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Duma
April 25th, 2006, 19:24
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The Caparo T1 Unveiled at Monaco
Source: Caparo | Published: April 21, 2006

Accompanied by massed ranks of press photographers, video cameramen and media journalists, all vying for exclusive pictures and interviews, His Serene Highness Prince Albert II unveiled the exclusive Caparo T1 following the official opening yesterday of the prestigious Top Marques show held in Monaco.

The media were drawn to the event by the appearance of the world’s first ever 1,000 bhp-per-ton ultra high performance road and track car. The T1 was the first car at the show to be visited by Prince Albert, who was introduced to Caparo Vehicle Technologies’ design director Ben Scott-Geddes and engineering director Graham Halstead by Angad Paul chief executive of Caparo plc. The $1,3 billion multinational manufacturer and supplier of components to carmakers worldwide, is backing the two ex-McLaren engineers whose inspiration helped create the car.

"Prince Albert was particularly interested in how we’d achieved the car’s high power-to-weight ratio and what composite materials we’d used to reduce weight," said Scott-Geddes. "He was also fascinated to see the car was a two-seater in such a compact package."

Another visitor impressed by the Caparo T1 was celebrity commentator Murray Walker who speculated on what it might feel like to be a passenger by referring to his famous drive in the McLaren two-seater formula one racecar, another high performance vehicle project handled by Scott-Geddes and Halstead, and possibly the closest comparison to the T1 in terms of sheer dynamic performance. Whereas the McLaren had a panic button for VIP passengers unaccustomed to 3g cornering, the Caparo T1 passenger will simply have to tap the T1 driver on the shoulder if he or she - like Murray Walker - feels that one more lap at such high performance would be one too many!

This is the first time that Caparo Vehicle Technologies has exhibited at any event. The stunning T1 was created not only as a high performance road and track car but also to demonstrate the company’s technical know-how and competence in vehicle design.

"With deposits received beforehand and cheques taken at the show the order book continues to grow and if a mere fraction of the letters of interest we’ve received turn into additional orders then the demand could soon outstrip our ability to supply," said commercial director Sean Butcher.

Commenting on the build schedule and prospects for meeting customer orders managing director Mark Findlay added: "We completed the build of the first prototype in less than seven weeks to meet the show deadline, which is something of a record even in our industry. We will now build a second prototype for a busy test and development schedule to ensure the car meets our quality and reliability goals. We have started to recruit the engineers and technicians we need to grow the company and our intention is to start building production cars later this year for delivery to customers in 2007."

The ultra lightweight T1, which weighs less than 1100 lbs, is a British designed 2-seater which has been developed using aerospace and high formula racing technology. The compact V8 engine develops approximately 500 bhp and the resultant 1,000 bhp-per-ton power-to-weight ratio endows the car with an extraordinary 0-60 mph time of 2.5 seconds, 0-100 mph time of 5 seconds and 0-100-0mph time of less than 10 seconds making it the world’s fastest accelerating and braking road car. It is also fast round corners with 3g cornering ability equivalent to a Le Mans Prototype.

The T1, which defines an entirely new breed of ultra high performance car that is lighter than a Caterham but with almost twice the power-to-weight ratio of a Bugatti Veyron, forms an eye-catching centrepiece to the show held at the Grimaldi Forum in the heartland of Monte-Carlo; one of the world's most glamorous locations.

Caparo will present the prototype for the duration of the show, which runs from Thursday 20 April to Sunday 23 April 2006.

Benman
April 25th, 2006, 20:14
I am so impressed with this car! It is finally nice to see "supercar" makers returning to less is more instead of heavier and heavier! Well done!:heart:

Ben:addict:

leblanc
October 3rd, 2006, 15:46
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Caparo cuts a dash
From brainchild to wild child in less than a year is an impressive transformation.

It's one the Caparo T1 has undergone, and it's now entering the difficult teenage process of development with the completion of the first running prototype.

Called XP1, this car was driven by creators Graham Halstead and Ben Scott-Geddes for the T1's first-ever trial run.

A second prototype is on the way soon, and both cars will undergo reliability and endurance testing before the first T1s reach customers in March 2007.

Just 24 of the £150,000 T1s are expected to be built per year, but Caparo says it has an order book that will keep it busy for most of next year.

Much of the development driving will be undertaken by racing driver Chris Goodwin, who was also largely responsible for the McLaren F1's development, so he knows a thing or two about honing supercars.

The T1 could give the Bugatti Veyron a run for its money in the acceleration stakes, with 0-60mph expected in 2.4 seconds.

