A front and rear double wishbone suspension takes care of the ride and handling of the Grand Sport. The ride height in the standard mode is 125 mm front and rear, in handling mode it comes down to 80 mm front and 95 mm rear and the top speed setting drops it further down to 65 mm front and 70 mm rear.
There is a snowball effect when you increase the power to such an extent then your suspension and brakes have to keep pace with the performance of the car. The Grand Sport weighs a cool 1.8 tonnes and is capable of doing a top speed of 407 km/h. In order to harness that kind of speed, this car is equipped with huge 400-mm front and 380-mm rear carbon ceramic disc rotors with an eight-piston calliper gripping the front rotor and a six-piston calliper gripping the rear one. Thus the Grand Sport also sets a benchmark for road cars in the braking department.
The minute you slide inside the Grand Sport you can feel the quality of the interior – from the feel of the well-supported napa leather seats to all the switchgear and controls. The power indicator shows you the amount of horsepower the engine is developing at any given moment.
The engine was already running when I got behind the wheel. I did not have to make many adjustments to the driving position, for Pierre-Henri Raphanel, the pilot official, was nearly the same size as I and had just given a small demo of acceleration and braking capabilities of the Veyron. I engaged ‘Drive’ and we were cruising at 70 km/h in seven gears and the car was behaving like a luxury sedan. The ride quality was comparable to a luxury car and did not rattle our bones as most super cars tend to do.
The route was a blend of country roads and motorways. The handling of the Grand Sport is so nimble you can throw her round corners like cars half her weight. Its precise steering makes the car fun to drive as it requires very little inputs to get her round corners; she holds on to the line as if on rails.