Praga [Hot!] 2023 Praga Bohema is track-ready, road-legal 700bhp hypercar!


Based in Prague, Czech Republic, Praga got restarted in 2011 as a custom-builder of race cars and road supersports. Praga cars are made to order and can be customized to meet the customer's specifications. Its origins date back from 1907 to 1947, when Praga manufactured motorcycles, automobiles, trucks and airplanes. Official website: Praga Cars

Tourbillon

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From the maker of the R1 racer, the £1.32 million Bohema weighs 987kg and shares Nissan GT-R's V6

"An extraordinary, trackday-optimised hypercar from Czech maker Praga is currently in the final stages of development and will launch next year.

The mid-engined, carbon-tubbed and carbon-bodied Bohema will mark the 115-year-old, multi-disciplinary firm’s first proper foray into road cars since 1947 and is heavily influenced by the flyweight Praga R1 racer that, having recently proved too competitive for even the full-blown GT3 cars of Britcar Endurance Championship, now enjoys its own one-make series.

Beyond their insectoid and highly sculptural aesthetics, the Bohema and the R1 will share almost nothing, the road-legal model being new from the ground up. This was essential in order to give the the car enough breadth of ability to be used properly on the road, and in terms of footprint the larger Bohema is similar to the current crop of supercars, being roughly the same width and length as a Ferrari 296 GTB. It means that while the cockpit is tight and utilitarian in its architecture, it can carry driver and passenger in reasonable comfort, though this has partly been achieved by staggering the seats.



praga-bohema-front-three-quarter-static.v1.jpg


The car's cabin is also upholstered with relative lavishness and there is even 100 litres of luggage space in the car’s flanks, package in similar fashion to what Pagani does with the Huyra.
Having spent two years establishing the car’s track capabilities, which included use of an F1 team's wind tunnel to hone the car’s aero properties, Praga’s engineers are now in the final stages of ensuring the Bohema’s road manners are up to scratch.
An acceptably absorbent ride and adequate insulation from road roar and engine din are important factors that Praga never had to consider with the R1, and are reasons why the rear-drive powertrain is affixed to the central structure via a chromoly subframe rather than being bolted on directly.

praga-bohema-rear.v1.jpg


Work on the car’s automated-clutch sequential gearbox also continues, and the compliance characteristics of the in-board pushrod suspension, which will use manually adjustable Öhlins dampers, will be the final dynamic element the team signs off.

However, matters relating to usability and comfort are very much concessions, and the Bohema’s main concern is raw speed.

Praga is targeting a weight of 982kg at the kerb, and it’s this lack of mass along with the potential for up to 900kg of downforce at 150mph that should yield jaw-dropping pace on the track.

With as much as 700bhp available, the car’s power-to-weight ratio should be comfortably in excess of what even hardcore specials such as the BAC Mono R and Ariel Atom 4 can muster. That power will come from the same 3.8-litre twin-turbo V6 found in the R35-generation Nissan GT-R, only with the wet-sump lubrication system removed and replaced by a dry sump set-up of Praga’s own design. As well as being better suited to the high lateral loads achieved on track, this lowers the height of the engine considerably and allows it to sit deep within the car. Note also that the Praga is purely rear-wheel drive.

Iain Litchfield, the British tuner renowned for his expertise with the GT-R, has been involved and helped establish an arrangement that will enable Nissan to support Praga during the time it uses the Japanese company’s engines.

Interestingly, chief engineer Jan Martinek had the unenviable task of choosing between the Nissan unit and Audi’s 5.2-litre atmospheric V10, but while the V10 would undoubtedly have sounded superb, Audi couldn’t guarantee ongoing support for an engine nearing the end of its regulatory life, which was a deal-breaker for Praga."

Etc continues in the link it's a big piece!

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So its basically a wannabe Valkyrie with a Nissan GTR engine. It looks good but for the price I would expect more than a GTR engine, I'd want something bespoke.


"making and selling products, or providing services, specially for a particular person, organization, or purpose."

It very literally is bespoke. Brand new crate fresh engines from Japan delivered. Nissan doesn't just hand these engines out to anyone with a cheque book. They are then re engineered in England with warranties.:)

And I feel this car will be tested for metrics and laptimes and it's not like they don't have any racing or Motorsport's experience with their own cars, which is more than I can say about the car you mentioned.
 
Proven is reassuring though.

A completely brand new engine design from the ground up is a multi year research and development project costing tens of millions of dollars. Even the major OEM's struggle with this and many have stopped investment. There is absolutely no ROI in many cases.
 

"making and selling products, or providing services, specially for a particular person, organization, or purpose."

It very literally is bespoke. Brand new crate fresh engines from Japan delivered. Nissan doesn't just hand these engines out to anyone with a cheque book. They are then re engineered in England with warranties.:)

And I feel this car will be tested for metrics and laptimes and it's not like they don't have any racing or Motorsport's experience with their own cars, which is more than I can say about the car you mentioned.

I disagree its a Nissan engine warmed over by Litchfield, not different to what they do with there modified GTR's. It's a solid engine but if I'm paying over a millions Euros I would want something more impressive than that.
 
I disagree its a Nissan engine warmed over by Litchfield, not different to what they do with there modified GTR's. It's a solid engine but if I'm paying over a millions Euros I would want something more impressive than that.

But your not paying though? Anything, so I'll leave it there.
 
Found a picture showing the engine bay. No styling bits here, just pure motorsport.
Photo credit goes to Jiri Linhart on facebook.

396574121_10231525302743527_7673615476755986987_n.jpg


And some more pictures of the engine itself. They showed it at the SCD Meet at Donington in July.
Photo credit: Litchfield social media, IIRC.
 

