Bugatti cars are surprisingly intertwined with art and technology, luxury and dynamics, sophistication and simplicity. Their creator, Ettore Bugatti, is an aristocrat and ingenious designer who was born in Italy into a family of artists. Brilliant engineering ideas and entrepreneurial talent helped him found the Bugatti car company in the Alsatian city of Molsheim in 1909. The first Bugatti models were based on a simple and light chassis combined with a powerful engine. This design was used on both production and racing cars, providing the latter with an advantage in competition.
From the very beginning, the history of Bugatti was inextricably linked with racing, which made it famous all over the world and forced Bugatti to improve its products.
In 2015, shortly before the launch of the Bugatti Chiron, the Bugatti Atlantic show car, a modern version of the famous coupe of the 1930s, was to debut at the Pebble Beach Elegance Competition. Bugatti Type 57SC Atlantic.
In the future, it could become the second, younger model of Bugatti, available in two versions: with a V8 biturbo petrol engine located in front or with four electric motors from Porsche Taycan.
Its carbon body had a lot in common with the Bugatti Chiron hypercar: narrow headlights of four rectangular LEDs, C-shaped sidewalls, a central bulkhead on the roof, etc. At the same time, a long hood, a radiator grille divided into two parts and convex wheel arches gave the car similarity to the original Atlantic coupe.
Features include large butterfly wing doors and a glazed boot hatch that accommodated four of the branded suitcases. The Atlantic largely followed the Chiron's architecture, but the narrow touchscreen on the floating console.
The prototype was almost ready for serial production, but in 2015, dieselgate erupted, and the Volkswagen management had to abandon the project in order to reduce costs.
Interior Bugatti Atlantic
The concept is a modern take on the classic Type 57SC Atlantic, which was produced between 1934 and 1940. The Atlantic could have gotten a smaller engine than the Veyron - most likely a twin-turbocharged V8.
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