Golf Asia

Bugatti Baby Reborn

500 Junior Bugatti’s Built to Celebrate 110th Anniversar­y

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The car that brought Automobile­s Ettore Bugatti to fame in the 1920s, the Bugatti Type 35, is generally acknowledg­ed as the most successful racing car of all time. During its long career it won around 2,000 profession­al

and amateur races, averaging more than fourteen per week at its peak. In 1926 Ettore and his son Jean decided to build a half-scale Type 35 for Ettore’s youngest son, Roland, on the occasion of his fourth birthday. Now, on the occasion of the company’s 110th birthday, Bugatti and Junior Classics are reviving the idea of the Bugatti ‘Baby’.

What Ettore and Jean had intended as a one-off car, became an official Bugatti vehicle. The feedback from customers

visiting Molsheim had been so positive that it went into production and was sold between 1927 and 1936. The Bugatti ‘Baby’ was born. Cherished by Bugatti enthusiast­s worldwide, today no collection is complete without a Baby. However, with only around 500 ever made, they have been the preserve of the lucky few. Until now.

To celebrate Bugatti’s 110th anniversar­y, the company is introducin­g the smallest member of the Bugatti family, the Baby II. A contempora­ry tribute to Ettore’s masterpiec­e, the Baby II will be a strictly limited run, with only 500 cars to be be built just like the original. Unlike the original, which was only suitable for the youngest drivers, the Baby II is a three-quarters-size replica of the Bugatti Type 35 so it can be driven by both adults and children. The Baby II will allow automobile enthusiast­s from across generation­s to share the love of driving and of the classic marque of Bugatti.

Launching almost a century after its predecesso­r, the Baby II has been created using the latest technology, but with the utmost respect for Bugatti’s automotive heritage. Hand-built, the car was designed with the aid of a precise digital scan of an original Type 35, built for the 1924 French Grand Prix in Lyon.

Just like the original Baby, the Baby II has a rear-wheel-drive electric powertrain. Unlike its predecesso­r, the Baby II features removable lithium-ion battery packs, a limited slip differenti­al and even regenerati­ve braking. The junior car will come with two selectable power modes for drivers of different statures: a 1kw ‘child mode’ with the top speed limited to 20 km/h, and a 4kw ‘adult mode’ with the top speed limited to 45 km/h. In addition, for those enthusiast­s who crave even more pace, an optional ‘Speed Key’ upgrade is available (just like the Speed Key for its big brother, the Chiron!), which allows power of up to 10kw and disengages the speed limiter.

The cockpit of the Baby II features Bugatti’s signature turned aluminium dashboard, a leather seat, a scale recreation of the Type 35’s distinctiv­e fourspoke steering wheel and custom Bugatti instrument­s. The exterior of the car is painted in traditiona­l French Racing Blue, although buyers will be able to order in a range of alternativ­e colours. The signature eight-spoke aluminium alloy wheels are scale replicas of Ettore Bugatti’s groundbrea­king 1924 design, and house modern brakes on each wheel. Finally, powerful headlights (not shown here) light the way ahead for drivers young and old, whether you’re exploring new landscapes or lapping the local karting track.

Despite being the smallest member of the Bugatti family, the Baby II has a lot in common with its bigger brothers. Proudly displayed on the nose of the car is Bugatti’s famous ‘Macaron’ badge, made of 50g of solid silver, just like the Chiron. Each car comes with a limited-edition numbered plaque and cars ordered in 2019 will also incorporat­e a badge to commemorat­e Bugatti’s 110th anniversar­y.

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