Attachments

Since the winter has been very content-dry for us Pragaheads, I decided to compile pictures of Bohema aero kit.

Before we start, I should stress that the following is speculation and for all we know, the final form of the kit might end up looking different, or they might cancel the idea completely.

This kit comprises of two additional aerofoils with Gurney flaps mounted to the back of the car. It's been shown testing on several occasions (Slovakiaring, Dunsfold, Nürburgring), but mostly when paired with the optional 18" wheels with slick tires.

aerofoils.jpg


aerofoils_02.jpg


aerofoils_03.jpg


mounting points.jpg


Praga never tried too much to conceal the fact they were testing this package, but somehow nobody ever seemed to notice.
For instance, there's a lot of footage showing the aero kit in plain view in Ben Collins Drives video.

dunsfold.jpg


The first mention of the aero kit in press was in EVO magazine test, quoting chief engineer Jan Martínek:
"There is excellent aerodynamic performance but we didn’t want to go crazy, so there could be a track pack to come."

Here's another quote by Praga marketing director, Mark Harrison, as heard on Car Chat Podcast:
"We're aiming for the aerodynamic package on the car to be honed for more than 700 horsepower, because we know some people will (want to tune the engine).

There'll be a point, we'll probably start with number eight, where we would recommend additional aero performance is involved. And we're looking at how we can support that with something like a track pack or aero pack. Whatever you want to call it.

And the reality is that, if you can take a bit of weight out of the car, even further from 982 kg... That it's absolutely conceivable, 1:1 power-to-weight ratio car could be looked at by clients, I suspect."

The aerofoils are also visible on these CFD pressure map images, along with something we've only seen mounted to the car when stationary - the rear wheel aero discs.

cfd.jpg


Notice how their design differs between the axles. The front ones are a bit like Manthey Racing discs for 911 GT2/GT3, while the rear ones are more like Formula 1 wheel fairings from 2006.

disc_01.jpg


disc_02.jpg


Then, there's also one other variant of the aero kit, which could be seen testing at Nürburgring back in July. It's basically just two small gurney flaps in the back. Barely visible.

gurneys.jpg


Surprisingly, as far as I can see, none of these test configurations ever had any aero device on the front, counteracting the extra downforce added to the back.
I would expect something like front canards to keep the balance in check, making sure the front end doesn't wash into understeer. But maybe it just works as is, who knows...

Hopefully the Bohema content resumes in 2024 as the first customer cars get finished. Although I fully expect there to be delays, given how that seems to be the industry standard even for way larger operations. Don't forget that not only the car itself needs to work correctly, but there's also stuff like onboard recording/telemetry system that people pay for. Which I bet is a headache to realize on its own.
 
Nice write-up, @Revvd.
I just love the Bohema, it's a true monster and basically almost no road legal car can compare to it.
I think Ariel Atom 4R with all the options checked is pretty good alternative on a budget, although not quite the same category.
The one car that beats Bohema, on paper, is Czinger 21C Lightweight. But that one only ever comes short of GT3 lap times IRL, which is odd, as it should be way faster than that.

Man, I can't wait for some Praga lap times.
 
KTM X-Bow GT-XR, Dallara Stradale, BAC Mono R
If I can react...

KTM GT-XR - 150 kg over the magic 1 ton mark, identical monocoque to the old X-Bow, not limited production, components from Audi hot-hatch.
It does have the looks, but I think of it as a "how can we take our old car upmarket with minimum effort" - kind of model. Not capable enough on track, and not exclusive and special enough for the boutique supercar category.

BAC Mono R - not a downforce car, being a single seater makes it even less practical,
tube frame alloy chassis takes away from the prestige factor.

Dallara Stradale - has the cool factor and the convertibility is a plus. But overall it's a less capable car.
With mounted rear wing, it has as much downforce as 992 GT3 RS. But 400 PS hits the drag wall at 265 kph Vmax, at which point the downforce maxes out at 734 kg. Bohema powers through to gear-ratio-limited 305 kph where it generates 1,340 kg. We can argue how attainable those speeds are on an average circuit, but on paper, the two are leagues apart.

Let me put it this way... with slicks, Bohema is much closer to something like a Ginetta G58 than any of these normal cars.
 
If I can react...

KTM GT-XR - 150 kg over the magic 1 ton mark, identical monocoque to the old X-Bow, not limited production, components from Audi hot-hatch.
It does have the looks, but I think of it as a "how can we take our old car upmarket with minimum effort" - kind of model. Not capable enough on track, and not exclusive and special enough for the boutique supercar category.

BAC Mono R - not a downforce car, being a single seater makes it even less practical,
tube frame alloy chassis takes away from the prestige factor.

Dallara Stradale - has the cool factor and the convertibility is a plus. But overall it's a less capable car.
With mounted rear wing, it has as much downforce as 992 GT3 RS. But 400 PS hits the drag wall at 265 kph Vmax, at which point the downforce maxes out at 734 kg. Bohema powers through to gear-ratio-limited 305 kph where it generates 1,340 kg. We can argue how attainable those speeds are on an average circuit, but on paper, the two are leagues apart.

Let me put it this way... with slicks, Bohema is much closer to something like a Ginetta G58 than any of these normal cars.

You can always buy a KTM X-Bow GT4. Why change the chassis if you don’t need to? Caterham, Atom, McLaren all have chassis which they have used for a long time.

If you really want to go around a track stupid fast and want crazy downforce the Rodin Fzero is your whip, it also uses a bespoke engine which the Bohema doesn’t.
 

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