Whatever Bugatti has to prove, it proves with its
road-going supercars. But there was a time when it competed in professional
motorsports. And looking at this design, we wonder if it
shouldn't return.
Though the Alsatian marque never competed in the
modern Formula One World Championship, it was a fixture in pre-war grand prix racing. In fact the legendary
Type 35 was the most successful car of the 1920s, winning some 1,000 races in
its time, cementing Bugatti's place in the record books.
That kind of legend naturally leads to imagining its
revival, especially with the marque itself producing such immensely fast road
cars. Leave it to budding livery designer Sean Bull to put that idea to pixels
with the concept you see here.
The story behind the design has it that, by the year
2020, F1 has gotten so boring and processional that a radical rethink is
required. So the rule book is thrown out, with only the tires, ground effects,
and overall budget cap stipulated by the FIA, and the rest left up to the
participating manufacturers.
Bugatti designs a
competitor that is at least as much a successor to the 100P experimental
aircraft as it is to its grand prix racers of the 1920s and '30s. It calls the
chassis the 101P, giving it a canopy cockpit, smart-composite brakes, and a
turbine engine based on a Nikola Tesla design from 1913. Bean even goes as far
as suggesting that the team would recruit Mick Schumacher and Daniel Ricciardo
to drive the machine.
After all, Bugatti is part of the Volkswagen Group, and if
Wolfsburg were to ever finally approve an F1 program, it has half a dozen other
brands it would likely choose to promote before giving it to Bugatti. But it
sure would be awesome if this idea became a reality.