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Highlights | Styling | Interior Design and Style | Design | Design Technology
Powertrain | Chassis | Safety | Marketing | Conclusion | Photo Gallery
Featuring a 6-litre, 12 cylinder,
twin-turbocharged, engine with more than 500bhp
driving all four wheels through a paddle-operated,
six speed automatic gearbox, the Continental GT
offers true supercar performance combined with
the interior space, versatility and ease of ownership
to make it not merely viable as an everyday car,
but a natural for the role. In this respect as
well as many others, Bentley believes the Continental
GT to be unique.
The Continental GT is being designed
and engineered by Bentley at Crewe and will be
manufactured there in all-new facilities that
combine state of the art technologies with the
unique hand finishing and attention to detail
that have been the hallmark of all cars to wear
the winged 'B'. It goes on sale in the second
half of 2003 and will bring the prospect of Bentley
ownership to a wider audience of discerning enthusiasts
than ever before. And while the Continental GT
is a Bentley from bumper to bumper, the role of
the company's Volkswagen parent can scarcely be
ignored.
The dream of building a new Bentley
coupé is not new - indeed it has been alive at
Crewe for over 20 years. But it was only the £500
million vote of confidence placed in the marque
by VW that brought the dream to reality. And VW
has more than merely made funds available to design
an all-new car. It has also enabled Bentley to
transform the Crewe factory into a thoroughly
modern centre of manufacturing excellence, ensuring
not only that Bentley is in better shape today
than ever, but also guaranteeing its design, engineering
and manufacturing sovereignty as far into the
future as it is possible to see.
Highlights
- An all-new Bentley coupé, inspired by the
finest Grand Touring traditions but designed,
engineered and built using the most modern techniques
blended with inimitable Bentley craftsmanship.
- The fastest four-seat coupé in the world with
a top speed in excess of 180mph (290km/h) and
0-62mph (100km/h) of under five seconds.
- Powered by a Bentley-designed 6-litre, twin-turbocharged,
W12 engine developing more than 500bhp. Tuned
to provide not simply massive power, but also
the unmistakeable Bentley delivery achieved
only by the coincidence of high torque at low
revs.
- Drive is sent to all four wheels, a first
for a Bentley - as is the paddle operated, six
speed automatic gearbox. All-wheel drive and
electronic stability programme were considered
essential not only for the Continental GT's
performance, but also to provide year-round
versatility in all conditions.
- Styled in house at Bentley's design studios
in Crewe to incorporate all traditional Bentley
design hallmarks into a totally contemporary
shape. Packaged to seat a family of four in
comfort and to provide enough luggage space
for a fortnight's driving holiday.
- Styling cues include pillarless cabin, minimal
front overhang, pronounced haunches, distinctive
'face' featuring large inner headlamps, flush
mounted rear spoiler that rises at speed.
- Designed entirely in the virtual world, using
the very latest digital processes.
- Chassis designed by Bentley engineers to provide
responsive handling combined with an effortlessly
absorbent ride quality consistent with Continental
GT's Grand Touring role.
Styling
The styling story of the Continental GT dates
back to August 1999 when newly appointed head
of design, Dirk van Braeckel was briefed to prepare
a concept for an all new Bentley coupé: one that
would use 80 years of Bentley design as its inspiration,
yet look only to the future in its shape. It took
just four months - until just before Christmas
- when van Braeckel submitted his preferred design
to the board of Bentley Motors. It was approved
on the spot. 'I'm still staggered it took four
months,' says van Braeckel. 'When you design a
car there's always a story to tell and this one
involved gathering the right team of designers,
all of whom understood what we were trying to
create. It's a very emotional product and that's
the way we approached it. It was a magical process.'
The key to honouring Bentley's
design past without simultaneously creating an
inappropriately 'retro' car, was to take the design
philosophy that inspired cars such as the Bentley
Speed Six of 1928 and the 1952 R-type Continental
and use it in an entirely contemporary context.
