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12/08/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 13/08/2024 00:30

To Celebrate Koenigsegg’s 30th, Watch the Stop-Motion Film That Inspired Its Founder

Koenigsegg

In 1994, a 22-year-old Swede named Christian von Koenigsegg booted up his IBM 486 and opened Microsoft Paint. He drafted a yellow, mid-engine supercar with two seats, a wraparound windshield, and a removable roof. This year, the company he founded celebrates its 30th birthday. Its cars still look a lot like that first sketch, and they've succeeded in putting the country of Sweden on the radar of supercar fans around the world.

If you're a fan of high-dollar exotics, you have probably heard of Koenigsegg. If you're more interested in how cars work than what rich people drive, hang with us. Koenigsegg has quite the technological resume: Its first car boasted a highly modified Audi V-8 that, in 2002, was the world's most powerful production engine. (Today, Koenigsegg uses Ford V-8s.) The company designed an electric motor that weighs 86 pounds and makes 800 horsepower, hollow carbon-fiber wheels, a 2.0-liter three-cylinder engine that makes 600 horsepower with no camshaft, and a wild transmission that can be a gated six-speed manual or an automatic:

Koenigsegg currently makes four cars: Two variants of the mid-engine, two-seat Jesko, one optimized for straight-line speed, the other for road courses; a throwback model called CC850, limited to 70 units, and a mid-engine, four-seat two-door called the Gemera, of which 300 will be made.

(Fans of Mystery Science Theater 3000, or Japanese sci-fi, may recall a flying, fire-breathing turtle named Gamera; this ain't it.)

Koenigsegg GemeraKoenigsegg

Some of the company's most important, previous models include the Agera, made in various configurations between 2010 and 2018. In 2017, an Agera RS became the world's fastest production car with a two-way average of 278 mph. In 2005, the CCR broke the top speed record set by the McLaren F1-a car from which Christian took much inspiration-at the Nardó Ring in 1998. In 2006, the CCX appeared on Top Gear in 2006 and set a record at its test track that stood for seven years.

Koengsegg's first production model was the CC8S. The alphanumeric stood for Competition Coupe V8 Supercharged, and it debuted at the Geneva Motor Show in 2003. The prototype, the CC, had debuted in production form at Paris the year before. It was the sacrificial lamb, of sorts, subjected to the crash tests that allowed Koenigsegg to homologate the car for sale in global markets.

KoenigseggKoenigseggKoenigseggKoenigsegg

All of the cars trace back to the dream that was sparked in young Christian when he watched a stop-motion film with his dad called Pinchcliffe Grand Prix. Give part one a watch below-it's in English, the quality of production is great, and it's honestly delightful:

A cavalcade of Koenigseggs is traveling to the West Coast of the United States for Monterey Car Week. They'll be on display at The Quail, A Motorsport Gathering on Friday, August 16. However, brass bands and complementary champagne may not be in your plan for Car Week; in that case, keep an eye out for our coverage of The Quail, and if you're nearby, head over to Exotics on Broadway at Seaside to see them for free on Saturday, August 17, from 1 pm to 6 pm.

Agera RS, "dihedral synchro-helix" doors aloft.KoenigseggThe Regera, whose electric motors sub in for the transmission. We're pretty sure it's witchcraft.RM Sotheby's/Jessica Lynn WalkerWe already forgot what the door mechanism is called, but it looks badass.RM Sotheby's/Jessica Lynn WalkerAn earlier Koenigsegg, the CCXR Edition from 2008.KoenigseggThe four-seat Gemera, from the rear.James HolmUp close to the Gemera's three-cylinder, no camshaft in sight.James HolmMore GemeraJames HolmInside the four-seat GemeraJames HolmThe Jesko, named for Christian's father, in "Absolut" spec, designed for top straight-line speed.James Holm
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