Posts Tagged ‘Concept Cars’

Le Corbusier's Car

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

It shouldn’t be surprising that the man who created the idea of houses ‘machines for living in’ should have penned a distinct­ively beetle like creation as long ago as 1929.

With its bug-​​like fastback and modular construction, modernist architect Le Corbusier sketched his idea for an automobile for the everyman in response to the growing dependency on petrol in the rapidly growing cities of the years between the wars.

Thing is, the car itself evolved with whole idea of modernism and the city. That’s why the car resounds so heavily in our imagin­a­tions. An inter­esting piece by archi­tec­tural critic Jonathan Glancey here.

Japanarama

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

We’re a little bit obsessed with concept cars from the latter end of the sixties, as close readers will realise. There was something beauti­fully outlandish in the imagin­eering of car designers between 1965 and 1975 — and when you throw the Japanese aesthetic into the mix it goes bonkers.

Sure, the cultural threads of the decade when psyche­delia took hold of the creative indus­tries were just as prevalant in the far east — but what you had also in Japan was a flowering of the economic miracle that saw industry imitate, then better the vast excesses of Americana.

In many of the concepts from the seventies you can see the European influence too — with wedge-​​like profiles, sleekly raked pillars and sporty composure even more visible than the gravit­a­tional pull of Detroit.

Inspiration from Japanese Car Blog.

Countach Evoluzione

Monday, October 25th, 2010

It looks incredible. It’s made of very light, very badass-​​looking material. And you’ll probably never own one.

But, it should come as no suprise that Lamborghini’s Vader-​​looking ‘Sesto Elemento’ concept (unveiled recently at the Paris Motor Show) is constructed using various manifest­a­tions of Carbon Fibre technologies.

Because as long ago as the mid eighties, the folks at Sant’Agata were exper­i­menting with the material with poster child for the wedge supercar the Countach.

In 1986 – 1987, a fellah called Horacio Pagani got involved with Lamborghini and was given free rein to use the Countach test-​​bed for all sorts of composites. The result was the strangely ‘indus­trial’ looking Countach Evoluzione. The creative future of the company, and perhaps of the entire auto industry, was glimpsed.

The LP 400 had been, of course, the first, the purest, most gobsmacking version of the Countach when it was unveiled in geneva in 1971. Dressed in the type of block colour paintjob that showed off perfectly the in audacious Gandini-​​drawn lines, at an aesthetic level the design never got any better.

For us the subsequent versions of the Countach appeared even at the time to be the result of a Halfords ram-​​raid.

The intro­duction of carbon fibre is one of the answers to the recurring question: ‘where next for supercars?’

With every supercar on the planet able to top 300KM/​H ( the sort of speed it’s difficult to achieve on track, let alone on the road), perhaps to focus on handling and accel­er­ation is the correct way to go.

If carbon fibre materials help you get to greater power weight-​​ratios, then perhaps Mr Pagani’s early exper­i­ments will be seen to be even more prescient than they already appear.

Audi Quattro Concept

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

Few concepts are guarranteed to get us hot under the collar like the announcement that Audi are resur­recting the idea of the original Quattro. The motorshow at Paris is after all one of those events were legends have been born.

The concept is slated as commem­or­ating 30 years of quattro all-​​wheel-​​drive and specifically pays homage to the revered Sport quattro of 1984.

The basis of the car is the V8 powered RS 5 Coupe. But this new study combines an inline five-​​cylinder turbocharged petrol engine devel­oping 408PS with a light­weight body, a shortened wheelbase and latest gener­ation Quattro drive.

The wheelbase is shortened by 150 milli­metres and the roofline lowered by around 40 milli­metres compared to the four-​​seat RS 5. Like its Eighties prede­cessor, the 2010 show car is now also a two-​​seater. The heavily modified body is made primarily of aluminium, with the bonnet, the rear hatch and other components made of carbon.

The concept Audi quattro concept weighs just 1,300 kilograms, almost exactly the same as the original Sport quattro. and according to the press released the know-​​how and techno­logies of the quattro concept body will charac­terize Audi’s entire production model portfolio in the future.

The eight-​​cylinder engine from the production model has been replaced under the hood by a turbocharged inline five-​​cylinder engine that can trace its roots back to another Audi sports car – the TT RS.

This pocket rocket produces 408PS and powers the car from 0 to 62mph in only 3.9 seconds. Torque is distributed as needed via a six-​​speed manual transmission.

The key innov­ation in the latest gen of the Quattro system is appar­ently the compact, light­weight diff that can vary the distri­bution of power between the front and rear axles over a broad range, enabling the quattro drive system to react within milli­seconds to coax the maximum of fun and safety out of every last bit of torque.

Bravo, Audi. Again.

Isdera Commendatore

Friday, August 20th, 2010

It’s not often you meet a car that’s a cross between a Mercedes Gullwing CW 311 and a batmobile. But that’s what the ridicu­lously strange and exotic Isdera Commendatore is. With all the subtlety of a rally at Nuremberg and an air brake – the sort of analogue tech that makes a rear parking camera look crass — the commend­atore was for true freaks of nature: folks who like to pay through the nose for exotic, for exotic’s sake.

And the thing is that in the early nineties, when the car was designed, there wasn’t exactly a lot of hypercar compet­ition. This was the depths of a recession almost as bad as the one in which we currently find ourselves: and it doesn’t take a genius to imagine why you don’t see many of them down at the local Waitrose. Even if you live in an area posh enough to actually have a Waitrose.

It had a Mercedes V12 and appar­ently enough gumption to get from 0 – 60 in 4.7 and a top end of 212 MPH. It is reckoned that only 70 Isderas have been sold since launch. Please send in pics if you ever get to see one.

Triumph Italia

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Check out the pulch­ritudinous slice of Anglo Italian coöper­ation that is the Triumph Italia. As you will read via MR Wiki, this car was actually (sort of) the TR3. Only 329 of this piece of beautiful automotive sculpture were built before, in 1961, Leyland bought out Triumph and the project was shelved forever.

It was penned by the great Michelotti and built by legendary coach builder Vignale in Torino. If only someone had had the vision to carry on with the Italia. We never really like the TR4 that replaced it…

Out of all of Michelotti’s Italianate creations that were blessed with English blood, the Italia is our Fave.

MG EX-E Concept

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

The MG EX — E was rather ahead of its time. Used as a test bed for future AR platforms, you can still see the embryonic MGF embedded deep in its spacey lines. And you don’t have to squint to see the side profile of the second gener­ation Toyota MR2 and the Ford Probe.

Seeing former concepts from grand old badges like the MG makes you blanche at the way the marque has been devalued since the grand old days.

While Lotus are keeping the candle burning for (sort of) accessible Brit sports cars, we’re hoping the machin­a­tions of Chinese co-​​operation finally end up producing an MG sports car to which we can truly aspire.