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.



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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.

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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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This guy says it's 986 kg. Wish we could get a weight confirmation from Praga instead of this wide range of vague claims.
 
They also posted this frontal crash test slowmo (without disclosing the speed). Could it be 50 kph? 🤔
 
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Mark Harrison went on The Driven Podcast last week. Here's what they talked about:
  • his start in the industry, launch of Mini, E46 M3 CSL, MP4-12C, working with Frank Stephenson
  • history of Praga
  • Praga Bohema:
    - 1st car delivered
    - challenges of glamorous spec customizations (one car will have gold leaf accents, mimicking certain Koenigsegg Jesko)
    - production version is heavier than prototypes ["we might be a bit over that (982 kg)... The target was always 1,000 kg and that's what we'll do."]
    - possibility of future Bohema derivatives and next generation Praga models
  • current market situation (Czinger, Nilu, Oilstainlab mentioned)
  • private track resorts
  • ESCA (European Small Volume Car Alliance) and fighting EU legislation
  • Praga R1 and UK Praga Cup
 
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This article from yesterday says the first delivered Bohema is still not registered:
"Officially, you are not allowed to drive it on the street yet. What are you going to do when it is registered?"
Maybe I'm reading too much into it, and this is just some holdup with NL authorities. But this being four months since the delivery, it does call into question the status of Bohema's EU homologation.

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Another news is that a factory prototype was recently seen wearing Michelin Cup 2 R during the BDG Motorshow trackday event at Spa Francorchamps.

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While the rear tires do have a direct 1:1 replacement, I couldn't find a clear shot of the front tire size. But unless Michelin decided to come up with the first ever Cup 2 R in 18-inch, everything points to the new fronts being a 235/35 R19... 10 mm narrower, with 18 mm less tire wall.
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Was Trofeo R not fast enough? Is this going to be the official OE tire choice? Has Praga been waiting with homologation (and lap times) because of this new tire? - These would be my questions if I was a journalist reporting on the car. Sadly, no one else seems to give a shit about any of this.
 
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I'm excited for the "record run" Ben says they'll be doing later this month. I assume he means Dunsfold and that they're after Valkyrie's lap record.
I think it'll be very close. If their stats are legit, Bohema should have the edge in grip (now that they've upgraded to Cup 2 R). But it's gonna be hard to beat the Aston Martin's straight line performance.
 
I still don't know how I feel about this lap time.
On one hand, couple of tenths behind ERS abusing Valkyrie, driven by a younger version of Stig, seems impressive. But then it's just 1.5s faster than SF90... Admittedly, the Ferrari benefitted from standing start and the lap looked ace. But it's still a heavy, non-limited, ordinary supercar. I don't want to live in a world where ~1,800 kg (including driver) SF90 XX is just as fast as two of the most hardcore track focused supercars ever.

Could Bohema do any better?
I hate to go there, but I have to question Ben Collins' speed. Driving the Ariel Atom 4R, Ben only managed 1:15.8 (on carbon wheels), where the new Stig did 1:13.7 (w/ standard alloy wheels). That's a huge difference on such a short track. There could have been something wrong with the car. But there's also a possibility that the new Stig is simply much faster driver. Surely Top Gear wouldn't hire Stig replacement that is slower.

As a Bohema fan, I might just take consolation in the fact that the car's launch control is just not there, and that this hot lap is more or less repeatable performance - there's no empty battery or overheated tires to significantly slow it down in subsequent laps.

And it looked so beautiful out there, moving around and throwing sparks! ❤️
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"The light weight obviously makes a massive difference. It's got the aerodynamics, and it's got an interesting bias towards the front end. Normally, cars will understeer, lose front grip with the Bohema. It comes out of the box with a fairly aggressive balance, which is easier to tune into something with speed. It's kind of like the Verstappen setup, if you like."

Next stop: Goodwood Festival of Speed (hopefully including a Bohema entry in the timed shootout)
"...the Goodwood handovers will see owners fly in from around the world – including the first US owner – to take delivery and enjoy a thrilling ride up the Goodwood Hill."
 
Here's a nice Slovakia Ring onboard with telemetry posted by Praga's test driver.
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I'm not sure about the "similar pace" bit. Even if you look at race session lap times, a fast GT3 should still be around two minutes flat (unless perhaps it has full tank). So 2:04 is still way off.

On the other hand, maybe what's shown here is not the ultimate pace from Bohema. The lap looks really good, don't get me wrong... But I'm also getting slight tinge of sandbagging. For example: the driver takes the entire Turn 2 in sixth gear and then keeps 6th all the way to the end of the following straight, instead of downshifting to 5th and gaining an extra 1,000 rpm.
I also have a feeling they would have officially claimed the production lap record already if it truly was full attack.

This chart has got me confused even more:
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As you can see, Bohema's telemetry overlay speed doesn't quite fit the resulting lap time. How does it have the highest trap average and nearly the highest min average, while being 6 seconds down on the GT3?
There's just no way the data is right. Or maybe everyone else's telemetry is wrong and Praga is the only one with honest data. You tell me what's the more likely scenario.

In any case, I added a second column representing a true speed adjusted for 95%. This assumes there's no GPS in the car and the overlay readout is instead hooked up to the car's speedometer, which overreports.
 
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Top Gear had Praga's factory driver set three production lap records on the same set of tires while doing a 700 km road trip over Czechia and Slovakia!

It did 1:35.1 at Most, which is a little slow. My OptimumLap simulation spat out 1:33. I guess they were conserving the tires.

2:01.6 at Brno is a different story. That's a mega lap! And just 0.6s behind GT3 lap record. This track has lots of long constant radius corners - something that rewards Bohema's aero performance. Here, my simulation was spot on at 2:01.

2:03.6 at Slovakia Ring is a little faster than the onboard from my previous post, where I suspected slight sandbagging. Given how the tires were well past their prime at this point, I think I was right. Very impressive achievement.

Now if only they could get back to Most and Slovakia Ring with fresh rubber and more track session time... And release the onboards so I can dissect the data. 😁
 
Wow I am blown away by this car, it is mighty impressive. Actually amazed that Praga is a long standing car company with over 100 year history of making cars, bikes and trucks.
 

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