Tumgik
#bugatti eb110
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Bugatti ID90, 1990, by Italdesign. Giugiaro’s proposal for the EB110 Bugatti supercar. It was rejected in favour of Marcello Gandini’s design
289 notes · View notes
en-wheelz-me · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
23 notes · View notes
itcars · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Bugatti EB110
Image by Andrea Fracchia || IG
183 notes · View notes
blackros78 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
1994 Bugatti EB 110 America
41 notes · View notes
diabolus1exmachina · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Ferrari LaFerrari 'Signal Green' (for six years it was owned by Jay Kay.  For sale in 2019). 
Unveiled at the 2013 Geneva International Motor Show as a replacement for the Enzo, the Ferrari LaFerrari was a technological tour de force that took the world by storm. Maranello's first production model to be equipped with a hybrid power unit, the sixth-generation hypercar was the fastest and most powerful road-going Ferrari ever. It was, and remains, one of the greatest achievements in the marque's 75-year history.
Compared to contemporaries such as the Porsche 959 and Bugatti EB110, the first Ferrari hypercars had been conservative designs. For all their astonishing pace, the 288 GTO and F40 had lacked headline innovation, focusing instead on a back-to-basics ethos of minimal weight and colossal power. With the subsequent F50, the Prancing Horse had abandoned the traditional spaceframe in favor of a more futuristic carbon fiber tub, but there was little else to whet the appetite of techno freaks. Its successor, the Enzo, upped the technological ante. The first Ferrari hypercar to feature an automated paddle-change transmission and active aerodynamics, it represented a radical leap compared to the outgoing F50. The Enzo was an up-to-the-minute interpretation of what a flagship sports car should be all about. And then along came the game changer.
Based around a carbon fiber monocoque designed by F1 technical director Rory Byrne, the Type F150 LaFerrari adopted an enhanced version of KERS (Kinetic Energy Recovery System), which had been used in Grands Prix since 2009. Like any other hybrid set-up, KERS employed electric motors in addition to a traditional petrol engine. With an electric motor delivering maximum torque from zero rpm, the benefits included noticeably stronger acceleration. Kimi Räikkönen had emphatically proven this in Formula 1 when his KERS-equipped Ferrari stormed past Giancarlo Fisichella to win the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix—Fisichella attributing Räikkönen's win to the hybrid system.
Dubbed HY-KERS, the production version in the LaFerrari mated a 120-kilowatt motor to a 6,262 cc 65-degree V-12 to deliver quite extraordinary results. Delivering a combined 950 horsepower and 715 lb ft of torque through a seven-speed dual-clutch Getrag transmission, the car could accelerate from 0-100 km/h in a mere 2.9 seconds. The manufacturer claimed that 0-300 km/h could be dispatched in 15 seconds, while top speed was an astonishing 350 km/h. Even more startling, however, was the car’s pace around the Fiorano test track, where it was said to lap more than five seconds quicker than the Enzo. Such pace was in no small part down to the brilliance of the hybrid set-up. With HY-KERS taking care of low-down torque, the engine could be tuned for maximum power at high revs without the car becoming a temperamental prima donna. As a result, Ferrari engineers were able to produce an engine that was more potent than the Scuderia’s last V-12 single-seater, in a car able to cope with city traffic.
To ensure the thundering performance was accessible, electronic traction control was integrated with the hybrid system, and there was a third-generation electronic differential. The double-wishbone front- and multilink rear suspension was equipped with active damping, while the Brembo carbon-ceramic brakes measured a huge 398 mm at the front and 380 mm at the rear. The Pirelli P-Zero front tyres were an equally vast 265/30 R19, but were nonetheless dwarfed by the 345/30 R20 rears.
Drawing from the Grand Prix team’s expertise in computational fluid dynamics, the composite body continued the high-tech theme. Produced in-house alongside the Scuderia’s F1 racers, it was as aerodynamically efficient as it was beautiful. The vast scallops on each flank served to extract air from around the front wheels, increasing the downforce created by the active front diffuser, as well as channelling air to the rear-mounted radiators. A guide vane in the underbody automatically reduced flow to the front radiator to reduce drag, while dynamic air intakes on the haunches boosted ram effect for an additional 5 horsepower at speed. At the rear, a computer-controlled spoiler optimised drag and downforce, while dynamic diffuser flaps helped “suck” the car onto the road. This electronic gadgetry added up to 360 kilograms of downforce when cornering at 200 km/h, reducing it to 90 kilograms in a straight line at the same speed.
Remarkably, the carbon fibre monocoque boasted a 27 per cent improvement in torsional stiffness compared to the Enzo, yet was some 20 per cent lighter. In spite of the HY-KERS with its eight 15-cell battery modules, the LaFerrari was no larger than its predecessor, while the centre of gravity was lowered by 35 mm—providing further improvements to balance and stability. Visually, the whole was tied together into a tautly styled berlinetta that combined hints of classic racing icons such as the 330 P4 and 312 P with exciting flourishes from the modern Formula 1 era. In creating the LaFerrari body, form very much followed function, yet never has the application of science looked quite so stunning.
47 notes · View notes
neutron669 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Bugatti EB110
Makoto Ouchi.
Cutaway Illustrations.
7 notes · View notes
thecargays · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes
silhouettehistory · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Nicola's Creations SilhouetteHistory
Silhouettes of finest cars created by Nicola Materazzi. R.I.P.
Shop | Home | NFT | Special Tees | FB | IG | TW | Ask
21 notes · View notes
lt64 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
cadoretjerome · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
EB110, Chantilly arts et élégance 2022
3 notes · View notes
andycama · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Bugatti at the airport hanger
4 notes · View notes
en-wheelz-me · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
punta-tacco · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Che bellezza!
Bugatti EB110 SS, Le Mans and SS in Molsheim
© unknow
5 notes · View notes
tech-n-autos · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Bugatti EB110
1 note · View note
justcarz · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
dreamer-classics · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Bugatti EB110
by kevinvanc via instagram
227 notes · View notes