0 Share In the early days of the car, when they were hand-made and based on a separate chassis, it was easy to build one-offs. But the advent of monocoque construction made it much harder to construct a unique car, which is why it’s now such a costly business. But every so often a car maker will unveil a road-going machine that’s unique, either as a customer commission, a marketing exercise or it could simply be as the basis for a production model which never sees the light of day. Sometimes it’s a shame that only the one was made – but sometimes it’s not such a bad thing: Peugeot 404 (1966) Starting out with a 404 cabriolet, Peugeot created a diesel-engined record breaker with a fixed narrow roof and just 69bhp. It ran for 72 hours at Montlhéry, breaking 22 speed records in the process, three of them all-new. Ford Supervan 1 (1971) When the Transit Supervan made its public debut at the Easter race meeting at Thruxton in April 1971, Ford could never have predicted just what an icon this ludicrous machine would become. The bodyshell was a standard Transit Mk1, but it hid a rather barmy secret; this delivery van was based on the chassis of a Ford GT40, complete with mid-mounted 5.0-litre V8. Ford Supervan 1 (1971) With 435bhp on tap, the Supervan’s performance was shattering. We clocked a 0-100mph time of just 21.6 seconds when we drove it at Ford Motorsport’s Boreham airfield. We also saw 102mph on the clock – in second gear! It was reckoned that the top speed was 168mph, but Supervan’s aerodynamics were so poor that it would have been a frightening experience. Sadly, Supervan 1 was scrapped in the 1970s. Fiat 130 Familiare (1971) When business tycoon Gianni Agnelli (1921-2003) owned Fiat he could have whatever cars he wanted and a whole raft of one-offs were built for him. Among them was a five-door estate based on the ultra-luxurious Fiat 130 saloon, with its 3.2-litre six-cylinder engine rated at 165bhp. Aston Martin Bulldog (1980) When Aston Martin developed the incredibly futuristic mid-engined Bulldog, there was talk of building up to 25 of the Williams Towns-designed machines. With electrically operated gullwing doors, a twin-turbo V8 cranking out 700bhp and the most dramatic proportions imaginable, it’s likely the necessary buyers could have been found. In the early days of the car, when they were hand-made and based on a separate chassis, it was easy to build one-offs. But the advent of monocoque construction made it much harder to construct a unique car, which is why it’s now such a costly business. But every so often a car maker will unveil a road-going machine that’s unique, either as a customer commission, a marketing exercise or it could simply be as the basis for a production model which never sees the light of day. Sometimes it’s a shame that only the one was made – but sometimes it’s not such a bad thing: 0 Share FacebookTwitterGoogle+ReddItWhatsAppPinterestEmail
Peugeot 404 (1966) Starting out with a 404 cabriolet, Peugeot created a diesel-engined record breaker with a fixed narrow roof and just 69bhp. It ran for 72 hours at Montlhéry, breaking 22 speed records in the process, three of them all-new. Ford Supervan 1 (1971) When the Transit Supervan made its public debut at the Easter race meeting at Thruxton in April 1971, Ford could never have predicted just what an icon this ludicrous machine would become. The bodyshell was a standard Transit Mk1, but it hid a rather barmy secret; this delivery van was based on the chassis of a Ford GT40, complete with mid-mounted 5.0-litre V8. Ford Supervan 1 (1971) With 435bhp on tap, the Supervan’s performance was shattering. We clocked a 0-100mph time of just 21.6 seconds when we drove it at Ford Motorsport’s Boreham airfield. We also saw 102mph on the clock – in second gear! It was reckoned that the top speed was 168mph, but Supervan’s aerodynamics were so poor that it would have been a frightening experience. Sadly, Supervan 1 was scrapped in the 1970s. Fiat 130 Familiare (1971) When business tycoon Gianni Agnelli (1921-2003) owned Fiat he could have whatever cars he wanted and a whole raft of one-offs were built for him. Among them was a five-door estate based on the ultra-luxurious Fiat 130 saloon, with its 3.2-litre six-cylinder engine rated at 165bhp. Aston Martin Bulldog (1980) When Aston Martin developed the incredibly futuristic mid-engined Bulldog, there was talk of building up to 25 of the Williams Towns-designed machines. With electrically operated gullwing doors, a twin-turbo V8 cranking out 700bhp and the most dramatic proportions imaginable, it’s likely the necessary buyers could have been found. In the early days of the car, when they were hand-made and based on a separate chassis, it was easy to build one-offs. But the advent of monocoque construction made it much harder to construct a unique car, which is why it’s now such a costly business. But every so often a car maker will unveil a road-going machine that’s unique, either as a customer commission, a marketing exercise or it could simply be as the basis for a production model which never sees the light of day. Sometimes it’s a shame that only the one was made – but sometimes it’s not such a bad thing: