Bugatti is nothing if not enterprising. With clever and careful manipulation of its one platform and engine it has turned the Chiron into the world’s fastest car (Super Sport 300+), an unlikely trackday weapon (Pur Sport), a homage to a 1990s supercar icon (Centodieci) and the most desirable convertible on the planet (W16 Mistral). But still customers wanted more. And what they wanted, according to Bugatti, is the car you see here, the Chiron Profilée.
The Profilée came about because potential
Bugatti owners were asking the luxury automaker for a car with the on-track
poise and snappy gearing of the handling-focused Chiron Pur Sport, but classier
bodywork that dispensed with the PS’s fixed rear wing. At this level of spend
the customer is always right, and Bugatti was ready to oblige, until disaster
stuck. The Pur Sport proved incredibly popular, the 60-unit run selling out
quickly, leaving no spare capacity for Bugatti to put the Profilée into
production without busting over the self-imposed 500-unit maximum it had set
for the entire Chiron programme.
Which means the car you’re looking at, and
which one lucky soul will get to take home when Bugatti auctions the model for
charity through RM Sotheby’s on February 1, is the only Chiron Profilée in
existence. Named, not in fact after a fancy dessert, but in honour of Jean
Bugatti’s Type 46 and 50 cars, which were given the same label for their
distinctive silhouettes, the Profilée’s calling card is a handsome looping
hydraulic rear wing. It takes the place of the fixed spoiler on the Pur Sport
and is designed both to provide downforce and draw hot air out of the engine
bay. The two cars share the same face though, each featuring wide lower air
intakes either side of a large horseshoe grille, but you won’t find another
Chiron wearing the Profilée’s elegant Argent Atlantique blue paint. The lower
section of the body is finished in exposed carbon fiber tinted in Bugatti Blu
Royal, a color replicated in sections of the wheels, whose design is again
exclusive to this Chiron special. The Profilée is also the first Chiron to get
a woven leather finish interior made up of 2,500 m of leather
strips, which are visible on the door trims and center tunnel.
That interior finish gives the cabin a
very different look to the Alcantara-swathed track-ready Pur Sport, but there’s
closer kinship under the skin, with both cars featuring chassis tweaks aimed at
enhancing the Chiron’s agility. The Profilée’s springs are 10 percent stiffer
versus the Chiron Sport’s and the rear axle serves up 50 percent more negative
camber to improve cornering grip. But having driven a Pur Sport back to back
with a base Chiron and Chiron Sport I can guarantee that the defining hardware
upgrade is the 15 percent shorter rear axle ratio the Pur Sport donates to the
new car. The top speed is limited to “only” 380 km/h, though that’s
still better that the 350 km/h the Pur Sport offers, but what matters
is that the in-gear acceleration is on a different level to what you get from a
regular Chiron. Seventh gear feels like third in a regal fast car. Standing
start energy isn’t bad, either: zero to 100 km/h takes 2.3 seconds and
zero to 200 km/h is dispatched in an incredible 5.5 seconds.
And like the Pur Sport, the Profilée
archives those numbers using the same 1,479 hp quad-turbo W16 engine
fitted to the base Chiron, rather than the 1,578 hp version found in
the Super Sport, and Centodieci. Both of those cars accelerate more slowly
because of their taller gears and even the record-breaking 300+ lags behind the
Profilée until beyond 240 km/h when its slippery aero body starts to
do its thing. The one thing Bugatti doesn’t disclose is how much the Profileé weighs.
The Pur Sport came in at 50 kg lighter than a stock Chiron, but much
of that was due to the fixed wing and trick carbon wheels, neither of which
appear on its luxury-lovin’ brother.
As for a price, well that comes down to
how much champagne the bidders have been enjoying before the hammer comes down
on February 1. But if you consider that the Pur Sport cost US$ 3.6 million and
there were 60 of those and only one Profilée, it’s safe to assume it’s going to
be a big bill.