Lamborghini’s First Seabob Is Also the Msot Powerful Yet


Sure, you can drive the Lamborghini Huracan Sterrato off-road, but the latest Raging Bull can be taken off land completely.
The Italian supercar maker has teamed up with Cayago for a special edition of the ubiquitous Seabob. The German company says the latest version of its battery-powered personal watercraft is also its most powerful model yet.
This isn’t the first time Lamborghini has built a supercar for the sea. Earlier this decade, the automaker teamed up with Tecnomar for a 4,000-hp sport yacht called the Lamborghini 63. The new Seabob Special Edition 63 (or SE63)—1963 was the year Lamborghini transitioned from making tractors to sports cars—isn’t anywhere near as powerful but is also a decidedly more accessible type of water toy.
Cayago Seabob SE63 for Automobili Lamborghini
Lamborghini
The collaboration is based on the current-generation Seabob F9, which was actually designed with the help of Studio F.A. Porsche, according to Newatlas. The newer watercraft features a subtly reworked look that includes nods to Lamborghini’s current crop of supercars, including an angular fascia inspired by that of the Revuelto and hexagonal headlamps similar to those found on the Temerario. It also comes in a slew of bold colors that were dreamt up in Sant’Agata Bolognese, including Arancio Egon (orange), Verde Gea (bronze green), Grigio Lynx (grey), Verde Selvans (neon green), Giallo (yellow), Bianco Siderale (white).
The SE63 also packs plenty of power, by Cayago standards. The electric motor in the latest Seabob makes 8.4 hp. That is nothing compared to the Temerario (907 hp) or Revuelto (1,001 hp), but neither of those can operate underwater. That figure is also significantly more than the other Seabobs currently on the market, the F9 and F9S, which make 3.5 hp and 4.8 hp, respectively. The bigger motor does mean that the SE63 weighs 20 pounds more than the rest of the Cayago lineup, but it can still reach a speed of up to 22 mph, dive to a depth of 25 meters (roughly 82 feet), and run for 60 minutes on a single charge.
The SE63 can reach speeds of up to 22 mph
Lamborghini
Intrigued? Neither Lamborghini nor Cayago has announced how much the SE63 will cost just yet. The F9 starts at $10,725 and the F9S at $14,465, so a price well north of the latter seems likely.
Click here for more photos of the Cayago Seabob SE63 for Automobili Lamborghini.
Authors
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Bryan Hood
Senior Staff Writer
Bryan Hood is a digital staff writer at Robb Report. Before joining the magazine, he worked for the New York Post, Artinfo and New York magazine, where he covered everything from celebrity gossip to…