The T1 uses a purpose-built 2.4-litre V8 with 480bhp and has an all-up weight of just 470kg, which gives the car a Veyron-rivalling power-to-weight ratio of 1,000bhp-per-tonne.TopGear


More: http://www.pistonheads.com/news/default.asp?storyId=15201

Benman
October 3rd, 2006, 15:56
Brilliant! I love that car! That would be a tough choice, Ultimate luxury Bugatti or Ultimate driving dynamics T1. Oh please, if you had the $$$ you'd just buy both.:hihi:

Ben:addict:

Charles DLF
October 3rd, 2006, 16:00
purpose-built 2.4-litre V8 with 480bhp

Wow, that has to be the smalest V8 i've ever heard of, always the F40's 3.0 V8 was about as small as a V8 could get, but 2.4... :eek: :bigeyes:

Anyone know what the smallest V8, IN A REAL CAR is??

Cheers all


Charles

Benman
October 3rd, 2006, 19:08
Anyone know what the smallest V8, IN A REAL CAR is??

Cheers all

Charles


I believe this one is. It is developed from two Suzuki motors joined (very similar to the motor that Radical uses for their SR8 only supercharged...).

Ben:addict:

Inline Six
October 9th, 2006, 04:17
I believe this one is.

Nope. The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale had a 2.0L V8, natrually aspirated too. It made 250hp and revved to 10k rpm in street trim. The best thing about it? It was made 40 years ago.

The Tipo 33 Stradale might be the most underrated supercar in history. It was years ahead of its time, being the first mid-engine supercar with an over 100hp/L engine. At 1500lbs, it accelerated faster than the Miura which had debuted a year earlier. Lambo can claim the Miura to be the first supercar all they want, but the Tipo 33 Stradale was lighter and quicker, had an extra gear and actually featured "Lambo doors" before any Lambo did.

Leadfoot
October 9th, 2006, 09:59
Nope. The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale had a 2.0L V8, natrually aspirated too. It made 250hp and revved to 10k rpm in street trim. The best thing about it? It was made 40 years ago.

The Tipo 33 Stradale might be the most underrated supercar in history. It was years ahead of its time, being the first mid-engine supercar with an over 100hp/L engine. At 1500lbs, it accelerated faster than the Miura which had debuted a year earlier. Lambo can claim the Miura to be the first supercar all they want, but the Tipo 33 Stradale was lighter and quicker, had an extra gear and actually featured "Lambo doors" before any Lambo did.

Surely this statement I have highlighted means that the Lambo was the first mid-engined supercar.:vhmmm:

Inline Six
October 9th, 2006, 11:49
Surely this statement I have highlighted means that the Lambo was the first mid-engined supercar.:vhmmm:

Maybe I phrased that badly, but I was not questioning which car came out first. I was trying to point out the Tipo 33 Stradale being a more sophisticated car, featured more supercar qualities and thus was a superior supercar to the Lambo. The Mirua, despite the beautiful design and having its engine mounted in the middle (albeit transversally), was really not that "super" in technical terms.

Since we are on the topic, here's another fact: the Tipo 33 had a wonderful racing career, whereas the Lambo never raced and was more of a boulevard express.

Leadfoot
October 9th, 2006, 17:22
Since we are on the topic, here's another fact: the Tipo 33 had a wonderful racing career, whereas the Lambo never raced and was more of a boulevard express.

Yes, but has this not always been the case with Lamborghini.:hihi:

Benman
October 9th, 2006, 18:23
Nope. The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale had a 2.0L V8, natrually aspirated too. .


I stand corrected. Learn something new everyday. :thumb:

However...
Since we are on the topic, here's another fact: the Tipo 33 had a wonderful racing career, whereas the Lambo never raced and was more of a boulevard express.

That part, not so correct...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfa_Romeo_33_(race_car)

Especially read this part: "The original T33 proved unreliable and uncompetitive in the World Sportscar Championship, its best result a 5th place at the 1000km Nürburgring, with Zeccoli and Roberto Bussinello."


Ben:addict:

Inline Six
October 10th, 2006, 00:21
However...

That part, not so correct...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfa_Romeo_33_(race_car)

Especially read this part: "The original T33 proved unreliable and uncompetitive in the World Sportscar Championship, its best result a 5th place at the 1000km Nürburgring, with Zeccoli and Roberto Bussinello."


Ben:addict:

Well, not every racecar is race-winning right off the bat. In vintage racing circles, the T33 varients are remembered as very successful racecars of their time against big boys like Ferrari and Porsche.

The Stradale was and still is stunningly beautiful, and you can see a lot of it in the new Alfa 8C Competizione.

It's a shame that the T33 moniker isn't quite as big as GT40, 917 and 330 P3/4 today. It's a forgotten champion.

Benman
October 10th, 2006, 15:06
The Stradale was and still is stunningly beautiful, and you can see a lot of it in the new Alfa 8C Competizione.



I'd agree with that, very good looking car. :cheers:

Ben:addict: