All hail the fresh Bugatti Chiron, Top Gear

All hail the fresh Bugatti Chiron

Welcome the fresh 261mph, 1,479bhp successor to the Veyron

We will dramatically raise the bar in terms of top speed, we will dramatically increase the power… We didn’t need a hybrid.

There are days, and they don’t come often, when the automotive world shifts on its axis. This, ladies and gentleman, is one of them because the Veyron’s reign as the world fastest production car is at an end, and the usurper comes from within. Yes, the £1.9m Chiron retains the Veyron’s fundamental proportions and powertrain, but it’s fresh in every other conceivable way, and built to arch physics to cracking point.

The Chiron is not a hybrid. Unlike its closest competitors – the McLaren P1, LaFerrari and Porsche nine hundred eighteen – it relies solely on fossil fuels. Its engine is a development of the Veyron’s 8.0-litre quad-turbo W16, its gearbox a strengthened version of the Veyron’s seven-speed twin-clutch, and like the Veyron it deploys its immense power through all four wheels.

“If we went with hybrid we would have added extra weight. We would have experienced package constraints, too, because this car doesn’t have any areas where you can put extra stuff, so the styling would need to switch,” Wolfgang Durheimer, Bugatti’s CEO explained. “We will dramatically raise the bar in terms of top speed, we will dramatically increase the power by twenty five per cent, the aerodynamics are better, the road holding is better. We didn’t need a hybrid.”

Whereas the Veyron Super Sport produced a piffling 1183bhp and 1106lb ft of torque, the Chiron develops 1479bhp and 1180lb ft. Oh, and at a constant top speed the Veyron could drain its 100-litre fuel tank in twelve minutes, the Chiron can do it in 9.

Then there’s the top speed, which Bugatti has limited to 261mph – a token 3mph more than the Veyron Super Sport.

Clearly this is a game of very senior numbers, so here’s some more. It will accelerate from 0-62mph in less than Two.Five seconds, 0-124mph in less than 6.Five and 0-186mph in under 13.6. Take a moment to let that last one bury in. That’s Two.9 seconds swifter than a P1 and a 2nd quicker than the Veyron Super Sport, bearing in mind that at 186mph a 2nd equals a lot of fresh air – 83m of it to be precise.

Then there’s the top speed, which Bugatti has limited to 261mph – a token 3mph more than the Veyron Super Sport. The specially-developed, broader Michelins can take more, Bugatti says, and will be used for a Chiron’s record-setting attempt, which is expected to surpass 270mph, but the limiter is a “safety measure for road-travel”. Euro NCAP will be delighted.

Key to the engine’s engorged power reserves are four larger turbos that work in tandem to supply maximum torque from two thousand to 6000rpm – that’s across seventy per cent of the engine’s utter operating range. The two-stage system only calls on two turbos up to 3800rpm, to improve throttle response, and all four beyond that. A fresh titanium harass system helps out by reducing back pressure compared to the Veyron and houses two enormous catalytic converters – each six times the size of one you’ll find in a Mondeo. There are six exit pipes in total – four sticking out the back and two pointing downwards to create a sucked diffuser – a downforce-boosting technology proven by, then subsequently banned in F1.

Everything about the Chiron’s powertrain is super-sized. An improved charge air cooling system means 60,000 litres of air per minute are pumped through the engine, while the coolant pump can circulate 800-litres in the same time. According to Willi Netuschil, head of engineering “temperature management is one of the thickest problems”. In total there are ten radiators crammed under the Chiron’s skin.

With fine power comes superb need for big brakes, so the front and rear discs are now 20mm larger, 2mm thicker and made from carbon silicon carbide – a material that’s both lighter and more resistant to fade. Tweaking them are eight-piston calipers in the front and six-piston at the rear – each piston a subtly different diameter to keep brake wear even.

