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The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit
The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit-April 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:51

All in-person photos by Raphael Orlove

I was just wasting a good amount of my afternoon reading about the Orca C113. Not familiar with it? Don’t feel bad, there’s a reason for that.

The Orca C113 () was going to be one of the fastest cars in the world, the product of a composites specialist René Beck, himself from the small European principality of Liechtenstein, his company based out of bordering Switzerland. First shown in 2001, , and then 2005, the car was supposed to be production-ready, and a contender for fastest car in the world. It looked like a Le Mans car with a license plate and soon traded a Volvo inline-five engine for claims of a twin-turbo MTM-tuned Audi V8, as detailed in . If you never saw the car, you’d wonder why, in a pre-Recession era, René Beck’s car went nowhere. That is, if you never saw the car.

The Orca did get some amazing press photos, though.

I will always be personally charmed by the audacity of the Orca, its styling an assault on the eyes as much as it is rear tires were an assault on the road. Orca claimed it would limit production to 99 examples. I can’t find pictures of more than two.

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This is what’s on my mind as I looked over Pagani Zonda 001. This is the first Zonda, also a brainchild of a single composites expert, working not far away in northern Italy. Recently restored by the company, it was on display in Grand Central here in New York along with a .

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It’s the look of the thing that caught me over and over as I walked around the car. The original Zonda, called the C12, is not all that different from the Orca in ethos. Even the names fit the same mold. The C113 name of the Orca calls back to how Mercedes named its experimental designs, the and the . C12 for the Zonda recalls Mercedes’ actual Le Mans racing program in the Group C era, a line rounding out with the , if you .

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In terms of specifications, there’s not a ton to distance the Pagani from other startup supercars of the day. Pagani only claimed 450 horsepower for this early car, and 435 lb-ft of torque, pushing 2,755 pounds (1,250 kg) around, as the display sign next to the car detailed. It only rides on 18s, with a meaty 40-profile tire up front and a 35-profile tire at the rear. . The Orca claimed much higher specs, with a mythical super-super Orca called the SC7 hitting something in the 800 horsepower range and just moving 1874 pounds (850 kg) up those Swiss mountains.

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The difference between the two, at least the most obvious one, is that the Pagani is a singular work of design genius. It is spectacular to behold, over the top and restrained at the same time. Next to other Paganis it looks simple, but it’s covered in scoops and vents, the interior looks lifted from an auto show concept, complete with air vents rising like periscopes and leather stretched in almost cartoonish shapes. One moment it seems low-key, then you see the four exhausts bundled out at the back “like something James Bond would drive” an older woman standing next to me couldn’t help but blurt out.

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This is all to say Pagani was not unique in wanting to be a boutique supercar builder in the pre-Recession boom years. But seeing the car in person, after all this time, confirms as easily enough why Pagani survived when others fell to the wayside.

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

Image for article titled The Original Pagani Zonda Still Doesn't Get Enough Credit

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