Tag Archives: Bugatti

The Sultan’s Super Sport – Bugatti EB110 Super Sport #39001

Having launched the Bugatti EB110 GT in 1991 Bugatti Automobilli SpA started working on an even higher performance model of the 212 mph EB110 GT known as the EB 110 SS (Super Sport).

Bugatti EB110 Super Sport, Classic Motor Show, NEC, Birmingham

The Super Sport made more use of carbon fibre to make the vehicle lighter and the quad turbo 60 valve V12 motor received a 50hp upgrade to just top 600hp. Externally the Super Sport is identifiable by the seven spoke alloy wheel rims.

Rest to 62.5 mph performance was reduced from 4.2 seconds to 3.2 seconds and top speed went up to 216 mph. In 1995 an EB110 Super Sport became the fastest car on ice with a world record speed of 185 mph.

Former World Rally Champion Juha Kankkunen first broke this record in 2007 taking the speed up to 199 mph and four years later took the record to over 205 mph driving Bentley’s on both occasions.

Chassis #39001 seen here, a couple of years ago at the Classic Motor Show at the NEC in Birmingham, was purchased new by The Royal Family of Brunei in 1993.

Thanks for joining me on this “The Sultan’s Super Sport” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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110th Anniversary Edition – Bugatti EB110 GT

After the death of Ettore Bugatti in 1947 the company he founded that bore his name struggled on in it’s original incarnation for another 5 years.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

During that time the original Type 73C and parts for a further four vehicles of the same type were kept in storage.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

A new road car the Type 101, the protoype for which was based on a Type 57 chassis was manufactured from 1951 to 1952. Five Type 101 vehicles appear to have been completed before the factory shut down, a further two Type 57’s were converted to Type 101’s at owners request.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

There was a brief Bugatti resurgence in 1955 and Gioacchino Colombo better known for his designs for Ferrari, designed an unusual Formula One car with a transverse mounted straight 8 motor behind the driver.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

Maurice Trintignant drove the Type 251 for 18 uncompetitive laps in the 1956 French Grand Prix before Bugatti name went into a hiberantion so far as road and racing cars were concerned for 30 years.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

A sixth Bugatti Type 101 chassis had a body designed by Virgil Exner that was built and fitted by Ghia in 1965.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

In 1987 Italian Romano Artioli acquired the Bugatti road car brand from French Aerospace manufacturer Snecma and built a new factory in Campogalliano, Italy to build a new model.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

The protoype EB110 GT was designed by Marcello Gandini while
Giampaolo Benedini was responsible for the final design that was launched on the 15th September 1991, the 110th Anniversary of Ettore Bugatti’s birth.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

The EB110 GT is powered by a 5 valve 3.5 litre / 213 cui quad turbocharged V12 motor with 5 valves per cylinder, that’s 60 in all (!), producing over 550 hp.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

Performance for the EB110 GT is said to include a rest to 62.5 mph time of 4.2 seconds and top speed in excess of 210 mph.

Bugatti EB110 GT, Goodwood Festival of Speed

It is believed just 95 EB110 GT models were built between 1991 and 1995 when Bugatti Automobiles SpA, where former Ferrari engineer Mauro Forghieri was serving as technical director, went under.

Thanks for joining me on this “110th Anniversary Edition” of “Gettin’ a li’l psychoontyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Unfinished Prototype – Bugatti 73C #73005

Having lost control of his factory in Alsace to occupying German forces in the 1939/45 war Ettoire Bugatti spent the duration making plans for a new post war facility in Paris and a Type 73 which was to be built in it.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

The Type 73 was conceived with designers Noel Domboy and Antoine Pichetto to have a single overhead cam 4 cylinder 16 valve motor for sports car use and a twin overhead cam for racing purposes.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

These alloy motors were unusual for Bugatti’s because they had detachable cylinder heads.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

Plans for the new model called for the 500,000 FF racing models to be built in batches of 5 and one was first seen at the Paris Motor Show in October 1947.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

However by this time Ettoire Bugatti had died and no further Type 73C’s were completed, the original car was stored, with the parts for four further Type 73C’s, never turning a wheel in anger.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

In 1960 Bugatti dealer Jean de Dobbeleer in Brussels manage to acquire the parts for one of the five Type 73C chassis #73002 which became the first Type 73 to enter private hands. In 1962 #73002 was described by Hugh Conway of the Bugatti Owners Club as not ‘pur sang’, pure blooded.