The tyres, now fourteen per cent broader at the front and twelve per cent broader at the rear, are packaged around larger rims – 20-inch front and 21-inch rear – and built to withstand otherworldly coerces. They need to be, as each gram of rubber is exposed to a centrifugal force of Trio,800G. A thicker contact patch on the road means better braking, acceleration and wet-weather grip, while the updated four-wheel drive system uses electronic diffs on the front and rear axles, permitting fine control of the treating characteristics. More on that in a bit…

As a embarking point for the world’s fastest car Bugatti uses a fresh carbon-fibre monocoque (each one takes four weeks to make), with a carbon-fibre rear-subframe affixed to save 8kg versus the Veyron and boost rigidity, while the entire package is packaged in a carbon-fibre skin. Bugatti claims torsional stiffness is now up there with an LMP1 prototype, while a fresh electrified steering system and suspension bolted directly to the monocoque means it should react to inputs swifter than a 1995kg car has any right to.

Exactly how the Chiron behaves and what it’s capable of is up to you. Five different driving modes are available, and we’re not talking your average Sport and Convenience settings. Not in Bugatti land. There’s ‘Lift’, ‘Auto’, ‘Autobahn’, ‘Handling’ and ‘Top Speed’ to choose from, each an individual blend of settings for the chassis height, dampers, steering weight, torque distribution from the four-wheel drive system, active aero and the electronic stability system.

‘Auto’ is your default setting, shifting responsibility to the Chiron’s enormous brain to determine on the best parameters. ‘Lift’ is designed for speedbumps or loading onto a trailer and only available below 50kmh. Thrust it beyond 112mph and ‘Autobahn’ mode activates automatically, softening up the dampers for more comfy and stable high-speed cruising. Feeling courageous? ‘Handling’ mode turns everything up to eleven and is primarily designed for track work. All the above are accessed via a rotary control on the steering wheel, and come with a top speed limited to a mere 236mph.

In a car this over-engineered, technology has to take precedence over the styling

If you happen to have a salt plane to play with then ‘Top Speed’ mode, like the Veyron, requires a 2nd key to initiate. Do so and the car hunkers down, the four-stage rear spoiler flicks into its “slightly extended” position and you’re free to run up to the 261mph limiter.

In a car this over-engineered, technology has to take precedence over the styling, something Achim Anscheidt, Bugatti’s design director, loosely admits: “From every side of the car: rear-view, side-view and front-view, the technical necessity for more dynamic driving spectacle, more cooling spectacle, more engine spectacle sets of stylistic strategy for the car.”

Those quad LED headlights, for example, very first shown on the bewinged Gran Turismo concept, dual as intakes, funnelling air towards the front brakes. The sweeping curve (constructed from a single lump of carbon-fibre) that defines the profile of the car – the “Bugatti Line” – is also an intake, gobbling air to feed and cool the 16-cylinder engine. The rear – shaped to reduce haul and create a absorption effect, drawing hot air off the engine – is largely just a gaping chasm, punctuated only by 1.6m broad light undress featuring eighty two LEDs that act as a brake light, reversing light and indicators. Perhaps the only indulgent element is the central fin, a nod towards the seam on the Bugatti Type 57SC Atlantic.

Too conservative a transformation for you? Well consider this: while volume manufacturers are obsessed with pinching buyers from other brands to feed their growth projections, Bugatti is focused on holding taut to what it has. “Am I here to switch everything and to switch our customer?” Anscheidt mused. “No, I’m here with this project to make that customer base proceed on into the next generation.”

Albeit the wheelbase is a scant 1mm longer than the Veyron, the Chiron is actually 14mm broader and 6mm taller – little increments for you or I, but a world of difference to a designer. The main benefit is an extra 12mm of headroom – meaning you can drive it with a helmet on and not get a stiff neck. The rest of the interior is an exercise in minimising driver distraction. An analogue speedo (running all the way to 310mph or the magical 500km/h) is surrounded by digital TFT screens suggesting various entertainment and driving information. As the speed increases, the amount of info on the screens thins out, leaving the driver to concentrate on keeping the car on the road.

A narrow centre console, designed to echo the exterior Bugatti Line, houses the gear lever and four circular air-con dials, each beautifully machined – a jewel in its own right. The real jewels, however, are in the speakers – a one-carat diamond membrane on each of the four tweeters (insert joke about crystal-clear sound quality here), while the fresh 3D bonnet emblem or “Macaron” is made from enamel and solid silver. Don’t sell the Bentley Bentayga just yet, but there’s even a modicum of practicality shoehorned in. A cooled glove box is ideal for keeping the Bolli’ on ice, suit bags and jackets can be draped behind the seats and a weekend bag can be tucked under the front bonnet.

