How The Fastest Fish In The Ocean Inspired The McLaren P1’s Design

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The McLaren P1, a 903-horsepower hybrid halo car, was designed by Frank Stephenson, who drew inspiration from nature, specifically the Caribbean sailfish.

The sailfish, capable of swimming up to 68 miles per hour, has a hydrodynamic shape that slices through the water with ease.

How The Fastest Fish In The Ocean Inspired The McLaren P1's Design

Stephenson was impressed by the sailfish’s shape and had one mounted and shipped to McLaren’s aerodynamics department for a full laser scan to study its hydrodynamic intricacies.

The scan revealed that the sailfish’s scales generate vortices of turbulence, reducing hydrodynamic friction, and Stephenson applied a similar scaly texture to the P1’s engine inlet ducts to improve airflow.

The P1’s design was also influenced by the sailfish’s foil-shaped bumps, which smooth out turbulent flow, and were replicated on the support arms for the exterior mirrors to reduce wind noise.

How The Fastest Fish In The Ocean Inspired The McLaren P1's Design

Additionally, the P1’s shape was inspired by a running cheetah, with the goal of creating an organic-looking shape that vacuum seals the bodywork around the car’s components.

The result is a car that is shaped with speed in mind, with every piece designed to optimize performance.

How The Fastest Fish In The Ocean Inspired The McLaren P1's Design

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Source: Jalopnik (Auto Culture & Tuning) (jalopnik.com)