'What you are looking for,' says van Braeckel,
'are the things that gave those cars such presence
and a stance that shouted 'Bentley' at anyone
who looked at them. It translated perfectly from
the pre to the post-war era and so it does from
there to the present day. Understand that and
you can forget about the past.'
Bentley's design philosophy for
the Continental GT can be quantified as follows:
the car must have a short front overhang and an
overtly dominant bonnet expressed by the unusually
large distance between the front axle line and
the A-pillar.
The pillarless cabin itself needs
to be sleek and compact while the rear haunches
should be taut and pronounced, giving the impression
of a crouching animal ready to pounce.
Overlaying these individual highlights
is a design language evolved straight from the
hearts of the styling team. It dictated that the
Continental GT be styled to be curvaceous and
sinuous with a form that appears and disappears
like muscle on a gymnast's arm, sculptural yet
lean.
Finally there was what van Braeckel
refers to as the car's 'jewellery'. Because the
shape of the car is essentially complex and to
suit its sporting intentions, it was decided that
brightwork should be minimised, limited to the
door surrounds, a finish along the sill, the exhaust
surrounds and radiator grille. But the headlamps
themselves assume a dominant role in the styling
signature with the inner units being the larger
of the two pairs both in tacit acknowledgment
of past Bentleys, but also to draw attention to
the most distinctive Bentley feature of all: the
matrix radiator grille.
Having achieved such a clean
design, it would have been easy to compromise
given the dynamic challenges of such a high performance
car. For instance, any car capable of being three
miles away in just 60 seconds clearly needs carefully
optimised aerodynamics to keep it safe at such
speeds, and clamping a vast rear spoiler to the
bootlid would have been one way of ensuring this.
In fact the aerodynamics department
at Crewe, formed in 1999, had a rather more elegant
solution in mind. The Continental GT is indeed
fitted with a rear spoiler, but one so skilfully
integrated into the design of the car, where the
rear screen meets the bootlid; it is for the most
part invisible, deploying automatically when high
speed merits additional downforce.
Another unique feature of the
styling of the car is the Central High Mounted
Stop Lamp, known somewhat awkwardly in the industry
as the CHMSL. Regulations require the CHMSL to
occupy a certain area, but do not dictate its
shape. So, some free thinking later and the Continental
GT is fitted with a CHMSL that is just 3mm tall
but fully one metre wide.
The effect of this is that it
has no negative impact whatsoever on the styling,
while at the same time ensuring that the driver
of the car behind is left in no doubt at all when
the brakes are being applied.
Interior design and style
The
cabin of the Continental GT is designed to make
Bentley devotees and marque newcomers feel equally
at home. Those familiar with the Bentley way of
doing things will be reassured, comforted and
cosseted by the expanses of top quality hide and
fine wood veneers; those for whom Bentley ownership
is a new experience will discover a new level
of luxury, style and effortless good taste. Most
notable perhaps is the symmetrical nature of the
facia with a centre console rising up and curving
left and right in front of the passenger and driver
in a shape that intentionally reflects the design
of the famed Bentley wings. It also has the effect
of creating the same atmosphere on either side
of the car so that the passenger feels almost
as much part of the action as the driver.
For the man or woman behind the
wheel, however, a unique driving environment awaits.
It goes without saying that an ideal driving position
is easily achieved - Bentley's interior designers
have been as far as to measure New York basketball
players to make sure all shapes and sizes can
be accommodated.
Bentley is one of few car manufacturers
to retain seat design as an in-house field of
excellence, and anyone who has travelled any distance
at all in a Bentley knows how important this area
of design is to the marque. The particular challenge
with the Continental GT was to offer a sublimely
comfortable seat complete with considerable front
and rear travel, a multitude of electric adjustments
and integral seat-belts. Seat-belt performance
is naturally one of the most important safety
aspects of any car, and those in the front usually
have their upper anchorages in the B-pillar. With
a pillarless design like that of the Continental
GT, however, this has not been possible and Bentley's
designers are pleased not only to have met all
the safety targets of the integral seat and belt,
but to reach them without compromising the interior
style of the car.
