Betcha didn't know Germans love Easter Eggs.
Not latent cinematic surprises, nor traditional tie-dyed orbs. Rather, the faint snail trails of craftsmanship that otherwise would go unseen unless you spent hours poring over patent applications or chatting with dudes like Dr. Frank-Steffen Walliser, the bushy-haired brainiac and architect of the absolutely astonishing bit of automotive technology that is the Porsche 918 Spyder.
The 918 is, for all intents and purposes, the spiritual successor to the famous (and, thanks to the untimely demise of a certain Hollywood star, infamous) Carrera GT. And while it shares a more than a passing resemblance to the late, great supercar of a decade ago, the 918 inverts the Carrera GT's analog embrace with electronic hardware and wiring jammed so tightly beneath its undulating bodywork that you couldn't squeeze a deck of cards in there if you tried. In contrast, the 918 packs miles of wiring and no fewer than 50 electronic control units. Curiously, it combines two electric motors with a naturally-aspirated V8, suggesting German engineers haven't traded every last ounce of emotion for inherently efficient—but arguably soulless—turbochargers. The 918 also serves as the meat in a numeric sandwich, flanked by the batshit crazy 917 race car and the just-unveiled 919 Hybrid LMP1 car; smack in the middle of that odd triumvirate of fearsome speed is a DOT-approved, airbag-equipped road car.
Given the magnitude of the 918's engineering ambitions, you'd think its creators would have neither the time nor the motivation to shape a Porsche crest into an unseen portion of the carbon-fiber monocoque (with "Made in Flacht" carved into the thing, a nod to this specimen's origins from Porsche's Motorsports division). Or that they would bother lining up the carbon-fiber weave along a center seam like an Italian tailor would, a visual theme that extends to the custom-fitted luggage, a $19,900 option. But they've left those tidbits there for the observant (and/or obsessive-compulsive) as discreet reminders of the specialness of this low-slung $845,000 ride.