All hail the fresh Bugatti Chiron, Top Gear

All hail the fresh Bugatti Chiron

Welcome the fresh 261mph, 1,479bhp successor to the Veyron

We will dramatically raise the bar in terms of top speed, we will dramatically increase the power… We didn’t need a hybrid.

There are days, and they don’t come often, when the automotive world shifts on its axis. This, ladies and gentleman, is one of them because the Veyron’s reign as the world fastest production car is at an end, and the usurper comes from within. Yes, the £1.9m Chiron retains the Veyron’s fundamental proportions and powertrain, but it’s fresh in every other conceivable way, and built to arch physics to violating point.

The Chiron is not a hybrid. Unlike its closest competitors – the McLaren P1, LaFerrari and Porsche nine hundred eighteen – it relies solely on fossil fuels. Its engine is a development of the Veyron’s 8.0-litre quad-turbo W16, its gearbox a strengthened version of the Veyron’s seven-speed twin-clutch, and like the Veyron it deploys its immense power through all four wheels.

“If we went with hybrid we would have added extra weight. We would have experienced package constraints, too, because this car doesn’t have any areas where you can put extra stuff, so the styling would need to switch,” Wolfgang Durheimer, Bugatti’s CEO explained. “We will dramatically raise the bar in terms of top speed, we will dramatically increase the power by twenty five per cent, the aerodynamics are better, the road holding is better. We didn’t need a hybrid.”

Whereas the Veyron Super Sport produced a piffling 1183bhp and 1106lb ft of torque, the Chiron develops 1479bhp and 1180lb ft. Oh, and at a constant top speed the Veyron could drain its 100-litre fuel tank in twelve minutes, the Chiron can do it in 9.

Then there’s the top speed, which Bugatti has limited to 261mph – a token 3mph more than the Veyron Super Sport.

Clearly this is a game of very senior numbers, so here’s some more. It will accelerate from 0-62mph in less than Two.Five seconds, 0-124mph in less than 6.Five and 0-186mph in under 13.6. Take a moment to let that last one submerge in. That’s Two.9 seconds swifter than a P1 and a 2nd quicker than the Veyron Super Sport, bearing in mind that at 186mph a 2nd equals a lot of fresh air – 83m of it to be precise.

Then there’s the top speed, which Bugatti has limited to 261mph – a token 3mph more than the Veyron Super Sport. The specially-developed, broader Michelins can take more, Bugatti says, and will be used for a Chiron’s record-setting attempt, which is expected to surpass 270mph, but the limiter is a “safety measure for road-travel”. Euro NCAP will be delighted.

Key to the engine’s engorged power reserves are four larger turbos that work in tandem to supply maximum torque from two thousand to 6000rpm – that’s across seventy per cent of the engine’s total operating range. The two-stage system only calls on two turbos up to 3800rpm, to improve throttle response, and all four beyond that. A fresh titanium harass system helps out by reducing back pressure compared to the Veyron and houses two enormous catalytic converters – each six times the size of one you’ll find in a Mondeo. There are six exit pipes in total – four sticking out the back and two pointing downwards to create a deep throated diffuser – a downforce-boosting technology proven by, then subsequently banned in F1.

Everything about the Chiron’s powertrain is super-sized. An improved charge air cooling system means 60,000 litres of air per minute are pumped through the engine, while the coolant pump can circulate 800-litres in the same time. According to Willi Netuschil, head of engineering “temperature management is one of the fattest problems”. In total there are ten radiators crammed under the Chiron’s skin.

With superb power comes fine need for big brakes, so the front and rear discs are now 20mm larger, 2mm thicker and made from carbon silicon carbide – a material that’s both lighter and more resistant to fade. Pinning them are eight-piston calipers in the front and six-piston at the rear – each piston a subtly different diameter to keep brake wear even.