Those used to sitting in the
back of most high-performance coupés will scarcely
believe the amount of thought that has gone into
creating the rear cabin. Far from appearing as
afterthoughts, the rear seats have been designed
with the same care and attention as those in the
front. Back seat passengers sit well apart with
deeply scalloped recesses for their elbows, allowing
adults ample personal space.
The toughest task facing designers
of all luxury car cabins these days is to present
the controls and information interfaces in a way
that is both uncluttered yet easy to use. At one
theoretical extreme is the car where every function
or display has a control of its own, at the other
is the car with one control and a single display
for all the car's operations. Bentley's solution
is to use intelligence, common sense and ergonomic
know-how to cherry-pick the best elements from
both extremes, and combine them in a cabin that
is both effective and attractive.
Most routine operations used
frequently when the car is in motion - such as
the cruise and basic music controls - can be operated
direct from the steering wheel. Other functions
such as the air-conditioning, navigation, computer
information and more advanced entertainment features
are individually controlled, but displayed on
the same screen sited in the middle of the centre
console.
Instrumentation is provided by
classically styled dials that live in deep recesses
ahead of the steering wheel, while a small screen
directly in the driver's sight-line monitors all
relevant in-car systems.
All around the cabin, unmistakeable
Bentley touches abound. Perhaps most easily spotted
are the classic bullseye ventilation outlets with
their organ stop controls - a feature no Bentley
has been without for a generation. Then there
are the aluminium pedals, chrome instrument surrounds,
knurled finishes to many of the ancillary controls,
and the centrally mounted analogue clock.
Naturally wood and leather remain
as integral and essential a part of the Bentley
furniture as ever, but they have been tailored
to suit the Continental GT's role as the most
sporting Bentley produced since the R-Type Continental,
proving that these most traditional materials
can still create a contemporary feel if understood
and used properly.
Though craftsmanship remains
as important as ever, these enduring skills have
been supplemented by some 21st century technology
allowing, for instance, wood to be dramatically
curved in a way that would simply not have been
possible in the past. And while the leather is
still applied to the car with as much loving care
as ever, it is cut from the hide using a new digitised
process that ensures minimal levels of wastage
and maximum efficiency.
Design
The
design brief for the Continental GT was as simple
to state as it was difficult to realise: create
a car with as much room as the most spacious coupés
on the market, equip it with the performance and
responses of the world's most dynamic supercars
and retain the whole within compact dimensions.
There are many questions raised by such a demanding
specification and it took sizeable measures of
blue sky thinking and detailed innovation before
it could be realised.
But go looking for the real key
to providing sufficient interior room and you'll
need to start your search under the bonnet. There
you will discover that the secret of the Continental
GT's interior room is, in fact, its engine. By
choosing the basic architecture of the W12 powerplant
used elsewhere in the VW Group, Bentley's engineers
were provided not simply with the opportunity
to develop it into a unique Bentley engine, but
also to exploit its phenomenal packaging attributes.
Instead of using two long banks
of six cylinders, as featured on all conventional
V12 motors, the W12 staggers the cylinders in
each bank creating effectively two extraordinarily
narrow angle (15deg) V6 engines sharing a common
crankshaft and giving rise to the 'W' formation.
This naturally provides a phenomenally
short engine for its considerable capacity, and
frees up space that can be reapportioned to the
car's interior. Indeed it is the shortest twelve
cylinder engine on the market.
Even so and allowing for extra
room provided by the super-short engine, there
was still some hard thinking to be done if the
interior space targets were going to be met within
the swooping roof line of the Continental GT.
Happily, help was again at hand and this time
it was provided by history.
One key to maximising interior
space is raising the so-called 'H' point - the
position in which the driver and front passenger
hips naturally sit, and which in all Bentleys
is elevated above where it would be in a conventional
supercar. The benefits are many: first it means
the commanding driving position - another Bentley
hallmark - is retained; secondly it means the
driver and passenger's hip to heel angle is as
close to anatomical perfection as is possible.
