Porsche Tapiro Explained

Porsche Tapiro
Manufacturer:Porsche
Production:1970 (1 built)
Class:Sports car
Related:Porsche 914/6
Layout:Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel drive
Engine:2.4 L flat-six
Transmission:5-speed manual
Designer:Giorgetto Giugiaro (Italdesign)

The Porsche Tapiro is a concept car built by Porsche in 1970. It was designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro and has a traditional 1970s wedge design, which critics say somewhat resembles that of the De Tomaso Mangusta. The chassis is based on the Porsche 914/6, and it features gullwing-style doors.[1]

Specifications

The Tapiro is powered by a longitudinally mounted air-cooled 2.4-liter flat-six engine producing at 7,800 rpm, and connected to a 5-speed manual transmission. This engine could propel the Tapiro to an official top speed of .[2]

History

The Porsche Tapiro was introduced to the world at the 1970 Turin Auto Show, in Turin, Italy.[3] The car made its US debut at the 5th Annual Los Angeles Imported Automobile and Sports Car Show in 1971.

In 1972, the car was sold to a Spanish industrialist who used it as his daily driver. The car was mostly destroyed after it caught fire. Most sources say the cause of the fire was a group of labor activists protesting its owner's labor policies, who planted a bomb under the Tapiro. The bomb exploded, burning the car but not destroying the chassis.[4] Other sources say the car was involved in an accident and caught fire that way.[5] The burnt shell was repurchased by Italdesign and is now on display in its Giugiaro Museum.

Notes and References

  1. News: TG's guide to concepts: the 1970 Porsche Tapiro. 2017-03-06. Top Gear. 2018-08-11. en. Craig Jamieson.
  2. News: 1970 Porsche Tapiro: Concept We Forgot. Motor1.com. 2018-08-11. en. Adrian Padeanu. 2017-09-27.
  3. Web site: Project: Tapiro. italdesign.it. en. 2024-05-16.
  4. Web site: What Happened to the Porsche Tapiro. 993C4S. flatsixes.com. 2024-05-16. 2009-03-05.
  5. News: Meet the 1970 Porsche Tapiro, a concept car that met a violent death. Autoweek. 2018-08-11. Zac Palmer. 2017-08-22.