SEAT Fórmula explained

SEAT Fórmula
Manufacturer:SEAT, SA
Stola
Production:1999 (Concept car)
Assembly:Turin, Italy
Doors:Butterfly
Class:Sports car (S)
Body Style:2-door roadster
Layout:Mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Platform:aluminium spaceframe
Engine:2L 20-valve Turbocharged I4
Transmission:6-speed sequential semi-automatic
Wheelbase:2523mm
Length:3943mm
Width:1758mm
Height:1152mm
Weight:900kg (2,000lb)
Designer:Erwin Leo Himmel

The SEAT Fórmula is a rear-wheel-drive mid-engined roadster concept car developed by the Spanish carmaker SEAT initially aimed at limited car production.[1] Designed at the Volkswagen Group's Design Center Europe at Sitges near Barcelona a facility jointly owned by Volkswagen, Audi and SEAT,[2] it was penned by a team directed by Erwin Leo Himmel[3] into which participated the Lotus Elise designer Julian Thomson exposing the design language of the future models of the brand.

The name Fórmula itself derives from the brand's heritage from the past, as a reminding of the creation of the Spanish Fórmula Nacional race tracks back in the 1960s,[4] when SEAT started its implication in motorsport activities.[5] [6]

The first concept for the car built by the Turinese company Stola was shown at the 1999 Geneva Salon international de l' auto, featuring a water-cooled 2-litre 20-valve turbo four-cylinder 240 hp engine which was riding onto an aluminium chassis weighing almost 900 kg.[7] Its 20-inch light alloy wheels (7.5 J × 20" front and 9 J × 20" rear) were fitted on 205/45 R20 front and 255/35 R20 rear tires and mounted onto an independent suspension system consisting of Formula One-style wishbones in front and horizontally mounted dampers rear system.[8] The combination of the very light chassis with the powerful engine (performing a maximum output of 240 bhp peaking at 5800 rpm and a maximum torque of 295 Nm between 2100 and 4800 rpm) and the six-speed sequential Sportronic electro-hydraulic semi-automatic gearbox,[9] both deriving from SEAT's rally cars, gave the SEAT Fórmula the ability to reach 0–100 km/h in 4.8 seconds with a top speed of 235 km/h.[10] As for the brakes, all front and rear wheels disposed ventilated disc brakes.

A 100-litre-volume luggage compartment was also available.[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. SEAT Formula http://www.electrifyingtimes.com/autodesign.html
  2. 1999 Seat Formula http://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z820/Seat-Formula.aspx
  3. Erwin Leo Himmel Currículum vitae http://www.motorsportscenter.com/printer_338.shtml
  4. http://SEAT

    Formula (Geneva 1999) www.autointell.com/european_companies/volkswagen/seat/seat-formula-concept/seat21111.htm

  5. SEAT historia deportiva http://www.seat-mexico.com.mx/seatmx/c/MX/es/home_page/inicio_/historia/historia_deportiva.html
  6. SEAT: A race back in time Web site: SEAT.com -> SEAT SPORT . 2010-11-11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100217052440/http://www.seat.com/com/generator/su/com/SEAT/site/company/SEATSport/main.html . 2010-02-17 .
  7. SEAT Formula http://www.mtm-online.de/en/highlights/details?id=13
  8. Out of the blue? You can Seat again! http://news.drive.com.au/drive/motor-news/out-of-the-blue-you-can-seat-again-20100823-13fqt.html
  9. SEAT Formula http://www.21stcentury.co.uk/cars/seat_formula.asp
  10. SEAT key figures http://media.seat.com/en/company/368-seat-sa-en-cifras-2005-2009.html
  11. SEAT Formula designstudien http://haendler.seat.de/extras/designstudien/formula/unten.htm