Skip advert
Advertisement

Lamborghini Canto – Dead on arrival

It’s the Lamborghini Diablo replacement that some considered to be the work of the Devil himself

Lamborghini Canto profile

In 1995 Lamborghini began work on a project to replace the Diablo, codenamed L147, which would adapt the chassis of its current flagship and marry it to the most powerful V12 it could muster.

The company’s go-to designer Marcello Gandini came up with a full-size styling model, only for management to pass on his wonky-arched work in favour of a rival pitch from frequent beauty strangers Zagato. This happened firstly because Gandini’s offering was hopelessly lumpen, and secondly because Zagato was the only Italian design house to be up to speed on the exciting new world of CADCAM.

Advertisement - Article continues below

And the design its numerically controlled milling machine had carved was certainly striking, chiefly because it sported air intakes of such enormity you could believe the thing was running jet engines.

The gigantic tunnels perched on top of the rear wings were a practical solution to an engineering edict which said that, since there was no money to move the Diablo’s radiators, the only cooling solution for the more powerful engine was to ingest as much air as possible. Zagato made a feature of this issue and Lamborghini was happy to play along, signing off the styling and commissioning the design house to start work on running prototypes.

Lamborghini Canto rear

By 1997 test cars were papped lapping Nardò and on the streets of Sant’Agata, the pics run alongside stories that revealed the so-called Super Diablo would bear the name Canto. All seemed to be progressing well until the following year when Audi bought Lamborghini and immediately requested a rethink. Under orders from the new bosses, power went up and the size of those comical intakes went down, though this did no favours to the cooling demands of the newly expanded 6-litre V12.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Nonetheless, with Audi money behind it, Lamborghini stepped up the pace on the Canto and was so confident of its imminent readiness that it put out a press release announcing the car’s debut at the forthcoming 1999 Geneva motor show.

This turned out to be an embarrassing mistake. There would be no Canto at the Geneva show. In fact, there would be no Canto at all. VW Group overlord Ferdinand Piëch had hated the car from the off, apparently believing it lacked fire in its belly and the right kind of drama in its styling, the latter confirmed by Audi pre-launch research among nonplussed customers. Even with the requested mods, the Canto wasn’t cutting it. Lambo engineers were flogging a weak-hearted, flabby-bodied horse. With enormous nostrils. Just weeks before its public introduction, Piëch saw no problem with having it shot.

In its place came a new project that addressed the concerns of the late gimlet-eyed engineering pervert in the top office by pairing a reworked 6.2-litre, 572bhp V12 with from-scratch styling by Luc Donckerwolke that nailed the brightly coloured Batmobile vibe all good Lambos should possess. Better yet, to keep that big motor from boiling without marring the sleek looks, the car gained its most famed feature: rear intakes that rose elegantly from its upper flanks whenever the radiators needed more air. And that’s how we ended up with the Murciélago.

As for the Canto, its 6-litre V12 was used to gee up the stopgap Diablo VT, its interior layout was adapted for the Murciélago and, though Audi ordered all 12 prototypes to be destroyed, two slipped through the net and exist to this day, one kept safe by Zagato, the other in the hands of a European collector.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Dead on arrival: 44 cars that failed before they launched
Dead on arrival
Best cars

Dead on arrival: 44 cars that failed before they launched

Sometimes cars make it all the way to production possibility before being snuffed out at the last minute. Here are 44 of the most memorable
19 Sep 2025
Lamborghini's Fenomeno is a lesson in how to sell hypercars – make them rare and fit a V12
Lamborghini Fenomeno front- Mitchell Weitzman
News

Lamborghini's Fenomeno is a lesson in how to sell hypercars – make them rare and fit a V12

The Fenomeno might be Lamborghini’s most powerful model ever, but changes go far beyond just the powertrain
12 Sep 2025
TVR Cerbera Speed 12 – dead on arrival
TVR Cerbera Speed 12
Features

TVR Cerbera Speed 12 – dead on arrival

The ultimate 'dead on arrival' supercar is the Cerbera Speed 12, a car even TVR was too afraid to put in public hands
27 Aug 2025
Lamborghini was ‘scared’ to go hybrid, but has the gamble paid off?
Lamborghini Fenomeno
Opinion

Lamborghini was ‘scared’ to go hybrid, but has the gamble paid off?

Electrification is tough to get right, especially in a flagship Lamborghini. evo speaks with the head of its V12 lineup to see if it was right to be n…
15 Aug 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Best cars of the 2000s – the best cars from the best of times
Best cars of the 2000s
Best cars

Best cars of the 2000s – the best cars from the best of times

The 2000s was a decade that went supernova for the performance car market. We count down just a few of the very best cars of the decade
6 Oct 2025
When Performance Car magazine closed, two writers and a Subaru kept driving
Subaru Impreza Turbo
Opinion

When Performance Car magazine closed, two writers and a Subaru kept driving

Porter recounts the extraordinary day that led to the birth of evo
6 Oct 2025
RML GT Hypercar review – the Porsche 911 taken to the ultimate extreme
RML GT Hypercar front
Reviews

RML GT Hypercar review – the Porsche 911 taken to the ultimate extreme

As close as anything’s gotten to being a modern day 911 GT1, the RML GT hypercar is a 900bhp monster
7 Oct 2025