
The Bugatti logo
'Bugatti' is one of the fastest marques of automobile and one of the most exclusive car producers of all time. The company is legendary for producing a few of the fastest sports cars in the world. Like many high-end marques, the original Bugatti failed with the coming of World War II, but the name has been resurrected twice, most recently under the Volkswagen Group, for this, see Bugatti Automobiles SAS.
Under Ettore Bugatti
Founder
Ettore Bugatti was born in
Italy, and the automobile company that bears his name was founded in
Molsheim, a town in the
Alsace region, which was then a part of the German Empire (
Alsace became a province under Frederick I and changed hands between France and Germany many times. Alsace was ceded to France in 1918 under the Treaty of Versailles). The company was known for the advanced engineering in its premium road cars and its success in early
Grand Prix motor racing, winning the first ever
Monaco Grand Prix. The company's success culminated with driver
Jean-Pierre Wimille winning the
24 hours of Le Mans twice (in 1937 with
Robert Benoist and 1939 with
Pierre Veyron).
Design
Bugatti's cars were as much works of art as they were mechanical creations, with hand turned finishes on the engine blocks, and safety wires threaded through almost every fastener in intricately laced patterns. He regarded his arch competitor Bentley's cars as "the world's fastest trucks" for focusing on durability. According to Bugatti, weight was the enemy. Bugatti’s inspiring creations attracted many people from other fields of interest; like
Arlen Ness who created a motorcycle, called “Smooth-Ness”, with the Bugatti style. He was inspired by the smoothness of a bronze casting of a Bugatti automobile.
Bugatti's disdain for his customers is as legendary as his devotion to his creations; in one probably apocryphal incident, upon greeting an unhappy customer returning to the factory with "What, you again?", he replied to the subsequent tale of automotive mechanical woe with "Well, see that it does not happen again!" and strode away.
Engines
Models
Only a few examples of each of Ettore Bugatti's vehicles were ever produced, the most famous being the
Type 35 Grand Prix cars, the "
Royale", the
Type 57 "Atlantic" and the
Type 55 sports car.
Throughout the production run of approximately 7,900 cars (of which about 2,000 still exist), each Bugatti model was designated with the prefix T for Type, which referred to the chassis and drive train.
Prototypes
★ 1900–1901
Type 2
★ 1903
Type 5
★ 1908
Type 10
★ 1925
Type 36
★ 1929–1930
Type 45/47
★
Type 56 (
electric car)
★ 1939
Type 64 (coupe)
★ 1943/1947
Type 73C
Racing cars
★ 1910–1914
Type 13/
Type 15/
17/
22
★ 1922–1926
Type 29
★ 1923
Type 32 "Tank"
★ 1924-1930
Type 35/
35A/
35B/
35T/
35C/
37/
39
★ 1927-1930
Type 52 (
electric racer for children)
★ 1936–1939
Type 57G "Tank"
★ 1937–1939
Type 50B
★ 1931–1936
Type 53
★ 1931–1936
Type 51/51A/
54GP/
59
★ 1955–1956
Type 251
Road cars
★ 1912–1914
Type 18 "Garros"
★ 1913–1914
Type 23/
Brescia Tourer (roadster)
★ 1922–1934
Type 30/
38/
40/
43/
44/
49 (touring car)
★ 1927–1933
Type 41 "Royale" (limousine)
★ 1929–1939
Type 46/
50/
50T (touring car)
★ 1932–1935
Type 55 (roadster)
★ 1934–1940
Type 57/
57S/
Type 57SC (touring car)
★ During the war Bugatti worked at Levallois, Paris on several new projects,These included the Type 73 road car,The T73C single seater racing car [5 were assembled]Also the T75 you you boat motor, After
World War II, a 375 cc supercharged car was canceled when Ettore died.
★ 1951-1956
Type 101 (coupe)
1957-62 Type 252 2 seater sports convertible
Racing Success
Bugatti cars were extremely successful in racing, with many thousands of victories in just a few decades. The little
Bugatti Type 10 swept the top four positions at its first race. The 1924
Bugatti Type 35 is probably the most successful racing car of all time with over 2,000 wins. Bugattis swept to victory in the
Targa Florio for five years straight from 1925 through 1929.
Louis Chiron held the most podiums in Bugatti cars, and the 21st century Bugatti company remembered him with a
concept car named in his honour. But it was the final racing success at
Le Mans that is most remembered —
Jean-Pierre Wimille and
Pierre Veyron won the 1939 race with just one car and meagre resources.
The end
Ettore Bugatti also designed a successful motorised railcar, the ''
Autorail'', and an
airplane which never flew. His son,
Jean Bugatti, was killed on
August 11,
1939 at the age of 30, while testing a
Type 57 tank-bodied race car near the
Molsheim factory. Subsequently the company's fortunes began to decline. World War II ruined the factory in Molsheim, and the company lost control of the property. During the war, Bugatti planned a new factory at Levallois in
Paris and designed a series of new cars. Ettore Bugatti died on
August 21,
1947.
