HOW WOULD YOU CHART THE evolution of the supercar? Forty years ago, when I was testing the strength of skirting board fitted to new-build homes, the genre had a very clear formula: low, wedge-shaped design, preferably drawn by an Italian; mid-engined with a dozen cylinders and capable of unimaginable speeds to someone who travelled to school in a 2CV.
It took many a year to accept that, despite the location of its engine, the less-than-inspiring design and the fact that it only had six cylinders and a piddly 3-litre engine, Porsche’s 911 (930) Turbo could also consider itself a signed-up member of the supercar elite, even if it was a ratio short of a full ’box.
Norfolk’s mid-engined wedge? A supercar through and through, despite its engine having the same…