Owing to the Goodwood Festival of Speed, it has been a busy news week. Ferrari announced the latest bespoke project. Based on the 488 GT3 Evo competition car, this track-only machine is dubbed the KC23. Designed in-house by Flavio Manzoni, it can be run with and without a massive rear wing.
Celebrating the company's 75th anniversary in style, Porsche revealed the Vision 357 Speedster. Visually a tribute to the original Porsche 356, it is equipped with a sophisticated all-electric drivetrain.
Inspired by the one-off Victor, Aston Martin has now revealed a limited run of the similarly styled Valour. In addition to the striking design, it also stands out due to the fact that it combines a V12 engine with a six-speed manual gearbox. All 110 examples due to be built have already been spoken for.
Lamborghini will enter top-level prototype racing with the SC63. Due to compete on both sides, it is built to the IMSA LMDh regulations. As such, it combines a proprietary twin-turbo V8 engine with an off-the-shelve Bosch hybrid system.
Caterham is stepping up its game with the all-electric Project V. The striking 2+1 Coupe offers a preview of a production model due to arrive late in 2025 or early in 2026. It was designed by Anthony Jannarelly and constructed with help from Italdesign.
A classic British sports car firm that might make a return is Triumph. With the blessing of BMW, who own the rights to the name, British specialist company Makkina unveiled this Triumph TR25 earlier in the week. The BMW connection runs deeper than the name alone as it is based on i3s underpinnings.

Enjoy the links:

2023 - 2024 Aston Martin Valour

2023 Caterham Project V

2023 Ferrari KC23

2024 Lamborghini SC63

2023 Porsche Vision 357 Speedster

2023 Triumph TR25