2014 Bugatti Veyron Vitesse Legend Ettore Bugatti
Bugatti is celebrating the conclusion of its “Les Légendes de Bugatti”
edition (Bugatti Legends). One year ago, Bugatti launched the exclusive model
series during the Monterey Car Week at the well-known and attended automotive
events “The Quail: A Motorsports Gathering” and “Pebble Beach Concours
d’Elegance” with the first Legend. This year, the crowning conclusion will be
held on August 15 at the same location with the world première of the company’s
sixth Legend. It honors Ettore Bugatti, founder and patron of the brand, and is
based on the historical model Type 41 Royale. As with the five previous
Legends, only three of the final Legends model will be produced. It costs €2.35
million net. Bugatti is presenting all six Bugatti Legends together for the
first and only time.
“Ettore Bugatti is our ‘patron’. His demand that an automobile be a perfect
harmony of technology and aesthetics still applies to us today,” said Wolfgang
Dürheimer, President of Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S. “Ettore Bugatti always
strived for the creation of a total work of art. His ideas and vehicles set the
foundation stone for an automobile brand that was lauded then and now as the
most valuable in the world. Ettore Bugatti himself is a legend. It was clear
from the start that we should dedicate the final Legends model to him
personally.” Ettore Bugatti is one of the most important figures of the
automotive world in the 20th century. He knew how to combine his family’s rich
artistic heritage with his technological ideas and succeeded in creating the
foundation for a design language that shaped the brand for years to come and
made it unmistakable. The brand’s values of “Art, Forme, Technique” define this
unique approach. Under his leadership, vehicles were produced that were ahead
of their times both technically and stylistically, and are today highly valued
collectors’ items. Two such vehicles are the Type 57 SC Atlantic and the
unforgettable Type 41 Royale that Ettore Bugatti built as the most powerful and
luxurious car of its time. It also serves as the historical basis for this
Bugatti Legend. The lightweight construction designs of the 1920s, such as the
Type 13 “Brescia” or the Type 35 – which was one of the most successful racing
cars in motor sport history with 2,000 victories and podium finishes – are
further notable representatives of the brand.
One-off presentation of all six Legends at Pebble Beach
Alongside the world première of the Ettore Bugatti Legend, for the first
and only time, Bugatti will be presenting all six models of the Legends Edition
on Friday, August 15 at “The Quail: A Motorsports Gathering” and also on
Sunday, August 17 at the “Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance”.
The Bugatti Legend “Ettore Bugatti”
The “Ettore Bugatti” Legend is based on the Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport
Vitesse1, as are all the other Legends. The super sports car is powered by a
1,200 PS, 8-litre W16 engine that transmits an unequalled 1,500 Nm at 3,000 to
5,000 rpm to the tarmac and rockets it from zero to 100 km/h in 2.6 seconds.
With a maximum speed of 408.84 km/h (254 MPH) with the roof down, the Vitesse
is the world’s fastest production roadster ever built.
Design – pure image
“The legend’s design is dedicated to Ettore Bugatti’s passion for the
unusual in automobile construction. One of his masterpieces – the Type 41
Royale – never fails to impress and inspire with its mere presence,” explains
Achim Anscheidt, Chief Designer at Bugatti. “Ettore liked to describe his
creations as ‘Pur Sang’, as thoroughbreds. In dedicating this Bugatti Legend to
him, we are staying true to his philosophy of aesthetically functional beauty
for the automobile by using pure and natural materials such as polished
aluminium and the finest cordovan leather.”
A body of clear-coated carbon and hand-polished aluminium
Exterior. The design of the carbon body of the Legends model “Ettore
Bugatti” is based on a 1932 Type 41 Royale with the chassis number 41111 and
sports a “yin-yang” color split. The front part is made of hand-polished
aluminium and finished with a clear coating. Bugatti is the only manufacturer
to use clear-coated aluminium on a production vehicle. For the first time, this
material is used for the entire front and side panels including the bonnet, the
mirror bases and housings, the exterior door handles and the corners of the
bumpers, the wings, the doors and the regions just behind them, the so-called
“medallions” (in French). The vehicle’s rear, sill panels and A-pillar trims
are finished with dark-blue exposed carbon. Based on one of the most famous
wheel rim designs in automotive history, the polished, diamond-cut wheel rims
were specially developed for this vehicle and color-coordinated with a
dark-blue finish. The eight-spoke wheel was created by Ettore Bugatti who was
looking for a light wheel for his racing cars, like the famous Type 35. Ettore
Bugatti thus made a decisive contribution to the development of the aluminium
wheel in automobile manufacture. The new wheel rim design on the Vitesse Legend
therefore carries the name “Ettore Bugatti.” The distinctive Bugatti horseshoe
and the EB logo at the rear shine out in platinum and underscore the gleaming
exterior appearance of this Bugatti Legend.
The signature of the company’s founder Ettore Bugatti is engraved into the
tank and oil cap and painted in silver.
