Kenmerken

Conditie
Nieuw
Type
Auto

Beschrijving

Cunningham C-3 Continental Coupe by Vignale - 1:18 - CMF - NIEUW in OVP

Limited Edition 1 of 300 pcs

Laatste 7 foto's zijn van een origineel exemplaar.


Aanvullende informatie:

In de jaren '50 droomde Briggs Cunningham ervan om te winnen op Le Mans. Minstens 25 gebouwde weg-auto's eiste de Le Mans als voorwaarde. De Italiaan Alfredo Vignale werd ingeschakeld om coupé- en cabriolet carrosserieën te bouwen die waren gebaseerd op een ontwerp van Giovanni Michelotti met duidelijke Ferrari invloeden.

Krachtbron: OHV Chrysler HEMI V-8 motor met 4 Zenith-carburateurs.

Het Team Cunningham behaalde op Le Mans de derde plaats overall zowel in 1953 als ook in 1954!

Op 2 mei 2015 verkocht RM Sotheby de Vignale prototype voor $ 869.000,00


About the 1952 Cunningham C-3 Continental Coupe
“Spine-jolting acceleration that stems from phenomenal low-speed torque; ridiculous ease of motion; paralyzing brake power; positive steering…in the best Bugatti tradition; and with all the sort of lounging comfort one has no right to expect, even from the modern sports machine.” John Bentley was describing the Cunningham C-3 for readers of The Autocar in 1952. He was not alone in his enthusiasm.

In Road & Track, John Bond said taking the car through his favorite S-bend was a “revelation…no sway, no squat, no squawl.” Said another road tester: “It’s pretty hard to believe. You’ve never driven anything like it in your life.” Yet another was more explicit: “Driving this car is not unlike harnessing Niagara Falls… a suddenly opened throttle parallels the kick of a JATO assist rocket.”

Modifications to Chrysler’s massive hemi had provided the C-3 with about forty more horses than stock. The Cunningham production car’s easy cruising speed was 107mph. Top speed was about 135. Depending upon transmission, zero to 60 could be accomplished in 6.9 seconds (Cadillac three-speed) or 8.5 seconds (Chrysler Fluid-Torque).

To qualify his cars for Le Mans, Briggs Cunningham had no choice but to become an automobile manufacturer. Initially, he planned to build 25 cars in 1952 (the Le Mans minimum), followed by 50 in 1953. Total actual production turned out to be only 18 coupes and 9 convertibles. Consequently, though priced in the $10,000 range, very expensive for the times, the cars cost Briggs yet more to build.

Unquestionably, the Cunningham was the most exciting American sports car of its era and one of the most handsome sports cars anywhere. Giovanni Michelotti styled the body; Vignale built it in Turin, Italy. In 1953 the Cunningham Continental Coupe was one of just two American cars (the Studebaker Starliner from Raymond Loewy’s studio the other) selected by Arthur Drexler of New York’s Museum of Modern Art for landmark status among the world’s 10 best contemporary automobile designs.
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Sinds 18 jun '25
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