The Wraith Eagle VIII is Rolls-Royce’s latest
Collection Car, scheduled to be unveiled at this year’s Concorso d’Eleganza
Villa d’Este, May 24-26, on the shores of Lake Como. The nameplate will have a limited
production run of just 50 units, with each car telling the epic tale of one of
“one of the most pivotal moments of the 20th century,” – the first non-stop
transatlantic flight, which occurred in June of 1919 with Alcock and Brown on
board.
A modified first World War Vickers Vimy bomber
aircraft was used for the task, powered by twin 20.3-liter, 350 HP Rolls-Royce
Eagle VIII engines, hence the name of the limited edition Wraith. The transatlantic voyage was not
without its perils. In fact, the plane’s radio and navigation instruments
failed almost immediately, forcing the pilots to “fly by the stars” in order to
reach the coast of Ireland from their departure location in St. John’s,
Newfoundland. In the end, the Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII engines were the only
components that worked without fault.
The exterior of the Wraith Eagle VIII Collection car
is meant to reflect Alcock and Brown’s night time adventure. The body features
a two-tone Gunmetal and Selby Grey aesthetic, while the black grille vanes are
in reference to the Eagle VIII engine cowling on the aircraft. Meanwhile, the
wheels are part polished with a translucent shadow finish.
Yet, it’s the interior that’s received the most
attention to detail, with Selby Grey and black leather throughout, ‘RR’
monograms embroidered in brass colored thread onto the headrests, a brass
plaque with Churchill’s quote and Smoked Eucalyptus wood (vacuumed metalized in
gold before being inlaid with silver and copper). This last detail was meant to
depict night-time images of the Earth as seen from the Sky.
Other bespoke elements include the brass-stitched
quilted sides of the center tunnel that provide a nod to the V12 engined
Vickers Vimy, the iced background of the clock which glows faint green during
night time (to reflect the plane’s instrument panel being frozen at high
altitude and the only illumination coming from the green glow of the control
panel lighting), and of course the unique starlight headliner, boasting no
fewer than 1,183 starlight fibers showing the celestial arrangement at the time
of the flight in 1919.