GRR

Bugatti record-breakers unite at Goodwood

24th June 2022
Seán Ward

If you saw just one of these machines in the metal you wouldn't be able to do anything else other than stop whatever you were doing and stare. To see all three together? It's scarcely believable. Meet the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport World Record Edition, the Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse World Record Edition and the Chiron Super Sport 300.

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Since the Veyron arrived on the scene in 2005, Bugatti has stood atop the motoring world as a company that creates some of the fastest and most exquisite cars in the world. The Veyron was a work of magic, with 1,000PS (735kW) from an 8.0-litre, quad-turbocharged W16 engine which, combined with all-wheel-drive and a seven-speed double-clutch gearbox, could send it to 62mph in 2.5 seconds and on to a top speed of 253mph. But Bugatti was never going to stop there – the company’s engineers realised there was more performance to be had, the result of which was the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport.

In 2010 the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport hit 268mph, 15mph beyond the top speed achievable in the standard Veyron and a new record for road-going production cars. The bodywork was modified for maximum aerodynamic efficiency and greater high-speed stability, the turbochargers were larger, there were bigger intercoolers, the suspension, dampers, wheels and more were all tweaked to cope with the sheer straight-line performance. As for power, this ultimate Veyron had 1,200PS (883kW) and 1,500Nm (1,110lb ft) of torque, 200PS and 250Nm more than before.

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Bugatti made 48 Veyron Super Sports, the first five of which were known as ‘World Record Edition’ cars. This is one of those vehicles, complete with its naked carbon-fibre bodywork and unique painted orange accents. And the man behind the wheel at the 2022 Festival of Speed presented by Mastercard? Pierre-Henri Raphanel, the very man who drove the car to 268mph at the company’s test track, Ehra-Lessien in Germany.

Three years later Bugatti was at it again, this time pushing the open-top Veyron Grand Sport to the extreme with the Grand Sport Vitesse. It was, essentially, a roofless Veyron Super Sport, with the same upgraded engine and so on. But Bugatti had to put a great deal of effort into making sure that, with the roof off, the car would remain stable at more than the Grand Sport’s top speed of 229mph. In the end the company managed 254mph in the Grand Sport Vitesse – that’s 254mph without a roof, setting a record in the process, Anthony Liu the man who claimed the honours.

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The car at Goodwood is one of only eight ‘World Record Edition’ examples, finished with gloss carbon and orange paintwork once more, with Bugatti building 92 of the most extreme convertibles the world had ever seen.

The Veyron lived a long life, with a production run that spanned 10 years, and in 2016 it was succeeded by the Bugatti Chiron, a car with a heavily revised version of the 8.0-litre W16 from the Veyron and designed to go a step beyond that car in every respect. It had 1,500PS (1,103kW) and 1,600Nm (1,184lb ft), could hit 62mph in 2.4 seconds and career across the surface of the earth at a truly ridiculous 261mph. But, as with the Veyron, Bugatti knew there was more performance to be had, and in 2019 unveiled the Chiron Super Sport 300+.

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The first series production car to hit 300mph (304.773mph if we’re being precise), the Super Sport 300 had a power bump to 1,600PS (1,177kW), and was treated to a 25mm longer tail to reduce aerodynamic stall plus a new exhaust and rear diffuser to create negative lift and reduce drag. Only 30 cars will be built and, not one to break tradition, Bugatti stuck to a carbon-fibre and orange accent finish. It’s Bugatti test driver and 1988 Le Mans winner Andy Wallace in the driver’s seat at the 2022 Festival, a seat he’s very familiar with having set that astounding 300mph-plus record.

There will never be a convertible Chiron, so until the Chiron is replaced, whatever form that might take, these are the three record breakers, a trio of very special cars that pushed road car performance into another dimension.

  • Bugatti

  • Veyron

  • Chiron

  • Festival of Speed

  • FOS 2022

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