The Bentley Brooklands Coupé is a two-door hardtop coupé version of the Bentley Azure convertible (itself related to the Bentley Arnage). As a hand-assembled car made in very small numbers, employing traditional coach-building techniques and craftsmanship skills in wood and leather, the Brooklands Coupé is the true successor to the discontinued Bentley Continental R and T. Lifetime production was limited 550 cars, and deliveries started in the first half of 2008, with the car being discontinued three years later.[2][3][4]
The Brooklands is powered by a 6.75-litre Rolls-Royce twin-turbocharged OHV V8 engine,[4] producing 530 hp[4] and 1050 Nm, the highest torque ever developed by a production V8 engine using petrol at the time (there were diesel V8s producing more). It was featured on Top Gear in series 11 by Jeremy Clarkson, and due to the car having so much torque, one of the car's tires blew out during a powerslide after prolonged aggressive driving with its traction control off. It can accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in around 5.0 seconds,[4] with a top speed in the region of 296 km/h.[4] The Brooklands offered an optional Carbon fibre-reinforced Silicon Carbide (C/SiC) ceramic composite braking system with 14-inch SGL Carbon brake discs (only with 20-inch wheels).[4] The Brooklands features a pillarless design, with no B pillar between the front and rear side windows.
When retired in 2011, it marked the end of the last Rolls-Royce Crewe platform, concluding the history of the old Rolls-Royce.
Specifications:
Gallery
External links
- BentleyMotors.com official international portal
- Bentley Brooklands Image Gallery
References
- RAUL PIRES carart.usm, retrieved 12 July 2023^
- deLorenzo, Matt: "Ampersand: Bentley Brooklands", p.30, Road & Track, May 2007^
- Bentley Brooklands Reference Car Auto Portal Inc., CarAutoPortal.com, retrieved 2 January 2010^
- 2008 Bentley Brooklands Coupe LeftLane, LeftLaneNews.com, retrieved 2 January 2010^