KTM X-Bow GT-XR
Evo UK|June 2023
KTM has put meat on the bare-bones X-Bow to create a junior hypercar, and one of the most extreme road-legal cars yet seen. As we discover, it's as intense to drive as it looks
JAMES TAYLOR
KTM X-Bow GT-XR

RACING CAR FOR THE ROAD: IT'S ONE R of the great automotive clichés. And like most clichés, it's rarely true, of course. Even the hardest of hardcore sports cars are generally designed as road cars first and foremost, and if they do wind up on a GT racing grid at Spa or Silverstone, it's usually in a re-engineered, evolutionary form (or, depending on how relaxed the regs are, a clean-sheet design with only a passing resemblance to a distant road-going cousin).

But the wild-looking KTM X-Bow GT-XR you can see here really was designed as a racing car first- and subsequently house-trained into a productionised road car rather than the other way round. And it's evolved from the original, minimal X-Bow into something bigger, more potent - more supercar than sports car.

"Lots of customers of the original X-Bow told us: "It's a fun car, but it's a toy - I want a more 'adult' car," product manager Lukas Barth tells evo as he shows us around the sophisticated X-Bow production line in Graz, Austria. Now we are really in the adult sphere with this car.' The new X-Bow GT-XR's story starts back in 2018, when the four-cylinder turbocharged Audi engine that powered the first-generation X-Bow, launched in 2008, fell foul of tightening emissions regulations for homologation. That could have been the end of the X-Bow story, had the KTM board decided to call a halt to its car division - a relative minnow compared with its separate motorcycle companies and wider portfolio. But, happily, it saw the enforced engine change not as a dead end but an opportunity.

This story is from the June 2023 edition of Evo UK.

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This story is from the June 2023 edition of Evo UK.

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