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2010 Bentley Continental Supersports Big, graceful, race-bred Bentleys are certainly nothing new. Since the early '20s, they've earned the company six Le Mans wins and the prestige that goes along with them. Indeed, super-luxurious Bentley four-doors have basked in the limelight for decades now. But, for 2010, Bentley has built a very special coupe, and revived the Supersports name to go with it. So, we jumped at the chance to see just how super it really is. The 2010 Bentley Continental Supersports' silhouette is little changed from its less potent Continental stablemates. They all share a 108.1-inch wheelbase and a 189.1-inch overall length, but racy styling cues help this fastest Bentley ever stand out. A central 'letterbox' intake and two vertical apertures in the front fascia feed 10% more air through the Supersports' radiator and intercoolers. All of the mesh on the front end- from the intakes to the familiar Continental grille to the twin heat extractors in the hood- is finished in the same "smoked steel" as the headlight bezels, 20-inch ten-spoke alloy wheels, and rocker panel trim. Classic big-coupe good looks have worked just fine for the Continental so far, and the Supersports is no exception. Well-drawn body lines sweep over wider rear fender flares, which accommodate a two-inch wider rear track.
For motivation, the Supersports relies on the same 6.0-liter, twin-turbo W12 that has been under the Continental's hood since its debut in 2004. But this time around, there's 621 horsepower and 590 pound-feet of torque on tap. That's a bump of 21 horses and 37 pound-feet over the Continental GT Speed, and a leap of 69 horsepower and 111 pound-feet over the Continental GT. The heavily-revised ZF six-speed 'Quickshift' automatic with wheel-mounted paddle shifters is the only available transmission, and it cuts fuel and ignition between gear changes for lightning-quick shifts. In 'Sport' mode, they're almost telepathic. The extra power hauls a car featuring lightweight wheels, carbon-ceramic brakes, revised aluminum suspension components, and no rear seats. All told, the Supersports weighs in at 4,939 pounds, 243 pounds lighter than the GT Speed. At the track, it was a velvet sledgehammer. Power builds up fast and smooth, and its baritone around-town burble gave way to a primal roar at wide-open throttle. Our Supersports blazed from a standstill to 60 in 3.9 seconds-that's eight tenths quicker than the GT-and through the quarter mile in 12.3 seconds at 115 miles per hour, figures that put it in the same league as much more spartan supercars. Through the slalom, the all-wheel drive Supersports' revised dampers and anti-roll bars, coupled with its new 40/60 rear-biased torque split, made for quick, neutral responses in corners. Steering has been retuned too, and we found it to be quick and direct but with little feedback. Being ham-fisted results in understeer, while being overzealous with the gas tipped the Supersports over into power oversteer. For being as big and heavy as it is, however, the Supersports is very agile, with minimal body roll even in high-speed maneuvers. Those big carbon-ceramic brakes snapped it all to a dead halt from 60 in a very impressive average of 109 feet. The pedal is soft, but travel is short, and stops were stable and fade-free. For all the dynamic gains on the track, the Supersports loses a little refinement on the road. The ride is somewhat stiffer, but nothing we couldn't put up with. Bentley-exclusive manually adjustable Sparco sports seats were noticeably thin on padding, but generously trimmed in leather and diamond-pattern Alcantara and still very comfortable.
The biggest difference from the driver's seat is the leather three-spoke steering wheel. And, as usual, Bentley has the details perfect, from the Breitling clock and organ-stop vent controls to the drilled alloy sports pedals. Now, there's only room for two, but they'll enjoy standard satellite navigation, front and side curtain airbags, and 10-speaker sound. As you might surmise, Government Fuel Economy ratings are low: 12 city, 19 highway. Our test loop returned 13.9 miles per gallon on premium gas. But Bentley has become eco-minded. By summer, the Supersports will be the first Bentley that runs on E85, and by 2012, the entire lineup will be FlexFuel capable. Available now in very limited numbers, the Supersports starts at $272,195 including a $2,600 gas guzzler tax. The 2010 Bentley Continental Supersports delivers such astonishing performance that the slight ride penalty is easily overlooked. It's more like its famous racer namesakes than any road-going Bentley ever built, and is indeed a fitting tribute to those proud Winged 'B' warriors.
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