|
Acabion
GTBO Concept
Unveiled
at
the 2006 Geneva Motor Show, the Acabion GTBO is the product of a
45 year old automotive engineer with experience at Porsche, BMW
and Mercedes-Benz. The Acabion was introduced as the next generation
of transport, the replacement for the common car. Well, maybe not
replacement, but supplement maybe. The astonishing performance of
the Acabion is its major selling point. That and its looks which
can only be imitated by buying a fighter jet and lopping the wings
off.
Acabion intends to offer the GTBO in five variants, beginning with
the GTBO 36 which tops out at a ludicrous 340 mph (550 km/h), however
it is electronically limited to a 'sensible' 280 mph (450 km/h).
That's pretty tame when you compare it to the top spec GTBO 70 which
is capable of over 372 mph (600 km/h), supposedly. To complement
the amazing performance claims the Acabion GTBO also has outstanding
fuel economy, at 60 mph with a 90 litre fuel tank the GTBO can cover
1490 miles (2400 km) before refueling.
The Acabion aims to achieve these goals by adhering to two basic
principles, aerodynamic efficiency and lightweight construction
with immense power. The base spec GTBO comes in at just 359 kg (790
lbs) but develops 360 horsepower, that's over 1000 horsepower per
tonne, the Mclaren F1 had 550 horsepower per tonne. The Acabion
GTBO 70 has over 2000 horsepower per tonne! For low speed maneuvering
power is provided by an electrical motor.
Despite its diminutive size and light weight the GTBO has innovative
passenger safety equipment borrowed from F1 race cars, although
at 600+ km/h a head on collision is probably going to hurt in the
morning.
Inside the Acabion GTBO the driver and passenger, seated in tandem,
are offered all the usual refinements found in conventional automobiles,
although on ordering customers can kit their GTBO out in there preferred
materials. Entertainment is handled by an onboard computer system
with digital storage for portable media devices. In addition, all
Acabion GTBO's are compatible with a conceptual future of fully
automated traffic and vehicle control.
Related Links:
Strange vehicles
Concept
cars
All
sportscars
Acabion website
Diseno-art.com 2008
|