Spyker D12 Peking-to-Paris Concept

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Spyker D12 Peking-to-Paris Concept
(UltimateCarPage.com)


The Spyker D12 Peking-to-Paris traces its origins back, not to one, but three significant Spyker models, each of which contributed significantly to the company’s glorious heritage. This heritage is one of our five core brand values and influences the current models heavily. The second inspiration for the car is Spyker’s unique aviation heritage which created the first Spyker after the Great War in 1919: the Spyker ‘Aerocoque’ with fuselage body and its remarkable fintail. This model was the first Spyker in which the company introduced aircraft technology and design in its road cars. The Aerocoque’s fintail led to the functional roof fin on the SSUV. The final historical reference for the SSUV was its namesake from the Peking to Paris race of 1907, the most gruelling race of all time, in which the Frenchman Goddard entered his almost standard, factory-backed, Spyker 18/22 HP.

On 10 June 1907 five cars set out on what was to become an unprecedented challenge to man and machine. It was the final conquest of he motor car over non motorised mains of transport. Goddard finished second after three months of crossing territory where, for the most part, no car had ever dared to go. The SSUV has been named in honour of this race and the pioneering spirit it embodied: those men charted uncharted territory, something the modern Spyker D12 Peking-to-Paris does in its own very way: it enters an entirely new market segment, that of the SSUV which is currently uncharted.

Demographics in the Western world show an aging client base for super sports cars. An entire generation of customers, used to driving super sports cars, is facing an interesting challenge: matching their desire to continue to enjoy driving sensations of a super sports car with the harsh reality of their exacting family life and, unfortunately, their age. The alternative is now available: a relatively light weight 1850 kgs (4079lb) SSUV which performs like a super sports car but offers four comfortable seats, easy access through four doors and a spacious luggage compartment. Longing for super sports car excitement, for cars that tantelize all of their senses, for cars that combine exceptional performance with exotic looks. Cars built with passion, cars with soul. Exquisite pieces of car jewelry. Such a car now excists.

The Spyker D12 Peking-to-Paris is an all aluminium, permanent four-wheel drive super sports utility vehicle. The rear doors are rear-hinged coach doors, so-called ‘suicide doors’. It is powered by the 6.0 litre, 12 cylinder, 500 bhp W12 engine from Volkswagen AG and accelerates from 0-100 KM (0-60 MPH) in 5.0 seconds. The six-speed automatic transmission features a multifunctional steering wheel with F1 style shift paddles, a triple dashboard designed in the style of an airplane cockpit, and a sumptuous interior. The vehicle has an all aluminium body fitted to an aluminium space frame, and sits on 24'' Aeroblade wheels. It has a length of 4.95 m, a width of 2.0 m excluding mirrors, a minimum height of 1.68 m and a maximum height of 1.77 m and weighs 1895 Kg. The fuel tank capacity is 100 litres (22 gallons). Top speed is 295 km/h (185 mph). The car is custom-hand built using only the best materials available.

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More info & pics.
What Spyker says.
I'd totally buy one. C'mon a W12-powered SUV thingy from Spyker on 24's, what could be better?
 
I don't think that stylind suits an SUV at all, it's performance should be very good though.
 
Unlike it's coupe siblings, this Spyker does not look all that great. If I wanted a W12-powered SUV, I think I would go for the Touraeg W12 that we didn't get here in the US.

...But even then, beyond the extroverted styling, is this really any better than a Porsche Cayanne Turbo, VW Touraeg W12, or Audi Q7?
 
I hate performance SUVs. No matter how good it is, it will never handle as well as a proper coupe or sedan, due to the extra weight and the higher center of gravity. If you want quickness and utility, get a performance wagon, like the WRX or the E-Class AMG wagon for a more upmarket purchase. Same center of gravity as a sedan/coupe, with only a fraction of the weight gain.
 
There isnt anything wrong with high performance SUVs, but this just seems like an over-inflated C8. I'd rather have the actual utility offered by some of the other SUVs on the market today than driving something that just looks pretty.

...You need to keep in mind that in North America (or atleast in the US anyway) that wagons still havent caught on (again). The last time most people would have bought a station wagon, it was 1965, and even then, that is a stretch.

Fast forward to today, and it is generally the younger people who are buying wagons. Cars like the Jetta Wagon, Passat Wagon, A6 Avant, V70 Cross Country, etc. are all pretty popular with younger, more active familes. Myself included, I have considered the purchase of a MKIV Jetta Wagon with the 1.8T and the 5-speed, but they are few and far between.

In the US, size matters, and thats why so many people have stayed away from the relitively uncool wagons. Why have to bend down to put your groceries in the tailgate when you can lift them up into your Excursion? Why worry about three inches of snow when you can go through three feet of snow in your H2? Why pull only a 20ft boat when you can pull a 32ft boat in your Tahoe?
 
And they plan on selling these?!

This makes me thing the auto makers had a dog fight, and this is what Spyker brought to the bar... :lol:
 
I've seen some cars turned into bigger, wierder models of the same body, but this takes the cake.

The body just doesn't fit the height.
 
If you don't tell me it is actually made by Spyker
I would think of someone trying to make fun of Spyker
or making a bad replica or something
one word ... Fugly!
 
It's not that bad, I got lucky to be able to touch it and check out the interior from real close with the doors open at the Geneva car show. Even sat down in the Spyker! It's nice, not much more than that, you can get nicer for cheaper..

Also got to touch the new Koennigsegg, the Phantom, sit in the new Lotus Europa S, touch 2/4 of the Bentley's exposed and sit in the new Porsche Turbo, GT3 and GT3 Cup Car!

Aren't I lucky? :D

how hard is it to post some pictures on the forum? I've got quite a bunch that I could share
 
Dead easy, you can upload full size pictures to www.imageshack.com and copy and paste a forum link it gves you, or you can upload images upto a certain file size direct to GTP in the advanced post options.
 
live4speed
Dead easy, you can upload full size pictures to www.imageshack.com and copy and paste a forum link it gves you, or you can upload images upto a certain file size direct to GTP in the advanced post options.

Ok I'll give it a try as soon as I get back to my dads, where the upload is much faster.

What happens if the pictures I want to upload are bigger than 1024 KO? Could someone tell me the most simple way to reduce these on a Macintosh? In the worst case I could transfer them to my ultimately slow PC and do it there if no one knows the Macintosh world here.

I'll also upload some of the Ferrari 599 if they turned out well :scared:
 
Hmmm, what to say....

I've had the pleasure of seeing the C8 in the flesh at Birmingham Motor Show many years ago, and that was the first time I'd laid my eyes on a Spyker. The styling was radical, and was exciting to look at.

Fast forward a few years and Spyker show off this concept... its got the radical style of the other cars in the Spyker model range, but theres something just not quite right about it. For some reason, its grown on me from most perspectives but the rear end is terrible.
 
Maybe I'm blinded by the fact that it's a Spyker, but I don't see what's so bad about it. It does look like a stretched C8, but it isn't too bad. The vents around the grill are stupid and the ones at the base of the windsheild, but that's small potatoes.
The rear looks good too, not as horrible as you make it out to be.
 
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