Finally, and critically, a high and upright driving
position liberates vital room in the back for
rear seat passengers.
The result is a true two plus
two, a phrase rather devalued today by being applied
to cars with little more than a ledge behind the
front seats. In the Continental GT it means a
car capable of carrying two adults and two children
in comfort for unlimited distances.
Another less obvious but no less
important benefit of the Continental GT's design
is the omission of a B-pillar. There are many
aesthetic reasons for adopting the pillarless
look, but for those inside looking out and particularly
those in the back, the unbroken expanse of glass
from the front to the rear of the cabin provides
a feeling of great space and airiness. In the
GT coupé, the pillarless feature and other design
touches such as slimmed down front headrests mean
an unparalleled view from the rear seat for a
car in this class.
Even the 355 litre luggage capacity
has only been achieved through fresh thinking
and innovation. In cars of this size, it is accepted
practice to site the fuel tank between the boot
and rear seat, adding to the overall length of
the car, removing interior and boot capacity and,
crucially, removing the possibility of loading
long items through the boot into the rear cabin.
The Continental GT's fuel tank, however, is under
the floor of the car. It's a tricky piece of design
for to house a 90litre tank there requires it
to straddle the transmission tunnel but there's
no doubting the effectiveness of the result. Not
only is there enough boot space to swallow enough
luggage for a family fortnight away, if that holiday
happens to be to the ski slopes, it will take
all four sets of skis inside the car or two pairs
of skis and a couple of snow boards. All of this
mind, without having to resort to an unsightly
and insecure roof rack.
Design
Technology
The Continental GT is the first Bentley to have
been designed entirely in the virtual world. That
is to say every single component, down to the
smallest washer or bolt was not merely computer
designed, but designed into the Continental GT
concept alongside every other part.
Using the very latest CATIA-based
Computer Aided Design (CAD) programmes, the Continental
GT represents a huge step forward in Bentley design
technology. With all components existing in the
virtual world before a single one is created as
a physical property, it is possible to see how
each part interacts with all the others, illuminating
problems and conflicts that, in the past, may
never have come to light until the part had been
machined.
This process cuts down development
time and costs and, rather more importantly, it
enables Bentley's engineers to design in reliability
and consistency in each component and assembly,
to deliver unprecedented levels of quality in
the finished car.
Indeed, one critical aspect of
the design work that is now done in the virtual
world enables Bentley to produce theoretically
perfect component designs before the Data Control
Model (DCM) is made.
The DCM is as close to a mathematically
faultless physical model of the interior and exterior
of the car as it is possible to have.
And it is from this that are
taken all the measurements used to specify the
tools that will make it when production starts,
so the importance of getting it right can scarcely
be overstated.
Designing the car this way results
not simply in a better built and more reliable
product, it is also likely to be safer too. Bentley's
advanced Dynamic Crash Analysis (DCA) capability
means much of the trial and error traditionally
associated with providing a car with good impact
resistance has been bypassed. Indeed so highly
developed are the procedures that Bentley's engineers
can put a Continental GT through a real world
crash test with great confidence that the result
will vary in no major way from those suggested
in virtual world.
Nevertheless it should be understood
that DCA, as with all virtual design work will
never replace real world test procedure, nor was
it ever designed to. Its role is simply to ensure
that by the time these tests are conducted, the
product is in as good shape as possible to meet
each new challenge.
Powertrain
Even before it had been determined how the
Continental GT would be powered, two crucial decisions
were made and set in stone. First, the Continental
GT would possess a new level of performance -
one that placed it among the very fastest cars
on earth; secondly the provision of that performance
would remain inimitably Bentley. Reconciling these
issues would require a great deal of power, but
more importantly, huge torque delivered evenly
across the rev-range.
The W12 formation engine was
a natural choice for Bentley. Not only did it
have the potential to deliver these objectives,
it also boasted the incredibly compact dimensions
required to realise the Continental GT's packaging
requirements.
