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Bugatti Tourbillon [6] The Bugatti Chiron is a mid-engine two-seater sports car designed and developed in Germany by Bugatti Engineering GmbH [7] and manufactured in Molsheim, France, by French automobile manufacturer Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S.
1912 Peugeot Bébé Built by Bugatti under license from Peugeot. Known as Bugatti Type 16/Peugeot Type 69 and BP1. 1922–1926 Type 29 " Cigare ". 1923 Type 32 "Tank". 1924–1930 Type 35 / 35A / 35B / 35T / 35C / 37 / 39 "Grand Prix". 1927–1930 Type 52 (electric racer for children) 1936–1939 Type 57G "Tank". 1937–1939 Type 50B.
Automobiles Ettore Bugatti was a German then French manufacturer of high-performance automobiles. The company was founded in 1909 in the then- German city of Molsheim, Alsace, by the Italian-born industrial designer Ettore Bugatti. The cars were known for their design beauty and numerous race victories. Famous Bugatti automobiles include the ...
Bugatti EB 110. Successor. Bugatti Chiron. The Bugatti Veyron EB 16.4 is a mid-engine sports car, designed and developed in Germany by the Volkswagen Group and Bugatti and manufactured in Molsheim, France, by French automobile manufacturer Bugatti. It was named after the racing driver Pierre Veyron.
Bugatti Type 43. Bugatti Type 44. Bugatti Type 45. Bugatti Type 46. Bugatti Type 47. Bugatti 8-cylinder line. Bugatti Type 50. Bugatti Type 51. Bugatti Type 52.
This page is a compilation of sports cars, coupés, roadsters, kit cars, supercars, hypercars, electric sports cars, race cars, and super SUVs, both discontinued and still in production (or will be planned to produce). Cars that have sport trims (such as the Honda Civic SI) will be listed under the sport trims section. Production tunes will ...
IMSA GTO cars at Road Atlanta in 1981. Grand Touring Over (GTO) [1] is the name of a former classification designated to grand touring cars competing in the IMSA GT Championship, and later by Grand-Am in the Rolex Sports Car Series. IMSA used the class between 1971 and 1991, [2] and Grand-Am used the class for a single season in 2000.
Prototype Sports cars/Silhouettes. Porsche 550. Porsche 718. Porsche 904. Porsche 906. Porsche 910 Coupé. Porsche 910 Bergspyder. Porsche 907. Porsche 908 Coupé.