Editing Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 1/Episode 8

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|next = [[{{BASEPAGENAME}}/Episode 9|Series 1, Episode 9]]
|next = [[{{BASEPAGENAME}}/Episode 9|Series 1, Episode 9]]
|airdate =
|airdate =
{{FlagUK}} 8th December, 2002
UK: 8th December, 2002
| airdates    =
| airdates    =
{{TG 2002 Airdates/S01E08}}
WO: 1st January, 2003<br>
NL: 14th November, 2003<br>
PR: 28th December, 2004<br>
PL: 9th April, 2005<br>
RU: 7th August, 2005<br>
BE: 30th July, 2006 (BBC Prime)<br>
FI: 28th January, 2007<br>
AU: 12th April, 2008<br>
KO: 25th May, 2008<br>
CZ: 25th April, 2009<br>
HU: 24th June, 2009<br>
''Data may not be 100% accurate.''
}}
}}


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Admittedly, the car is not new; much of the body styling is derived from the earlier [[Maserati 3200 GT|3200 GT]] except with a tail light design that was less polarising than its predecessor. Under the bonnet, however, is a 4.2 litre V8 developing close to 400 BHP. Inside, the car is a proper 4-seater and is called the ''Cambiocorsa'' due to its paddle-shifter<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080320025425/http://www.roadandtrack.com/article.asp?print_page=y&section_id=6&article_id=37&page_number=2 (Archive link) Road & Track - Maserati Spyder Cambiocorsa.]</ref> gearbox, which Clarkson holds in high disregard as he struggles to get the car going. However, the car does have a regular manual transmission option. Once on the track, Clarkson enables Sport mode, which softens the suspension up, and then turns off the traction control, which renders the car uncontrollable and very tail-happy. He states that the Coupé is the first car he has been unable to get around [[Top Gear Test Track#Corners#Hammerhead|Hammerhead]], and because of its poor handling, cannot consider it a driver's car. He postulates that it's instead supposed to be an Italian alternative to the [[Jaguar XK (first generation)|Jaguar XK]], except that the interior is lacking a certain "opulence" that the Jaguar possesses.
Admittedly, the car is not new; much of the body styling is derived from the earlier [[Maserati 3200 GT|3200 GT]] except with a tail light design that was less polarising than its predecessor. Under the bonnet, however, is a 4.2 litre V8 developing close to 400 BHP. Inside, the car is a proper 4-seater and is called the ''Cambiocorsa'' due to its paddle-shifter<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080320025425/http://www.roadandtrack.com/article.asp?print_page=y&section_id=6&article_id=37&page_number=2 (Archive link) Road & Track - Maserati Spyder Cambiocorsa.]</ref> gearbox, which Clarkson holds in high disregard as he struggles to get the car going. However, the car does have a regular manual transmission option. Once on the track, Clarkson enables Sport mode, which softens the suspension up, and then turns off the traction control, which renders the car uncontrollable and very tail-happy. He states that the Coupé is the first car he has been unable to get around [[Top Gear Test Track#Corners#Hammerhead|Hammerhead]], and because of its poor handling, cannot consider it a driver's car. He postulates that it's instead supposed to be an Italian alternative to the [[Jaguar XK (first generation)|Jaguar XK]], except that the interior is lacking a certain "opulence" that the Jaguar possesses.


The Stig then takes the Coupé round for a lap in very cold, wet, and foggy conditions. Listening to "[[Sounds of The Stig|Copacabana]]" by Barry Manilow, The Stig has little difficulty in getting the car around the track in spite of the conditions, but the resultant lap is very slow:
The Stig then takes the Coupé round for a lap in very cold, wet, and foggy conditions. Listening to "Copacabana" by Barry Manilow, The Stig has little difficulty in getting the car around the track in spite of the conditions, but the resultant lap is very slow:
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 675px;"
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 675px;"
! style="width: 75px"|Position
! style="width: 75px"|Position
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|- align="center"
|- align="center"
|11
|11
|[[Bentley Arnage#Arnage T|Bentley Arnage T]]
|Bentley Arnage T
|1:40
|1:40
|Wet
|Wet
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<big>'''Worldwide'''</big><br>
<big>'''Worldwide'''</big><br>


Internationally, the episode would first premiere<ref>[https://www.rs6.com/showthread.php/645-Audi-RS6-on-BBC-World-Top-Gear-This-Week! RS6.com - Audi RS6 on BBC World Top Gear This Week!]</ref> on [[BBC/BBC World|BBC World]] at the end of January 2003. Due to its direct connection with the British government, Falkland Islands channel BFBS 1 would air the episode in its original form two weeks after its premiere in the UK. It would then be shown in the Netherlands on [[Veronica (TV channel)|Veronica]] from the 14th of November, 2003, 11 months later, before appearing on [[BBC/BBC Prime|BBC Prime]] at the end of December 2004, and then the likes of [[TVN Turbo]] in Poland and [[NTV]] in Russia during 2005, the latter in a similarly cut-down form to how the episode was shown on BBC World. The episode would be reshown in a handful of countries thereafter, but would not premiere in many Baltic and Balkan nations such as the Czech Republic, Hungary and Estonia until as late as mid-2009, a full six and a half years after the episode was first shown in the United Kingdom.
Internationally, the episode would first premiere on [[BBC/BBC World|BBC World]] on New Year's Day 2003, 3 weeks after its UK release, although some regions<ref>[https://www.rs6.com/showthread.php/645-Audi-RS6-on-BBC-World-Top-Gear-This-Week! RS6.com - Audi RS6 on BBC World Top Gear This Week!]</ref> wouldn't receive the episode until the end of January. It would then be shown in the Netherlands on [[Veronica (TV channel)|Veronica]] from the 14th of November, 2003, 11 months later, before appearing on [[BBC/BBC Prime|BBC Prime]] at the end of December 2004, and then the likes of [[TVN Turbo]] in Poland and [[NTV]] in Russia during 2005, the latter in a similarly cut-down form to how the episode was shown on BBC World. The episode would be reshown in a handful of countries thereafter, but would not premiere in many Baltic and Balkan nations such as the Czech Republic, Hungary and Estonia until as late as mid-2009, a full six and a half years after the episode was first shown in the United Kingdom.


{{Unabridged|episodename=Series 1, Episode 8}}
{{Unabridged|episodename=Series 1, Episode 8}}


==References==
==References==
<references/>
==Navigation==
{{TG 2002 S1}}
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