Importantly the basis of such
an engine already existed within the VW Group.
While Bentley would still need to design its own
application of it (not to mention the facility
in which it would be assembled), the advantages
of taking a known quantity, if only as a starting
point, are clear to see.
Once this decision had been made,
it was necessary to change entirely the specification
of the engine to adapt it for the very particular
purpose needed by the Continental GT. First of
all it was clear that the power output of the
standard engine - while impressive for a normally
aspirated engine - was not going to generate the
kind of power and torque figures required to make
it not only a great engine but, more importantly,
a great Bentley engine.
It was both impractical and undesirable
to increase the engine's capacity beyond its existing
6-litre displacement so Bentley's engineers decided
that it should be turbocharged. Forced induction
was first used on standard Bentley road cars as
long ago as 1928 with the introduction of the
famed 'Blower' Bentleys, while turbocharging has
been a hallmark of Bentley engine design for 20
years. So, in line with modern practice and consistent
with the Bentley Arnage Series Two introduced
earlier this year, the use of twin turbochargers
was selected as the preferred means of delivering
a dramatic hike in both power and torque.
Using two turbochargers on an
engine with two banks of cylinders has many advantages
over the old, single turbo method. For a start,
because there are two of them, each turbo is much
smaller than would be a single unit designed for
the same purpose. This means they have less inertia
and therefore accelerate up to and back down from
operating speed much more quickly, minimising
turbo-lag. Two turbochargers also means the car's
catalytic converters can be sited next to the
exhaust manifold where they heat up extremely
quickly, offering greatly reduced exhaust emissions,
particularly when the engine is cold.
For this application KKK turbochargers
were chosen and carefully integrated into the
under-bonnet package.
At the same time, Bentley's engineering
team modified the internal componentry of the
powerplant until all its power, torque, emissions,
consumption and durability targets had been met
or exceeded. Further details of these changes
will be released nearer the time when the car
goes on sale in the second half of next year.
For now, however, it can be confirmed
that Bentley will make good its promise to power
the Continental GT with an engine of 'more than
500bhp'. But power is nothing without the torque
to back it up. The idea that a Bentley should
be fabulously responsive from very little more
than idling revs is not new - indeed it was a
precedent set by WO Bentley's first six cylinder
cars over 75 years ago - but the Continental GT
will take the execution of the concept to new
heights, providing relentless acceleration from
2000rpm to its red-line.
Having created one of the world's
most powerful and responsive engines, it was clear
that an equally extraordinary transmission would
be needed to transmit its power and torque to
the driven wheels.
The use of four-wheel drive was
decided in the earliest stages of the project
and if this sounds like something of a departure
for Bentley - which has only ever made rear-wheel
drive cars in its past - it was felt that this
new level of power demanded a commensurate level
of control. Besides, if the Continental GT was
to be exploited by its owners to its maximum potential,
it would need to be not just useable, but utterly
at home in all environments from the Santa Monica
Boulevard to the compacted snow surfaces of Alpine
resorts.
Nevertheless, in order to ensure
that the right Bentley feel is communicated to
the driver, Bentley's powertrain and chassis engineers
have experimented extensively with the distribution
of torque to the front and rear axles. This has
been done to provide the Continental GT with all
the security of a four-wheel drive system but
when appropriate, the added fun factor inherent
within a rear-wheel drive layout.
Providing the link between the
driven wheels and the engine is a six-speed automatic
transmission built for Bentley by ZF and the first
of its type in the world to be used in an ultra-high
performance coupe. Firstly, the new transmission
was modified by moving the differential forward,
which allowed the drive shafts to be as far forward
as possible, thus enabling the wheels to be close
to the front of the car. But the defining characteristic
of this transmission, apart from the use of six
ratios, is its ability to lock its torque converter
in normal driving, providing the same immediacy
of response expected of manual transmissions.
Despite this, shift quality is so good that often
the most obvious evidence of a gearchange having
taken place is the repositioning of the rev-counter
needle.
