Monday, May 30, 2022

Some Coachbuilder Bodies for Pegaso

Spain's 80 or so Pegaso sports cars built 1951-1958 were mostly clad by coachbuiling firms, as mentioned in Pegaso's Wikipedia entry.  Early Pegasos were given factory bodies.

Those coachbuilt bodies were mostly furnished by Touring in Italy and Saoutchik in France.  A few were by Serra of Pegaso's home town, Barcelona.

Touring and Serra bodies stayed close to basic styles of each firm, whereas Saoutchik bodies were more varied.

Gallery

1952 Pegaso Z-102 Spider "Tibidabo" by Touring
Early on, Touring established its theme of chopped out hood segments.  The same was applied on rear ends of coupes.  Note the lack of a front bumper.  This was fairly typical of Pegasos, though some had sketchy bumper segments up front.

1953 Pegaso Z-102 "Thrill" showcar by Touring
The front end is typical Touring-Pegaso, but the rest is showcar jazz.  Some later American Motors designs had a similar feeling.

1954 Pegaso Z-102 Berlinetta by Touring - RM Sotheby's auction photo
This is a typical Touring body.

1954 Pegaso Z-102 Berlinetta by Touring - unknown photo source
The greenhouse is high, the hood long: another fine Touring design.

Another Sotheby's photo.  Note the chopped-out bits at the rear.  The window design is logical, but the chrome links aren't really needed.

1952 Pegaso Z-102 Berlinetta by Soutchik
Saoutchik made a few coupés and cabriolets with this fender design.  Unusually, there is a substantial front bumper that some later Saoutchik Pegasos lacked.

1954 Pegaso Z-102 Berlinetta by Saoutchik - auction photos
This seems to be a more common Saoutchik design for Pegaso.  Note the nearly invisible bumper.

The fenderline is thrusting and the greenhouse is small.

A more squared-off trunk lid blended with the fenders might have been more practical and better looking.

1954 Pegaso Z102 Cabriolet by Saoutchik - RM Sotheby's photos
The lower body design is the same as that of the car in the previous images.

Rear bumpers offer no serious protection.  This car should never be parked on a Paris street.

1955 Pegaso Z-103 Spider by Serra - unknown source
A nice, clean design.  Unlike most Pegasos, this car and the one below had panoramic (wraparound) windshields: very mid-1950s.

1956 Pegaso Z-102 Spider by Serra - unknown source 
This car has a fairly serious rear bumper.  I like this rear design better than Saoutchhik's.  It's bold, but logical.  Note the vent on the front fender that's absent in the car in the previous photo.

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