Venturi Atlantique Explained

Venturi Atlantique
Manufacturer:Venturi Automobiles
Production:1991-2000
Class:Sports car
Assembly:Couëron, Pays de la Loire, France
Body Style:2-door coupe
Layout:mid-engine, rear-wheel drive
Transmission:5-speed manual transmission
Wheelbase:25001NaN1
Length:42421NaN1
Width:18401NaN1
Height:11801NaN1
Designer:Claude Poiraud, Gérard Godfroy

The Venturi Atlantique was a mid-engined, fiberglass-bodied French sports car produced by Venturi Automobiles from 1991 to 2000.

Atlantique 260

The original 260 was a revised version of the Venturi APC 260, carrying over the 2.8-litre turbocharged V6 engine with, but with a reduced weight of 1110NaN. It was good for a top speed of 167mph and accelerated from 0-60lk=NaNlk= in 5.2 seconds.

Atlantique 300

Scotsman Hubert O'Neill purchased Venturi in 1994 and conceived of the Venturi 400GT as well as a revised Atlantique. After a rushed design time of six months, the new Atlantique 300 was unveiled at the Paris Motor Show. Its 3.0 V6 PRV engine was lifted from other Peugeot/Citroën models and was good for in naturally aspirated form or with a turbocharger which was essentially the same engine as used in the Alpine A610.

Venturi again went into receivership in 1996, and was bought by Thai firm Nakarin Benz, under whom the company focused its concentration upon road cars.

Atlantique 300 Biturbo

The Twin-turbo version of the Atlantique 300 was released in 1998 and used the later L7X V6, a Renault variant of the V6 ESL engine which brought the power up to at 6,200 rpm and 3940NaN0 of torque at 3,800 rpm, with a top speed of 275km/h and a 0-100km/h time of 4.7 seconds,[1] this addition made the Atlantique a serious performance competitor to the Lotus Esprit V8. 13 examples were built in 1999-2000; this model was the last Venturi to be considered French, before the firm became based in Monaco.

Venturi 300 GTR

In 1999, 2 cars were built exclusively for track racing. They were designated Venturi 300 GTR.

Reception and fate

Sales of the Atlantique were extremely poor; total Venturi sales over its lifespan amounted to fewer than 700, despite praise from contemporary critics and from Top Gear. In a 1992 episode, Jeremy Clarkson noted that the two most exciting sports cars of the time were the Alpine A610 and the Venturi Atlantique, and that the Atlantique was "like having your own personal jet fighter [...] I love it to death." In comparing the biturbo Atlantique and the Lotus Esprit, Performance Car noted that the Atlantique was "[...] a more relaxing car to drive, its tidier dimensions make it easier to place, it rides more smoothly, generates far less road noise, and has a much slicker gearchange. It's better built too."

Venturi again faced bankruptcy in 2000, and the Atlantique went out of production. Although current owner Gildo Pallanca Pastor, a Monegasque millionaire, has resumed production of Venturi cars, he has shifted the emphasis to electric sports cars such as the Venturi Fétish, retiring the Atlantique badge. Company production will be even more limited at 10 units per year.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Venturi Atlantique-300 (1996 - 2000). automobile-sportive.com. Sébastien . Dupuis. fr-fr. June 18, 2018.