Currently reading: Lamborghini Miura at 50 - Italian road trip
To celebrate half a century of the Miura, we tour some of Italy's finest roads with a collection of 25 classic Lambos

The Lamborghini Miura has long been hailed as one of the prettiest cars ever built. 50 years after its birth, we drive one through picturesque Italy.

Never trust an ancient Italian speedometer. The needle is touching 260km/h – more than 160mph – but there’s no way the Lamborghini Miura is running at that sort of pace.

Besides, there’s a police car alongside my bright yellow SV model as we hurtle down the dual carriageway between Bologna and Parma.

Fortunately, the carabinieri are all smiles in their Lamborghini Huracán squad car. And the driver is definitely urging me on, rather than trying to enforce the national speed limit.

Thousands of spectators have lined the route to wave Italian flags and photograph our progress. As we slow to pay a toll, the cry from a minibus opposite goes up: “Viva Lamborghini!”

Welcome to the inaugural Miura Tour – a collection of 25 classic Lamborghinis embarking on a four-day adventure across northern Italy. The event has star billing and cars have been shipped from as far afield as Japan and the US to attend.

Lambo drive web 563

Just 25 Miuras may not sound many, but then Lamborghini built fewer than 800 of these iconic coupés between 1966 and 1973. Only 400 are still believed to be in existence, and the cars here are some of the very best.

When it was unveiled at the Brussels motor show in 1966, the original Miura was the fastest production car in the world. It blew away the rival Ferrari 275 and forced the Jaguar E-Type to eat its exhaust fumes. The Miura was special because of its central V12 engine, which was ground-breaking in a road car at that time. Slip on a Bertone bodyshell measuring just over 41 inches tall and the result was jaw-dropping. This, remember, was the year England won the World Cup.

Driving one today should be on everybody’s bucket list, not least because it proves how far supercars have developed since Ferruccio Lamborghini unleashed the Miura onto an unsuspecting motoring public.

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Both the brakes and steering are woefully inadequate and the cabin is a greenhouse, then on top of that there’s an overheating issue. Lamborghini fitted the Miura with two cooling fans, one of which could be manually operated via a switch on the roof when things really warmed up.

Consequently, I’m driving the Miura by water temperature gauge rather than that optimistic speedo. I’ve been told to pull over quick if we hit heavy traffic, which may explain why the police are so keen to clear a path at every junction.

On top of all the above, there’s little seat adjustment, the clutch action is high and all Miuras are incredibly noisy. So what’s the appeal?

“I’ve owned mine for 38 years,” explains Chris Wood, from London. “An aunt left me some money to invest and I bought a Lamborghini; I was almost disowned by the family. The Miura is a very special car because it’s so beautiful and was the blueprint for all mid-engined supercars. I own an uprated E-Type, too. The Lamborghini is my wife and the Jaguar is my mistress.”

Lambo drive web 602

Iain Tyrrell, from Chester, buys and sells classics. One of his “several” Miuras was filmed in the opening scenes of The Italian Job and is currently for sale at £3 million. “I’ve been passionate about cars since I was 10 years old,” Tyrrell says. “I heard the sound of a V12 Espada driving past and I was hooked. I still get as much of a buzz from the Miura today as the first time I drove it. It left everything for dead; it was so far ahead of its time.”

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Miura prices lulled in the doldrums for decades but have soared in recent years, mirroring a rise in Lamborghini’s overall popularity. A restoration job will cost £800,000, while Sir Rod Stewart’s Miura has been offered for sale at £1.2m.

“Miuras have to be driven or they start to fester,” explains Tyrrell. “It’s not a car that appreciates being left in a garage as an asset.”

Driving a classic Ferrari in Italy is memorable enough, but touring in a Miura is the stuff of dreams. The Lambo has instant celebrity status. It’s a force of nature, like an E-Type, Ferrari 250 GTO and Aston Martin DB5 rolled into one.

I don’t speak a word of Japanese, but I know the guy from Tokyo in a Miura next to me feels the same. He’s got his thumb up, foot to the floor and is smiling like a 10-year-old who’s just heard a Lamborghini V12 for the very first time.

Jeremy Taylor

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rock8521 8 October 2018

Sync Function

Lamborghini is my favorite car making company, fantastic this posting. it is going to explore your system all sync related information, first of all loging the windows 10 microsoft account and easy to arrange your system sync setting.

Beastie_Boy 31 July 2016

The most beautiful car ever built.

Worthy of being considered art.