Bugatti Veyron is now available in a new exclusive color that will come with the latest models of the product lineup expected to be discontinued later this year. Photos showing the new golden painted Veyron were taken in Dubai, globalmotors.net wrote today, a particular region in which the biggest number of Bugattis are sold.
As you surely know, Bugatti's Veyron is capable of developing enough power to satisfy any of you, especially when talking about 0-100 acceleration and maximum speed. The golden Veyron is powered by a 8.0-liter W16 engine with four turbochargers capable of producing a maximum power of 1001 hp and 1250 Nm of torque.
As mentioned, the car sprints from a standstill to 100 km/h (62 mph) in less than 2.5 seconds, with top speed exceeding 400 km/h (248 mph).
Bugatti announced in mid-January that it plans to discontinue the Veyron lineup which was initially projected to rely on 300 units. About 250 models have already found an owner, Bugatti said in early 2009, with the remaining 50 vehicles waiting for buyers. Bugatti Veyron was first introduced to the general public in 2005, being mostly known as the fastest production car in the world.
“For years, the Bugatti engineers had worked diligently in order to push the 400 km/h boundary. No wind tunnel can simulate this velocity, which is why after each of a long series of improvements, the different ground clearance levels and the modifications of the rear fenders, spoiler and underbody were tested separately on high-speed test ranges. This ambition and diligence paid off, as the official speed measurement proves,” Bugatti said in 2005 when the company rolled out the Veyron.
As you surely know, Bugatti's Veyron is capable of developing enough power to satisfy any of you, especially when talking about 0-100 acceleration and maximum speed. The golden Veyron is powered by a 8.0-liter W16 engine with four turbochargers capable of producing a maximum power of 1001 hp and 1250 Nm of torque.
As mentioned, the car sprints from a standstill to 100 km/h (62 mph) in less than 2.5 seconds, with top speed exceeding 400 km/h (248 mph).
Bugatti announced in mid-January that it plans to discontinue the Veyron lineup which was initially projected to rely on 300 units. About 250 models have already found an owner, Bugatti said in early 2009, with the remaining 50 vehicles waiting for buyers. Bugatti Veyron was first introduced to the general public in 2005, being mostly known as the fastest production car in the world.
“For years, the Bugatti engineers had worked diligently in order to push the 400 km/h boundary. No wind tunnel can simulate this velocity, which is why after each of a long series of improvements, the different ground clearance levels and the modifications of the rear fenders, spoiler and underbody were tested separately on high-speed test ranges. This ambition and diligence paid off, as the official speed measurement proves,” Bugatti said in 2005 when the company rolled out the Veyron.