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GRAND TOURER


A 'grand tourer' (Italian: ''Gran Turismo''), (initialised 'GT'), is a high-performance automobile designed for long-distance driving. Any such car could be considered a grand tourer, but the traditional and most common body style is the coupé (two door) with either a two-seat or a 2+2 seat arrangement.
Grand tourers differ from typical sports cars (e.g. Lotus Elise, Porsche 911) in that they are usually larger, heavier (sometimes more than 3,500 lbs), and tend to make less compromise in comfort for the sake of driving ability. For this reason, most have front-mounted engines, which leave more space for the cabin than mid-mounted engines. They also tend to have softer suspensions to provide good ride quality. However, grand tourers do have similarities with sports cars, such as their use mainly of rear- or four-wheel drive, and the term sports car may be used to describe a car with grand touring qualities. Very high-performance grand tourers, such as the Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano and the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren, may be considered to be supercars.

Contents
Performance Characteristics
Classification
Examples of production grand tourers
See also
External links

Performance Characteristics


Because of their powerful engines, Grand tourers can still compete with many sports cars in top-speed and acceleration. However, in terms of handling they are a magnitude below sports cars, because of their weight and softer suspension. Grand tourers excel at high speed, long distance travel or races and make more practical daily drivers than sports cars.

Classification


In certain professional motorsport classifications, such as the FIA, It defines a GT car as "an open or closed automobile which has no more than one door on each side and a minimum of two seats situated one on each side of the longitudinal centre line of the car; these two seats must be crossed by the same transversal plane. This car must be able to be used perfectly legally on the open road, and adapted for racing on circuits or closed courses."
Using the above definition, it is still valid to place sport cars such as the Corvette and the 911 in the grand touring category since they do contain many, if not all, the amenities of a grand tourer. However, this weakness in motorsport classification sometimes blurs the line of what is considered a true ''production'' grand tourer, and may lead to mis-classification.

Examples of production grand tourers



AC Frua

Alfa Romeo GT

Aston Martin DB4

Aston Martin DB5

Aston Martin DB6

Aston Martin V8

Aston Martin DB7

Aston Martin DB9

Aston Martin V12 Vanquish

Audi A5

Bentley Continental GT [1]

BMW 6 Series

BMW 8 Series

Cadillac V-series

Citroën SM

Ferrari Daytona

Ferrari 599 GTB

Ferrari 612 Scaglietti

Ford Mustang GT

Holden Monaro

Jaguar XJS

Jaguar XK

Jensen Interceptor

Lancia Aurelia B20 GT (often considered the first GT)

Lexus SC

Maserati GranTurismo

Maserati Mistral

Maserati Ghibli

Maserati MC12

Mercedes-Benz CL-Class

Mercedes SL

Mercedes SLR Mclaren

Mitsubishi GTO

Nissan 300ZX

Porsche 928

Pontiac GTO

Toyota Supra

Toyota Soarer

Vauxhall Monaro

Volvo C70

See also



Sports car racing

FIA GT Championship

American Le Mans Series

External links



GT Photos (Creative Commons Licence)

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