The tyres, now fourteen per cent broader at the front and twelve per cent broader at the rear, are packaged around larger rims – 20-inch front and 21-inch rear – and built to withstand otherworldly coerces. They need to be, as each gram of rubber is exposed to a centrifugal force of Three,800G. A fatter contact patch on the road means better braking, acceleration and wet-weather grip, while the updated four-wheel drive system uses electronic diffs on the front and rear axles, permitting fine control of the treating characteristics. More on that in a bit…

As a embarking point for the world’s fastest car Bugatti uses a fresh carbon-fibre monocoque (each one takes four weeks to make), with a carbon-fibre rear-subframe fastened to save 8kg versus the Veyron and boost rigidity, while the entire package is packaged in a carbon-fibre skin. Bugatti claims torsional stiffness is now up there with an LMP1 prototype, while a fresh electrified steering system and suspension bolted directly to the monocoque means it should react to inputs swifter than a 1995kg car has any right to.

Exactly how the Chiron behaves and what it’s capable of is up to you. Five different driving modes are available, and we’re not talking your average Sport and Convenience settings. Not in Bugatti land. There’s ‘Lift’, ‘Auto’, ‘Autobahn’, ‘Handling’ and ‘Top Speed’ to choose from, each an individual blend of settings for the chassis height, dampers, steering weight, torque distribution from the four-wheel drive system, active aero and the electronic stability system.

‘Auto’ is your default setting, shifting responsibility to the Chiron’s enormous brain to determine on the best parameters. ‘Lift’ is designed for speedbumps or loading onto a trailer and only available below 50kmh. Thrust it beyond 112mph and ‘Autobahn’ mode activates automatically, softening up the dampers for more comfy and stable high-speed cruising. Feeling courageous? ‘Handling’ mode turns everything up to eleven and is primarily designed for track work. All the above are accessed via a rotary control on the steering wheel, and come with a top speed limited to a mere 236mph.

In a car this over-engineered, technology has to take precedence over the styling

If you happen to have a salt vapid to play with then ‘Top Speed’ mode, like the Veyron, requires a 2nd key to initiate. Do so and the car hunkers down, the four-stage rear spoiler flicks into its “slightly extended” position and you’re free to run up to the 261mph limiter.

In a car this over-engineered, technology has to take precedence over the styling, something Achim Anscheidt, Bugatti’s design director, loosely admits: “From every side of the car: rear-view, side-view and front-view, the technical necessity for more dynamic driving spectacle, more cooling spectacle, more engine spectacle sets of stylistic strategy for the car.”

Those quad LED headlights, for example, very first shown on the bewinged Gran Turismo concept, dual as intakes, funnelling air towards the front brakes. The sweeping curve (constructed from a single lump of carbon-fibre) that defines the profile of the car – the “Bugatti Line” – is also an intake, gobbling air to feed and cool the 16-cylinder engine. The rear – shaped to reduce haul and create a absorption effect, drawing hot air off the engine – is largely just a gaping chasm, punctuated only by 1.6m broad light disrobe featuring eighty two LEDs that act as a brake light, reversing light and indicators. Perhaps the only indulgent element is the central fin, a nod towards the seam on the Bugatti Type 57SC Atlantic.

Too conservative a transformation for you? Well consider this: while volume manufacturers are obsessed with pinching buyers from other brands to feed their growth projections, Bugatti is focused on holding taut to what it has. “Am I here to switch everything and to switch our customer?” Anscheidt mused. “No, I’m here with this project to make that customer base proceed on into the next generation.”

Albeit the wheelbase is a scant 1mm longer than the Veyron, the Chiron is actually 14mm broader and 6mm taller – little increments for you or I, but a world of difference to a designer. The main benefit is an extra 12mm of headroom – meaning you can drive it with a helmet on and not get a stiff neck. The rest of the interior is an exercise in minimising driver distraction. An analogue speedo (running all the way to 310mph or the magical 500km/h) is surrounded by digital TFT screens suggesting various entertainment and driving information. As the speed increases, the amount of info on the screens thins out, leaving the driver to concentrate on keeping the car on the road.

A narrow centre console, designed to echo the exterior Bugatti Line, houses the gear lever and four circular air-con dials, each beautifully machined – a jewel in its own right. The real jewels, however, are in the speakers – a one-carat diamond membrane on each of the four tweeters (insert joke about crystal-clear sound quality here), while the fresh 3D bonnet emblem or “Macaron” is made from enamel and solid silver. Don’t sell the Bentley Bentayga just yet, but there’s even a modicum of practicality shoehorned in. A cooled glove box is ideal for keeping the Bolli’ on ice, suit bags and jackets can be draped behind the seats and a weekend bag can be wedged under the front bonnet.

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