Try GOLD - Free
LIGHTNING
BBC TopGear India
|July 2025
What's the quickest car in the world like on a normal road? Can you ever use 2,000bhp – and what does it feel like? Ollie Kew has a date with a, erm, grandmother...
Poor Baka. She’s a mess. Her naked carbon fibre panels are yellowed and dulled from testing different lacquer finishes. Jagged chunks are missing from her butterfly doors. Everywhere the light touches exposes scratches, gouges and gaffer tape residue. This isn’t your usual Fabergé egg exposed weave hypercar, all pouty, peacocking and safely wrapped in paint protection armour, its reason for existing merely to preserve a single digit mileage for the next collector.
Baka’s interior is a bomb site. Her vivid blue steering wheel is stained brown from 38,000 miles of hard graft through 50°C deserts, subzero Arctic convoys, ten tenths racetrack torture and several deliberate crashes. The matted armrest is a petri dish of test driver mung and there’s a hole in the passenger seat that looks suspiciously like a cigarette burn. Apparently one of the engineers dropped his red hot soldering iron.
Baka is not her official name. It’s what I’ve christened this long suffering Rimac test bed. In a world exclusive for TG, we present the Nevera R.
It’s the lighter, grippier, angrier and even more powerful version of what was already the fastest accelerating car in the world. Only, this one didn’t start life as an R. It was originally a normal Nevera, if you could ever deem a car with 1,888bhp and capable of 0-62mph in 1.8 seconds ‘normal’. Once the factory learned everything it could from its original form, it mutated into an R.
Those of you who really know your supercars will remember this isn’t a unique strategy for an ultra boutique unicorn stable. Pagani shapeshifted a Trigger’s broom Zonda, which spent 18 years shaking down tuned up V12s, magnesium suspension, stronger brakes and unobtanium exhausts in increasingly tatty bodywork. Somewhere along her one million kilometre career, Pagani’s engineers nicknamed their patchwork supercar ‘La Nonna’ before treating her to a concours restoration to celebrate Horacio P’s 60th birthday.
This story is from the July 2025 edition of BBC TopGear India.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC TopGear India
BBC TopGear India
HYUNDAI CRETA N LINE
AFTER DRIVING THE HYUNDAI CRETA N LINE for approximately four months, it's time for a switch — and that means driving it back to Mumbai from Vadodara.
1 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
HOW VINFAST COULD REDEFINE VALUE IN
INDIA'S EV MARKET
2 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
DAKARRRRRGGGGHHHHHH
The Defender Octa is about as serious as road legal off roaders get... can it stick with a full blown Dakar truck?
7 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
VOLVO XC60
YES, YOU READ THAT RIGHT. IT TAKES ME the exact same time to get from our office in Jogeshwari to my house in central Mumbai as it took me to get from Pune to Mumbai.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
ADVENTURE, SIMPLIFIED
TVS APACHE RTX
6 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
KIA CARENS CLAVIS
THIS DIWALI SURPRISED US WITH RAIN, because the universe decided diyas and fireworks weren't enough, we needed a water element too.
1 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
OH MANTHEY GOD
A taste of something is better than never knowing what it feels like. And that's exactly what happened one October morning in Mumbai when I drove India's wildest street-legal road car
5 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
Watch kraft
Germany's once massive watch industry all but vanished. Now it's fighting back
1 min
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
MAKING IT HAPPEN
PCOTY, OFTEN REFERRED TO AS ‘THE BEST WEEK OF THE YEAR’, IS MERELY the cherry on top of a dense gateau of organisation.
1 mins
November 2025
BBC TopGear India
PRAISE THE PEDAL
There was a time when every car enthusiast learned to drive on a manual.
4 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