The company attempted a comeback under
Roland Bugatti in the mid-1950s with the
mid-engined Type 251 race car. Designed with help from famed
Alfa Romeo,
Ferrari, and
Maserati designer
Gioacchino Colombo, the car failed to perform to expectations and the company's attempts at automobile production were halted.
In the 1960s,
Virgil Exner designed a Bugatti as part of his "
Revival Cars" project. A show version of this car was actually built by
Ghia using the last
Bugatti Type 101 chassis and was shown at the 1965
Turin Motor Show. Finance was not forthcoming and Exner then turned his attention to a revival of
Stutz.
Bugatti continued producing airplane parts and was sold to
Hispano-Suiza (another auto maker turned aircraft supplier) in 1963.
Snecma took over in 1968, later acquiring Messier. The two were merged to form
Messier-Bugatti in 1977.
Bugatti Automobili SpA
Italian entrepreneur
Romano Artioli acquired the legendary Bugatti name in 1987 and established 'Bugatti Automobili SpA'. The new company built a factory designed by the architect
Giampaolo Benedini in
Campogalliano,
Italy, a town near
Modena, home to other performance-car manufacturers
De Tomaso,
Ferrari,
Lamborghini,
Pagani and
Maserati.
By 1989, the plans for the new Bugatti-revival were presented by
Paolo Stanzani and
Marcello Gandini, famous designers of the
Lamborghini Miura and
Countach. The first completed car was labelled the
Bugatti EB110 GT, advertised as the most technically advanced
supercar ever produced.
From 1992 through 1994, famed racing car designer,
Mauro Forghieri, was technical director.
On
August 27,
1993, through his holding company, ACBN Holdings S.A. of
Luxembourg, Romano Artioli purchased the
Lotus car company from
General Motors. The acquisition brought together two of the greatest historical names in automotive racing and plans were made for listing the company's shares on international stock exchanges.
Bugatti also presented in 1993 the prototype of a large sedan called the EB 112.
By the time the
Bugatti EB110 came to market the North American and European economies were in recession and operations ceased in September of 1995. A model specific to the
United States market called the "Bugatti America" was in the preparatory stages when the company closed.
In 1995, the German manufacturer
Dauer bought the EB110 license and remaining parts stock to Bugatti in order to produce a dozen
Dauer EB110 SS units.
The most famous
Bugatti EB110 owner is racing driver Michael Schumacher, 7 times Formula One world champion. Despite later racing for Ferrari, he still retained the
Bugatti EB110 he acquired while racing for the Benetton team.
Bugatti Automobiles SAS
:''See also the main article,
Bugatti Automobiles SAS''
Volkswagen AG purchased the rights to produce cars under the Bugatti marque in 1998. They commissioned
ItalDesign to produce the
Bugatti EB118 concept, a touring sedan which featured a 555 hp
DIN (408 kW) output and the first
W-configuration 18-cylinder engine in any passenger vehicle, at the
Paris Auto Show.
In 1999 the
Bugatti EB 218 concept was introduced at the
Geneva Auto Show; later that year the
Bugatti 18/3 Chiron was introduced at the
IAA in Frankfurt. At the
Tokyo Motor Show the EB 218 reappeared and the
Bugatti EB 18/4 Veyron was presented as the first incarnation of what was to be a production road car.
The Veyron concept
Main articles: Bugatti Veyron
In 2000 Volkswagen founded 'Bugatti Automobiles SAS' and introduced the EB 16/4 Veyron concept, a 16-cylinder car with 1001 hp DIN (736 kW)0-60 in 2.5 sec., at the
Paris,
Geneva and
Detroit auto shows. Development continued throughout 2001 and the EB 16/4 Veyron was promoted to "advanced concept" status. In July 2005 Bugatti Automobiles SAS announced that the car would officially be called the
Bugatti Veyron 16.4. It was said that the car - built in a brand new Bugatti factory in
Dorlisheim - would be delivered to clients in October 2005. In fact the Veyron finally entered production in late 2005, the first cars being delivered in early 2006. Maximum speed claims have been met in several high speed tests where the car slightly exceeded its target, reaching 252 mph (407.5 km/h)(Mach 0.3) and holding it for about two minutes
[1]. According to
Car and Driver, the Veyron's fuel consumption at 253 mph was 3.0
mpg (78L/100km). Independent press tests have reported many failures (three out of five cars notionally available for testing in November 2005 were out of service), but the Veyron prototypes were put through the same gruelling regimen as other Volkswagen group models, with each
pre-production car logging over 50,000 miles. This car comes in many different color combinations, including red and black, blue and dark blue, gray and black, and so on.
See also
★
Bugatti Automobiles SAS
★
Ettore Bugatti
★
Jean Bugatti
★
Musée National de l'Automobile de Mulhouse, home of the Schlumpf Collection of Bugatti cars
External links
★
Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S.
★
Bugatti English
★
Bugatti bibliography
References
1. Test Video