2001 Bentley Arnage Le Mans
Photo Credits » Bentley, Drew Phillips
General Information
Vehicle Type:
2-door coupe,
production car
Price:
Unavailable
Fuel Mileage:
11/19 mpg
Drivetrain
Configuration:
Front Engine/RWD
Engine:
Turbocharged V8
Displacement:
6750 cc
Horsepower:
400 bhp @ 4000 rpm
Torque:
616 lb-ft @ 2150 rpm
Max RPM:
Unavailable
Transmission:
Unavailable
Dimensions
Weight:
Unavailable
Height:
Unavailable
Length:
Unavailable
Width:
Unavailable
Wheelbase:
Unavailable
Track (f/r):
Unavailable
Performance
0-60 mph:
6.0 sec
0-100 mph:
Unavailable
¼ mile:
Unavailable
Top Speed:
Unavailable
Lateral acceleration:
Unavailable
Braking 60-0 mph:
Unavailable

Source: Bentley

The launch of the Bentley Arnage Le Mans Series came just seven weeks after Bentley Motors officially unveiled its EXP Speed 8 Le Mans contender at the Detroit Motor Show. The introduction of these very special motors, of which only 150 were made, prompted these cars to be designated as collector’s items.

The show cars are finished in an appropriately special Bentley green known as Verdant Green. The interiors, which showcase the leather working skills of Bentley Motors Crewe-based craftsmen and women feature two colours: the main trim is in Autumn Hide with contrasting detail in English Tan.

A number of exquisite details, wrought by Bentley’s specialists at Crewe further distinguish the Le Mans Series cars.

The Arnage Le Mans has its instrument gauges finished in racing green, with special Limited Edition insignia on the speedometer and tachometer and the gear lever is finished in English Tan hide.

Externally, 18 inch Le Mans Series five spoke, sports wheels and chrome, quad exhaust pipes on both sides of the modified rear bumper clearly proclaim the car’s heritage. Vents on the lower front wings and special badges designating the car as a Le Mans Series model underline the exclusivity of each one to be produced. Red brake calipers complete the subtle additions and ensure the car’s provenance is unmistakeable to enthusiasts and connoisseurs alike.

Mechanically the V8 6.75 litre engine powers the Bentley Arnage Le Mans Series. Producing 400 bhp at 4000 rpm, the intercooled and turbocharged engine also develops an impressive 616 lb ft of torque at 2100 rpm.

A casual glance at the outside may not immediately tell the whole story but the flared wheel arches, red-painted brake calipers, two sets of twin exhaust pipes on either side, front wing vents and front wing badges proclaiming the proud legend Le Mans Series, let expert and amateur know that this already remarkable motor car has a new identity.

Bentley Motors, maker of the world's most luxurious and powerful production cars, has developed the Le Mans Series to maintain the company's proud and unique sporting record at that most demanding event which shares, with the Indy 500 and the Monaco Grand Prix, status as one of the world's three greatest motor races.

The momentous return to the Sarthe circuit generated unprecedented levels of interest from around the world, and the Le Mans Series Arnage reflects that passion in a way that only cars bearing the Bentley wings can.

Tony Gott, Chief Executive of Bentley Motors commenting on the launch said: “Just seven weeks ago, at the Detroit International Motor Show, we unveiled the noisiest, most uncomfortable, cramped and arguably impractical Bentley ever made - the EXP Speed 8. It is our 2001 challenger for the 24 hour race at Le Mans, the scene of our greatest triumphs over seventy years ago. As I said at the time: It drinks fuel at a rate that makes the most thirsty four by four sports utility seem like it’s on an economy run; it has no airbags, cup holders or satellite navigation and it’ll never sell!?

He added: “It’s a car that will compete at an event that is so important to us that you could say it is in the DNA of every Bentley ever made. Bentley is going back to its roots with a race car of which W O himself would have been proudly delighted and we’re going back to that most demanding of races, which Bentley first won in 1924 and then in 1927, 28, 29 and in 1930.

The Le Mans Series Arnage unmistakeably carries the genes of those race winners in every detail - from the discrete wing vents and special badges, to the quad tail pipes and meticulous detailing. No other carmaker can claim a heritage like ours and no other carmaker can design, develop and build cars to this outstanding standard.”
Updated 09:06 AM - September 07, 2008