Tiptronic actuation means that
the car can be used either as a conventional automatic
or as a clutch less manual where gear changes
take place only on command from the driver, via
either the gear lever or paddles mounted behind
the steering wheel. Naturally fail-safe mechanisms
are incorporated to ensure it is not possible
to over-rev the engine when changing down in tiptronic
mode or stall the car by slowing too much in a
high gear.
It is a fair observation that
a 6-litre, twin-turbo engine with tremendous torque
does not strictly need six gears to keep itself
on the boil. Then again, to look at any element
of Bentley performance in terms of need is perhaps
to miss some of the point of the marque. It's
true that many Continental GT drivers will spend
much of their time allowing the transmission to
shift itself or even using the tiptronic function
to lock the gearbox in a certain ratio and allow
the engine's massive torque to carry the car along.
However, Bentley also knows that most of its customers
for the Continental GT will be enthusiasts who
will relish the prospect of flicking up and down
the gearbox at the pull of a paddle or the push
of a lever. Under the circumstances, six speeds
seem entirely appropriate.
Chassis
Perfecting ride and handling is one of the most
complex and difficult areas of car design. For
the Continental GT designers this job has been
doubly tough for few cars, if any, have been brought
to market with a greater expectation of excellence
in both areas.
Even so, by starting with well
defined and extremely ambitious targets and then
applying clear thinking and the skills of a 25-strong
chassis engineering team to realise them, the
Continental GT has been equipped with a chassis
that should appeal to sybarites and thrill-seekers
equally. The result is a car with firm rather
than harsh suspension, impressive resistance to
roll, pitch and heave yet compliant enough to
ride poorly surfaced roads with absolute equanimity.
The basis of the Continental
GT's chassis strategy is an extremely stiff body,
without which, even the most sophisticated of
suspension systems can be undermined. To this
was applied the very latest in suspension technology
featuring an innovative double wishbone arrangement
at the front - designed to minimise torque reactions
through the steered wheels - and multi-link rear
axle behind. Extensive use of aluminium has been
made, notably in the control arms, to lower unsprung
mass while the entire front subframe of the car
is fashioned from stainless steel.
Air springs are used at each
corner in place of conventional coils, each one
containing its own infinitely adjustable electronic
damper. The application of pressure to an air
spring (best thought of as bellows contained within
a metal tube) is uniform while coil springs are
subject to side forces that, in turn, lead to
damper friction, the bane of any chassis engineer's
life. Also the bellows can move through different
shapes as they expand and compress, effectively
allowing variable spring rates to be used.
Two more advantages of air springs
are that they can be smaller and therefore easier
to package than conventional coil systems and
secondly, they allow a car to maintain its static
ride height, regardless of load, so the car does
not suddenly become spongy to drive when fully
laden.
The electronic dampers fitted
to the Continental GT do more than offer a few
different settings for the driver to play with.
Within their set parameters they are, in fact,
capable of adjusting themselves infinitely and
continuously without the driver ever being aware
of it.
A central computer processes
information fed to it from sensors around the
car and instructs the dampers accordingly, each
damper is capable of adjusting its damping control
many times during a single event, such as a wheel
moving up and down over a bump. The key is for
the computer to analyse both the car's body and
wheel movements to ensure both remain in harmony
with each other.
Naturally both traction control
and the latest Bosch Electronic Stability Programme
(ESP) are fitted though they can be disabled at
the discretion of the driver. The secret to understanding
their function is to see them as additional to
the Continental GT's exceptionally well-mannered
dynamic behaviour, rather than as an essential
ingredient in keeping a car of these capabilities
safe. Bentley knows that many of its customers
will want to turn the electronics off from time
to time and they need to be certain that even
without these aids, the Continental GT's handling
remains supremely secure and capable.
Most of the time, however, the
ESP will be enabled, but inactive; should it be
required by the driving conditions though, it
will be deployed automatically but unobtrusively,
so as not to intrude on the Bentley driving experience.
