A Lamborghini Nobody Babied
Supercars usually live easy, pampered lives. One or two careful owners, low mileage, and a garage that’s cleaner than most kitchens. This Lamborghini Huracán didn’t get that treatment. YouTuber Rob Ferretti, who runs the exotic rental company Gotham Dream Cars, bought a 2019 Huracán Spyder and immediately put it to work in his fleet. Over the next five years, hundreds of customers drove the $260,000 V10-powered convertible, piling on 53,000 miles of launches, New York/Las Vegas city traffic, and first-time supercar excitement. When the time came to sell it, Ferretti filmed a full walkaround to show exactly what that kind of life does to a Lamborghini, potentially a useful guide to show what 50,000 miles of real, untampered mileage looks like.
superspeedersRob/YouTube
The Wear Is There, But It’s Not a Disaster
Visually, the front end took most of the punishment. The front bumper has several gravel chip marks and scratches from making contact with asphalt every now and then. The wheels are fine, but that’s because they’ve been restored a few times to cover some minor curb rash. Inside, the floor mats and the driver’s seat were the only items that appeared worn. Not surprising, because even passengers climb into it to experience what it’s like behind the wheel of a Lambo. In Ferretti’s fairly well-informed opinion, the overall condition sits somewhere around a six out of ten. Given the mileage and the sheer number of hands that touched it, that’s actually a decent score.
The Mechanical Story Changes Everything
A rental Lamborghini lives a much more stressful life than a privately owned car. Most of those 53,000 miles were probably short blasts of enthusiasm as opposed to Sunday cruises. The repeated cold starts, aggressive launches, and inexperienced drivers that are typical of a rental fleet will generally cut down on a car’s life expectancy.
superspeedersRob/YouTube
But here’s the surprising part. Despite five years of rental duty, the Huracán never needed major repairs. According to Ferretti, the car required nothing beyond routine maintenance: regular oil changes and two complete brake jobs. Apparently, the dual-clutch transmission still shifts cleanly, the steering remains tight, and the 5.2-liter V10 pulls just as violently as it did when new. The only point to note was a slightly squeaky retractable convertible top. For a car that spent its life being driven by strangers, many of them experiencing a Lamborghini for the first time, that level of durability is genuinely impressive.
superspeedersRob/YouTube
Exotic cars are often assumed to be fragile, but modern Lamborghinis share more engineering DNA with Audi than many people realize, and the Huracán’s durability in this case backs that up. In a strange way, the rental life may have helped the car. Because the Huracán was part of a business fleet, it was maintained on schedule and repaired immediately when something broke — something many privately owned supercars can’t always claim.