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Huracán who? Reiter Engineering shows the Lamborghini Gallardo still has some fight left in it

The Lamborghini Gallardo may have been retired to make room for the all-new Huracán, but there’s still some fight left in this bull.

Lambo tuner extraordinaire Reiter Engineering is proving that with its new Gallardo Extenso R-EX, an update of the Gallardo race cars the German company has built in the past.

The name “Extenso” refers to the car’s face-lifted status, and indeed Reiter has made many modifications to keep the Gallardo competitive on track.

Building on the already-aggressive looks of the stock car, the rear track was widened to 80 inches, the maximum allowed under FIA rules. The entire car is also wrapped in carbon-fiber bodywork inspired by Reiter’s old Murcielago R-SV racer.

The V10 engine also received a through going over, gaining new camshafts, sturdier Mahle pistons, and a retuned exhaust system to make sure every Ferrari and Porsche driver will hear this thing coming.

Reiter plans to the Gallardo Extenso R-EX in popular sports-car series, including the Blancpain GT Series and the Pirelli World Challenge.

Privateer racing teams can get their hands on one for 248,000 euros (just over $300,000), and they’ll be getting some solid engineering. Reiter says it’s built over 100 race cars, and every one built since 2012 is still using its original engine.

In the high-stress environment of racing, that’s a pretty impressive statistic.

Meanwhile, Lamborghini itself will launch a racing version of the Huracán, the LP620-2 Super Trofeo. So far it’s only slated to compete in the Lambo-only Blancpain Super Trofeo series, but it could be deployed in other race series in the future.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
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