The Continental GT is capable
of monitoring a whole range of dynamic attitudes
such as lateral acceleration, individual wheel
speeds, throttle position and brake pressure.
No car can defy the laws of physics and there
are certain extreme conditions that even ESP will
be unable to guard against, but as an extra line
of defence for the unfortunate driver caught out
by unexpected circumstances, its safety value
is real and evident.
That said, as the most sporting
road-going Bentley since the R-Type Continental,
the Continental GT is a driver's car through and
through and Bentley's chassis engineers - enthusiasts
all - have been acutely aware that not only must
the chassis have the raw ability to match perfectly
the engine's phenomenal output, it must provide
it in a way that indulges and engrosses its driver.
To this end, a huge amount of
work has been done analysing spring, damper and
anti-roll bar rates to ensure the car has the
right sporting stance on the road. Exhaustive
testing of different steering geometries has then
been undertaken to eliminate unwanted torque reactions,
and also to provide the appropriate amount of
'feel' in the chassis. In particular, the Servotronic
rack and pinion steering has been evaluated to
ensure it delivers the right response in terms
of steering, but also feedback to the driver.
Wheel and tyre choice is, of
course, crucial to the development of any chassis,
and while work continues apace in this area, the
Continental GT will come with 19in wheels as standard.
Braking will be provided by all
new, ventilated disc brakes at each corner featuring
the latest Bosch anti-lock system with Brake Assist
and Emergency Brake Force Distribution.
Once all the specification of
the chassis had been determined, the Continental
GT was put through the most rigorous real world
evaluation programme of any Bentley in history,
a process that continues to this day. From race
tracks such as the famed original Nurburgring
to mountain passes and sinuous switchbacks all
over the world, the Continental GT is being tested
and re-tested to fine tune its exceptionally promising
chassis specification to provide ride and handling
standards that don't merely rise above the class
standard but define it.
Safety
The Continental GT is equipped with the full suite
of passive safety equipment. As well as possessing
exceptional front, side and rear deformation characteristics
on impact, there are two front airbags, four side
airbags and two side curtain bags that, unusually
for a coupé, each run along the full length of
the cabin. Seat belt pretensioners are used for
all four seats.
Of course prevention is better
than cure and avoiding the accident in the first
place has to be preferable. To this end the Continental
GT is specified like few others in the market.
All-wheel drive, when correctly exploited, has
colossal safety advantages in adverse conditions,
while the latest traction, stability and brake
control systems offer further opportunities for
drivers to extricate themselves from danger. And
of course there is the not small issue of the
powerful engine and its ability to keep time spent
on the wrong side of the road during overtaking
to an absolute minimum; and should you ever have
to accelerate away from trouble, few will do so
more quickly than this.
Marketing
At its core, the Continental GT is the result
of just three things: first a deep seated emotional
desire within Bentley for over 20 years to create
an all new compact coupe. Secondly there is VW's
provision of the financial wherewithal not simply
to create the car, but to do so in a way that
gave Bentley a design, engineering and manufacturing
lead over all potential rivals. But the Continental
GT still would not have been possible without
a concrete business case for producing such a
car and introducing the prospect of Bentley ownership
to a greater number of discerning enthusiasts
than ever before.
The business case is satisfyingly
straightforward and hinges on what Bentley believes
to be a clear gap in the upper luxury coupé market.
Currently those looking to buy in this sector
have a straight choice between two dramatically
differing breeds of car. The first is an uncompromising
sportscar with minimal or no rear seat space and
miserly luggage provision. Alternatively they
can choose a rather more accommodating coupé,
but suffer a commensurate reduction in driving
enjoyment. Those who crave true supercar performance,
response and style but need the flexibility of
a car that seats four, carries their luggage and
can be used everyday for all purposes have not
been provided for. The Continental GT Coupé is
designed for these people.
Indeed although it is envisaged
that most Continental GT buyers will possess a
number of cars in their stable, it is also hoped
that many will find it satisfies all their motoring
requirements and wishes. Nevertheless even the
best product needs a voice if it is to be heard
particularly if, as will be the case with the
Continental GT, 75 per cent of those who buy one
will not be existing customers.