Finest cordovan leather in the vehicle interior
Interior. Bugatti is using two types of leather for the first time in the
“Ettore Bugatti” Legend. Traditional calf’s leather – here in a natural brown
(Brun Cavalier) – is used throughout the vehicle interior. Those parts that are
typically touched by hand including the steering wheel rim, gear lever, door
handles, centre console armrest and door handle recesses, the switches in the
door trims and in the roof module are all jacketed in an exclusive, natural
cordovan leather. Bugatti is using this skilfully created leather – the tanning
process alone takes around six months – for the first time. It is typically
used for high-quality shoes and is particularly durable and sure to the touch.
The exterior’s blue exposed carbon is present again in the vehicle interior,
such as in the door trims and cover of the rear centre box, perfectly
complemented by the seats’ dark-blue seams. The eye-catching feature of the
interior is the platinum-coated dancing elephant, that is inset in the cover of
the rear centre box and reminiscent of the hood ornament of the Type 41 Royale.
The figure was originally sculpted by Ettore’s brother, Rembrandt.
Other well-known Legends features have also been included in this vehicle,
namely the “Brun Cavalier” leather-clad insert in the centre console extension
which bears the “Les Légendes de Bugatti” nameplate and the relief of the
dancing elephant as well as the door sills bearing the portrait and signature
of Ettore Bugatti.
Ettore Bugatti – automotive pioneer and legend
Ettore Arco Isidoro Bugatti – his full name – was born in Milan on 15
September 1881, the second child of this highly creative family. His parents
hoped that he would pursue an artistic career like his father and grandfather
before him. But instead he became fascinated with technology, leaving the
“Accademia die Belle Arti di Brera” in Milan to begin, at 17, an apprenticeship
in a bicycle/tricycle factory. There he built his first motorized tricycle, and
soon thereafter his first automobile. The construction was so remarkable that
it earned him a prize at an internationally recognised exhibition in Milan. In
the following year, he moved to Niederbronn in Alsace, where the manufacturer
De Dietrich, impressed with Bugatti’s first construction, trusted him with the
management of automobile manufacture. Ettore Bugatti developed new models and
took part in several car races until 1904. After leaving De Dietrich & Cie,
he took on a number of jobs in automobile construction, including a job at the
Deutz gas engine factory in Cologne in September 1907. At this time, Bugatti
privately developed a very light vehicle, the Type 10, which he built a little
later under his own name. He left Deutz in 1909 and leased the empty buildings
of a former dyeworks factory in Molsheim (Alsace) and founded his own
automotive company. Production of the T13 began and grew year by year.
Thereafter came other light sports cars and an entry into motor racing.
Bugatti enjoyed racing successes at Le Mans in 1920 and four times at Brescia
in 1921. He built the famous Type 35 Grand Prix car in 1925, an automobile that
won an incredible 412 races in only its first nine months. It was during these
years that production of those automobiles people associate with the Bugatti
brand was begun. Racing, sport and touring cars of their quality can hardly be
found from any other factory. The prototype for the kingly limousine was
produced in 1926: the Type 41 Royale.
Ettore was a versatile inventor. He not only built cars but also dedicated
some of his time to the construction of trains, aeroplanes and boats. So it was
that Royale engines were produced for the new high-speed train for French
railways in Molsheim at the beginning of the 1930s.
Production of the Type 57 began in 1934. This best-selling touring car’s
body was designed by Ettore’s son Jean. Ettore handed over day-to-day running
of the business to Jean in 1936, by which time his son had made a name for
himself as an exceptionally gifted designer. Ettore’s hopes for the future of
the company rested on his son’s shoulders. Tragically, Jean died in an
automobile accident in 1939, a heavy blow for Ettore that also had consequences
for the company. Ettore Bugatti died from complications arising from pneumonia
on 21 August 1947 in Paris. His business was closed upon sale of the company at
the beginning of the 1960s. It was not until Volkswagen acquired the brand
rights in 1998 and began development of the Bugatti Veyron 16.4 that the
foundations for a sustainable and successful continuation of the brand were
laid.
Ettore Bugatti’s legacy is still present today and lives on in the brand.
The Type 41 Royale – automotive icon and “vehicle of kings”
As a young man, Ettore Bugatti had always dreamt of building the most
powerful and luxurious production car the world had ever seen. It was not until
1926 that he was able to turn his dream into a reality. With the acclaimed Type
41 Royale, he created a car that was in a league of its own in terms of
performance, size, comfort, quality and elegance. For its prototype, Ettore
designed an 8-cylinder in-line engine with an overhead camshaft, a capacity of
almost 15 liters and a monolithic head and engine block. The production version
had a 12.7-liter engine with the three valves per cylinder that were typical
for Bugatti at that time. The engine produced around 300 PS at less than 2,000
rpm. The Royale is also regal in size: measuring approximately 6.5m long and
4.3m across the wheelbase, it weighs around 3 tonnes (approx. 6,600 lbs.) and
boasts a 190-liter tank. The car’s crowning glory is its radiator cap which
features an elephant sculpture created by Rembrandt Bugatti, Ettore’s brother.
This elephant has since become a symbol that is synonymous with the Bugatti
brand to this day.
The difficult economic conditions in Europe and America at the time meant
that Ettore was unable to achieve his goal of producing the 25 vehicles that he
had intended to sell to various royal families and heads of state. Only six
vehicles were built and all of them still exist today.
Source:Bugatti Press
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