint job, leaving the stripe,” says Weir. “That’s £170,000 for carbonfibre, then £40,000 for the paint job. It’s 300-400 hours of work.”

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A bright green catches my eye in the box of paint swatches, which amass to at least 100 paint options, although realistically you can have whatever you want. “We were once sent a pink hairdryer from China to match,” says Weir. It turns out my chosen green was matched from Ayrton Senna’s helmet and, for that reason, has become a popular choice. Weir says: “A lot of people are quite keen to have a connection to Ayrton with the car.”

So what would the man behind the car’s design choose? McLaren design boss Rob Melville says: “I really like Pure White. The car is very stripped back, with strong graphical elements, and I think the white helps accentuate that. It’s a real race-car colour.”

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What we chose:

Laurel Green exterior paint: £9500, Black Alcantara interior with Laurel Green perforation to driver and passenger seats: £9500, Black Alacantara steering wheel with Laurel Green race band: £2519, Gearshift paddles with symbols in Laurel Green: £1333, Extended carbonfibre door sill with ‘McLaren’ logo painted in Solar Yellow: £1600, Solar Yellow vinyl detailing to front splitter, side skirts and rear diffuser: £3333, Bespoke ‘Autocar’ headrest stitch in Laurel Green: £3000, Bespoke key in Laurel Green with silver McLaren logo: £1500, TOTAL (incl base car): £782,285

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Three more bespoke arms: Bentley, Ferrari and Rolls-Royce also have customisation depts: 

ROLLS–ROYCEThe firm claims that every model that leaves Goodwood is unique. Last year, it showed its one-off Sweptail, built for an anonymous patron and reported to cost £10m.

FERRARIIts Tailor-Made service means a trip to Maranello to meet your personal designer, who’ll help you spec your car. Or be lucky and get one of three one-off models made per year.

BENTLEY - Mulliner by Bentley is the firm’s customisation arm. Its duties arch from details such as embroidered family crests to coachbuilt limousines for HRH The Queen.

Read more

McLaren Senna review 

McLaren 720S review 

McLaren 570GT review

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mysteryx 13 May 2018

Rachel Burgess

Glad to see from the photographs and the wonderful presentation about McLaren that Rachel will be enjoying her time off, wish her well with the oncoming pregnancy

scrap 13 May 2018

mysteryx wrote:

mysteryx wrote:

Glad to see from the photographs and the wonderful presentation about McLaren that Rachel will be enjoying her time off, wish her well with the oncoming pregnancy

 

are you for real?

jason_recliner 15 May 2018

mysteryx wrote:

mysteryx wrote:

Glad to see from the photographs and the wonderful presentation about McLaren that Rachel will be enjoying her time off, wish her well with the oncoming pregnancy

What are you, an arsehole?

Peter Cavellini 13 May 2018

Just plain silly...?

 I suppose if your spending this kind of dosh then adding changing the spec to what you want is fine, it’s just seems to us mere mortals that spending in some cases the price of a Flat for a Paint job is mind boggling, and why offer the option of deleting the Aircon and then advice the customer not to?, surely that’s not a deal breaker..?