These new customers will largely
be people who already admire Bentley and would
like one of its current products, but who either
cannot quite afford one or baulk at the prospect
of spending over £150,000 on a car, even if they
believe it to be worth the money. Current Bentley
customers tend to be among the most wealthy in
the world and there is a big step between them
and another group of still extremely well off
individuals who are not comfortable with buying
cars at Bentley's existing price points. These
are the people at whom the Continental GT is squarely
aimed.
The profile of the typical Continental
GT buyer will also be subtly different from that
of the existing Bentley customer. They will tend
to be younger, with an average age of just under
as opposed to just over 50 years. Men will still
buy many more than women, but their majority will
decrease from the overwhelming 96-99 per cent
of current customers, to a slightly more balanced
85-90 per cent. They will be high achieving, hard
working and more typically owners of their own
business rather than directors of public companies.
And while they will share a love
of high performance, quality and craftsmanship
with all Bentley customers, Continental GT buyers
will likely be interested also in technology and
contemporary design.
The approach that will be used
to inform these prospects about and attract them
to the Continental GT will be highly specialised
and targeted. Its expanding role in motorsport,
for instance, is seen not only as exactly right
for the marque, but also a key way of communicating
with those people for whom the Continental GT
was born. Through those who actually go to races
like Le Mans and the media coverage it attracts,
Bentley gains access to the mindset of an already
extremely car oriented group of people.
More broadly, such activities
also help people understand how Bentley is changing,
but also how it is more aware of the importance
of its heritage than at any time since Bentley
Motors was bought by Rolls-Royce in 1931.
Bentley also aims to reach its
new customers through strategic alliances with
other luxury non-automotive companies, organising
joint activities and promotions, highly targeted
direct marketing and Internet activity.
'To achieve our aims, we need
routinely to be in touch with roughly ten times
more people around the world than at present,'
says Adrian Hallmark, member of the board for
sales and marketing. 'These will be existing,
lapsed and prospective customers. We will involve
them in driving events, keep them informed of
the company's activities and give them an entirely
different and much more personal treatment than
they are accustomed to receiving for mass production
luxury car manufacturers. We will be charging
more for our coupé and, for us, justifying this
with the provision of what we believe will be
a demonstrably better car is not enough. Our customers
need to see not just a better car but a better
company too.'
So Bentley, despite the Continental
GT heralding a considerable increase in production
at Crewe, will remain small. The global dealership
network that stands currently at 121 will not
be expanded beyond 150 in the foreseeable future,
each selling no more than a few dozen cars every
year, so customers know they are part of a very
small and ultra-exclusive family of Bentley cognoscenti.
And it is creating a business that runs successfully
at such a personal level right from the factory
gates at Crewe, where customers can come and watch
their car being built, all the way to their own
front door that completes the environment that
any Bentley driver can expect to enjoy.
Conclusion
In all physical senses, the changes the Continental
GT has brought to Bentley have transformed the
company beyond recognition. The car itself and
the renewed factory in which it will be built
mark the dawn of a new and thrilling era for the
marque.
But in a less tangible but no
less important way Bentley is actually returning
to its heartland values, as defined by the founding
vision of WO Bentley. The strength of any brand
in this sector is the thought that created it,
and while there were times in the distant past
when that vision had become little more than a
nostalgic fairytale, now and increasingly it resonates
through the walls of the factory.
WO's proposition is as compelling
today as it was 83 years ago. He would combine
cutting edge design with outrageous performance
and superlative craftsmanship to create a potent,
authentic and unique motoring experience. Moreover
it would have a purpose that took it beyond mere
recreation and turned it into something of real
use and significance. And while it would offer
great comfort and unquestioned luxury as it went
about its daily business, so also it would possess
a thinly veiled ability to turn into something
very special at any moment. These are precisely
the qualities the Continental GT has been engineered
to provide and the result is a car of which WO
Bentley would be justifiably proud.
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