Bugatti Type 73C, VSCC Spring Start, Silverstone

It appears that the parts for #73005 were built up some time from the mid 1960’s. Today #73005 is run in VSCC events by Tom Dark, in these photo’s taken at the VSCC Spring Start meeting in the Silverstone paddock earlier this year the car was being prepared to race after being damaged during qualifying.

Thanks for joining me on this “Unfinished Prototype” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow when I’ll be visiting the Summer Classics meeting at Easter Compton. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Intimate Communication – Bugatti Type 32R

Last week I looked at a Bugatti Type 32, today’s featured car is a Replica built by Bob Sutherland who became so fascinated by the type in the mid 1970’s he ended up building one.

Bob’s big break came when the Schlumpf Museum first opened it’s doors in 1978 allowing him and British restorer Peter Shaw to visit the car featured in last weeks blog to get all of the correct measurements in the absence of any period drawings.

Bugatti Type 32R, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

Peter then built up the chassis and body in the UK while Bob in the USA bought a complete Type 35A motor and gave it to Bob Seiffert in Colorado to modify to Type 32 spec complete with a variant of the Type 30 crank case.

Bugatti Type 32R, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

Peter built up the chassis and body in the UK while Bob in the USA bought a complete Type 35A motor and gave it to Bob Seiffert in Colorado to modify to Type 32 spec complete with a variant of the Type 30 crank case.

The late British collector Paul Foulkes-Halbard helped out by having casts made of several Type 32 parts, from his own collection, that had once belonged to Elizabeth Junek who purchased a Type 32 from Ettore Bugatti.

Bugatti Type 32R, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

When the Replica type 32 was completed it was driven at Tours on the route of the 1923 French Grand Prix in 1981 shortly after the Centenary marking Ettore Bugatti’s birth.

More recently in 1995 this Replica was driven in a race at Lagunna Seca by Bob Sutherland against French Voisin collector Philip Moch who had built a copy of the peculiar 1923 Grand Prix Voisin that, like the Type 32, had failed to impress at Tours in 1923.

Bugatti Type 32R, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

By all accounts the two replica’s stole the race despite not being front runners and to this day the race announcer does not recall which replica crossed the line first.

Bob Sutherland described driving the Type 32 thus in the US Bugatti Club magazine Pur Sang thus :- “You can well imagine that with no firewall there is intimate communication between driver and machinery. The clutch whirrs dangerously close to one’s left leg, the pipes get hot, oil splatters all over you, and there is a lot of exhaust, hot water, steam, noise and danger. The exhaust glows, gas dribbles steadily on your feet, and backfires light up the universe. All very exciting.”

My thanks to Geoffrey Horton for sharing these photographs of the Type 32 Replica taken at Hillsborough Concours d’Elegance in 2011.

Thanks for joining me on this “Intimate Communication” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Aerodynamic Lift – Bugatti Type 32 #????

The 1923 French Grand Prix at Tours is usually remembered as the occaison on which a rare British 1-2 victory was recorded for the manufacturer Sunbeam for whom Sir Henry O’Neil de Hane Segrave was at the wheel of the winning car.

The race should also be remembered for two of the strangest designs ever to take part in Grand Prix racing namely the Type 32 Bugatti featured today and the even more outlandish Voisin Laboratoire.

Bugatti Type 32, Goodwood Festival of Speed,

The streamlined bodywork of the Type 32 had one major draw back, it created lift which made the short wheel based 2 litre / 122 cui 8 cylinder car exceptionally difficult to handle in the corners.

Bugatti took five Type 32 cars to the 1923 French Grand Prix Ernest Freidrich scored the teams best result 3rd behind Seagrave and Albert Divo in the second Sunbeam, André Lefebvre was the first Voisin home in fifth place behind Kenelm Lee Guinness in a third Sunbeam.

