Aston Martin has completed the first of what will be 150 street-legal Valkyrie hypercars. Each one of these license plate eligible F1 cars is hand-built at Aston Martin’s Gaydon Headquarters. According to the manufacturer, each Valkyrie takes over 2,000 labor hours to complete. Once completed, the vehicle is tuned and tested at Silverstone This new Aston Martin Valkyrie variant looks like a Le Mans racer. It's been a very long wait, but the Aston Martin Valkyrie is nearly ready. Deliveries for Aston Martin's extreme street-legal While it bears the appearance of a street-legal racecar and was crafted in compliance with the World Endurance Championship (WEC) Hypercar rules, the Aston Martin Valkyrie wasn’t initially drafted for a motorsports berth. However, that narrative is changing. The Aston Martin Valkyrie is a hybrid sports car that was first unveiled in 2016. The car is a joint venture between Aston Martin and Red Bull Racing, and is the brainchild of Formula One designer Adrian Newey. The Valkyrie is set to be one of the most extreme performance cars ever made, and will be street legal in Europe and the United Kingdom. The Aston Martin Valkyrie is the most extreme hypercar of all time! Join me for a ride onboard to get a sense of what happens when absolutely no compromises Aston Martin Valkyrie’s V12 engine generates 1,000 horses at 11,100 rpm, and it's all naturally aspirated. The car is street-legal, and it was codenamed 'Nebula,' an acronym for Newey, Red Bull, and Aston Martin , which inadvertently reminds us of the astronomical connotation and how it applies to a car that flies as though its speed should Aston Martin Right off the bat, the mere specifications of the Cosworth RA don't even make sense — the only one that's even comparable to other engines is the physical space it occupies as it The Aston Martin Valkyrie Was Designed in a Pub. It was a foolish thing, this idea to create a Formula 1 car for the street. It’s like building a Zumwalt-class destroyer for use in your local 20Tu.