The Peugeot 907 was a concept car which was built by Peugeot. Revealed at the 2004 Paris Motor Show,[1] the car was created by styling chief Gérard Welter and designer Jean Christophe Bolle Reddat to celebrate the closure of the firm’s 40-year-old design centre at La Garenne and the opening of the new centre at Vélizy.[2]
Peugeot 907 | |
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![]() Peugeot 907 | |
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Peugeot |
Production | 2004 (concept car) |
Designer | Gérard Welter Jean Christophe Bolle Reddat |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | two-door coupé (two seats) |
Layout | Front mid-engine, rear-wheel drive |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 6.0L PSA V12 (petrol) (based by ES9 from Peugeot 607) |
Transmission | six-speed transaxle rear mounted automated manual (electronically controlled sequential) |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,500 mm (98.4 in) |
Length | 4.37 m (172.0 in) |
Width | 1.88 metres (74.0 in) |
Height | 1,210 mm (47.6 in) |
Kerb weight | 1,400 kg (3,086 lb) |
It was one of three concepts cars unveiled by Peugeot within the show, alongside the Quark and 1007 RC.[3] Fleet News described this concept as “Peugeot’s answer to Ferrari’s Maranello” prior to the car's reveal.[4] The car was never designed to go into production, but was intended to be a prototype featuring the new design techniques by Peugeot.[5]
The engine is mounted just behind the front wheels, and side exhausts exit behind each of the front wheels. Unlike many concepts, the 907 can be driven like any production car. Under the bonnet, two 3.0 litre engines of V6 are joined together to form the 500BHP V12.[6]
The body of monocoque is made of carbon fiber and the car uses one double wishbone suspension all round while the sequential-shift transmission distributes power to the rear wheels. The arcing windscreen continues upwards to form the roof, while the bonnet has a see-through perspex insert that reveals the engine’s twelve intake trumpets.
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