Bugatti Type 32, Goodwood Festival of Speed,

The Musée de l’Auto which own’s today’s featured car seen at Goodwood Festival of speed believe they own chassis #4057 which was driven Pierre Marco and retired on the fourth laps of the 1923 French Grand Prix with engine problems.

However Bugatti expert Pierre Dumont is convinced this car is actually #4061 which is considered to be the original prototype taken along as a spare to the 1923 French Grand Prix. Spaniard Pierre de Vizcaya took over #4061 for the race after crashing his designated car #4058 during practice.

Bugatti Type 32, Goodwood Festival of Speed,

The unfortunate Pierre proceeded to crash #4061 on the opening lap of the 1923 French Grand Prix. Bugatti never officially raced the type 32 again, but it is believed that after being sold #4061 was driven by Pierre to a speed record at Arpajon in 1924.

Thanks for joining me on this “Aerodynamic Lift” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow when I’ll be visiting Brighton Speed Trials. Don’t forget to come back now !

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1st Mass Production 16 Valve – Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer

Following victories for the 16 valve Bugatti Type 13 in the 1920 VIII Coupe des Voiturettes at Le Mans and 1921 I Gran Premio delle Vetturette run in Brescia demand for touring vehicles powered Bugatti’s 16 valve 4 cylinder motors, known post 1921 as the ‘Brescia’, began to rise.

Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer, Goodwood Festival of Speed

To meet the demand in 1920 Ettore fitted the Brescia 16 Valve motor into the Type 23 boat tale tourer first seen in eight valve form in 1913.

Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer, Goodwood Festival of Speed

The Type 23 Brescia Tourer thus became the first 16 valve mass production vehicle with 2000 units sold before production was halted in 1926.

Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer, Goodwood Festival of Speed

Well known as a bit of a curmudgeon on the issue of front brakes Ettore did not sanction them as standard items on the Type 23 until the final year of production 1926.

Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer, Goodwood Festival of Speed

Today’s featured Type 23 Brescia Tourer, seen at Goodwood Festival of Speed in July, was delivered new to a Czechoslovakian customer in 1926.

Bugatti Type 23 Brescia Tourer, Goodwood Festival of Speed

It underwent a two year restoration in 1990/91 and is I believe currently owned by a Trustee of the Bugatti Trust.

Thanks for joining me on this “1st Mass Production 16 Valve” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again when I’ll be looking at some small cars at Carmel by the Sea. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Campbell’s Supercharged Short Stroke – Bugatti Type 39A #4810

There are said to be more than one way to skin a cat and using this philosophy Ettoire Bugatti devised more than one way to build a motor to meet the 1.5 litre / 91.5 cui Voiturette regulations for Grand Prix cars in 1926.

Last week I looked at a Type 37A featuring a motor with a 4 cylinder motor while today’s featured type 39A has an 8 cylinder motor of similar swept volume which was achieved by using a short stroke crankshaft in a motor originally designed to be of 2 litre / 122 cui capacity.

Bugatti Type 39A, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

Today’s featured car chassis #4810 was built for British Speed King Malcolm Campbell, later Sir, of Bluebird fame who bought this car in 1926 to compete in the inaugural British Grand Prix run at Brooklands.

Campbell was worried the original alloy wheels would not be up to withstanding the pounding of the remorseless Brooklands, broken, concrete track and so had wire wheels fitted.

Bugatti Type 39A, Hillsborough Concours d'Elegance

Driving #4810 solo Campbell came home second splitting two Delages, 10 mins behind the winners Robert Sénéchal and Louis Wagner.

Jules Goux driving a Type 39A won both the 1926 French Grand Prix and 1926 European Grand Prix run at San Sebastián in Spain while later in 1926 Louis Charavel driving a Type 39A became the first man since Jules Goux, driving a Ballot in 1921, to win the Italian Grand Prix in a non Italian car and clinch the 1926 World Manufacturers Championship for Bugatti.

In 1927 Malcolm Campbell won the Grand Prix de Boulogne driving #4810.

My thanks to Geoffrey Horton for sharing these photographs of #4810 seen at Hillsborough Concours d’Elegance in 2011.

Thanks for joining me on this “Campbell’s Supercharged Short Stroke” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow when I shall be revisiting Oulton Park for the 2014 Gold Cup meeting. Don’t forget to come back now !

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