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{{Short description|Last car model from Bucciali}}
{{Short description|Last car model from Bucciali}}
{{Infobox automobile
{{Infobox automobile
| name = [[Bucciali]]
| name = Bucciali TAV 12
| model_code = TAV 12
| model_code = TAV 12
| image = Bucciali TAV-12 2.jpg
| image = Bucciali TAV 8-32 Nationales Automuseum (cropped).JPG
| caption = Bucciali TAV 12 „la flèche d’or“
| caption = Bucciali TAV 12 "la flèche d’or"
| class = Luxury car
| class = Luxury car
| body_style = [[Limousine]], [[Convertible]]
| body_style = 2-door [[convertible]] (before being rebodied)<br>4-door [[sedan (automobile)|sedan]]
| length = {{convert|6360|mm|1|abbr=on}}
| motor = [[Gasoline engine]]: <br />4.9 liters (88 or 132&nbsp;kW<ref>There are different data on this in the sources.</ref>)
| height = {{convert|1480|mm|1|abbr=on}}
| length = 6360 mm
| wheelbase = {{convert|3734–4089|mm|1|abbr=on}}
| height = 1480 mm
| wheelbase = 3734–4089 mm
| production = 1931 - 1932
| production = 1931 - 1932
| aka = Bucciali TAV 8-32
}}The '''Bucciali TAV 12''' (alternatively also '''8-32''' or '''Type 7''') is the last model from the French car manufacturer [[Bucciali]]. Introduced in 1931, the TAV 12, whose history and characteristics are not fully understood, is considered "steeped in legend".<ref name=":0">''[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714170104/http://www.kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf „1932 Bucciali TAV 12 Berline, Coachwork by Saoutchik. Private Portfolio No. 114“.]'' (PDF) www.kidston.com, October 12, 2014, archived from the [https://kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf original] (no longer available online) on July 14, 2014; retrieved December 1, 2014.</ref> Unusual for the time, it had [[front-wheel drive]] and sensational bodywork, the flat and long limousine version of which was also known as ''la flèche d'or'' ("the golden arrow"). The vehicle, of which only one is known, was dismantled into its individual parts before the outbreak of the [[World War II|Second World War]]. A collector had it rebuilt 40 years later.<ref name=":5">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 48.</ref> Since the early 1990s, the TAV 12 has been ready to drive again and is shown at exhibitions from time to time.
| engine = 4.9 liter [[V12 engine|V12]] (88 or 132&nbsp;kW<ref>There are different data on this in the sources.</ref>)
}}The '''Bucciali TAV 12''' (alternatively also '''8-32''' or '''Type 7''') is the last model from the French car manufacturer [[Bucciali]]. Introduced in 1931, the TAV 12's history and characteristics are not fully understood.<ref name=":0">''[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714170104/http://www.kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf „1932 Bucciali TAV 12 Berline, Coachwork by Saoutchik. Private Portfolio No. 114“.]'' (PDF) www.kidston.com, October 12, 2014, archived from the [https://kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf original] (no longer available online) on July 14, 2014; retrieved December 1, 2014.</ref> Unusual for the time, it had [[front-wheel drive]] and sensational bodywork, the flat and long limousine version of which was also known as ''la flèche d'or'' ("the golden arrow"). The vehicle, of which only one is known, was dismantled into its individual parts before the outbreak of the [[World War II|Second World War]]. A collector had it rebuilt 40 years later.<ref name=":5">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 48.</ref> Since the early 1990s, the TAV 12 has been ready to drive again and is shown at exhibitions from time to time.


== Background ==
== Background ==
The Bucciali brand can be traced back to Angelo ("Buc"; 1889-1981) and Paul-Albert Bucciali (1887-1946). The Bucciali brothers, from a [[Corsica|Corsican]] family, were born in [[Boulogne-sur-Mer]] in [[Pas-de-Calais|northern France]] and worked as piano and [[Organ building|organ builders]] in their hometown.<ref name=":1">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926–1932), Part 1. in: [[Motor Klassik]], issue 4/1989, p. 49.</ref> After [[World War I]], they founded ''Société Bucciali Frères'', based in [[Courbevoie]] near [[Paris]], which produced a series of small, conventionally styled sports cars from 1922.<ref name=":7">Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12: ''L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 77 (with illustration).</ref> Some of the cars initially marketed under the Buc badge were one-offs, but some models were produced in small series of up to 100 units (Buc AB 4-5).<ref>Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 70.
The Bucciali brand can be traced back to Angelo ("Buc"; 1889–1981) and Paul-Albert Bucciali (1887–1946). The Bucciali brothers, from a [[Corsica]]n family, were born in [[Boulogne-sur-Mer]] in [[Pas-de-Calais|northern France]] and worked as piano and [[Organ building|organ builders]] in their hometown.<ref name=":1">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926–1932), Part 1. in: [[Motor Klassik]], issue 4/1989, p. 49.</ref> After [[World War I]], they founded ''Société Bucciali Frères'', based in [[Courbevoie]] near [[Paris]], which produced a series of small, conventionally styled sports cars from 1922.<ref name=":7">Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12: ''L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 77 (with illustration).</ref> Some of the cars initially marketed under the Buc badge were one-offs, but some models were produced in small series of up to 100 units (Buc AB 4–5).<ref>Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 70.


</ref> Occasionally, Buc cars appeared at French motorsport events. <ref>There is no record of an overall victory by a Buc in a motorsport event. At the III Grand Prix de Boulogne in 1923, a driver named Augustus Bucciali made his first start in a car designated as a Buc; he crossed the finish line but was not classified due to insufficient distance; see statistics of the race on the website [https://webcitation.org/5gWiFJjzo?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1923.html#cdv www.teamdan.com] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]) (retrieved on December 1, 2014). No entries were recorded for 1924; in 1925 there were several finishes by several Buc riders; see Statistics of the Grand Prix in [https://webcitation.org/5gWiFfRhr?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1924.html 1924] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]) and [https://webcitation.org/5gWntu2k0?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1925.html 1925] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]), both on the website www.teamdan.com (accessed on December 1, 2014).</ref> Depending on the source, the company produced 120<ref name=":9">Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 69.</ref>, 150<ref name=":6">Harald Linz, Halwart Schrader: Die ''große Automobil Enzyklopädie. 100 Jahre Geschichte, 2500 Marken aus 65 Ländern''. BLV Publishing Company Munich 1985, <nowiki>ISBN 3-405-13217-7</nowiki>, p. 72.</ref> or 200<ref name=":2">Eric Favre: ''Bucciali, la passion de la démesure'', History of the brand Bucciali in: La Gazoline, edition of January 26, 2003.</ref> cars in 1926. This was not enough to make the business economically viable.<ref name=":4">Daniel Vaughan: [https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z13389/bucciali-tav-12.aspx „1932 Bucciali TAV 12“]. www.conceptcarz.com, February 1, 2010, retrieved on December 1, 2014.</ref> As a result, the Bucciali brothers stopped producing conventionally designed automobiles at the end of 1925.
</ref> Occasionally, Buc cars appeared at French motorsport events.<ref>There is no record of an overall victory by a Buc in a motorsport event. At the III Grand Prix de Boulogne in 1923, a driver named Augustus Bucciali made his first start in a car designated as a Buc; he crossed the finish line but was not classified due to insufficient distance; see statistics of the race on the website [https://webcitation.org/5gWiFJjzo?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1923.html#cdv www.teamdan.com] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]) (retrieved on December 1, 2014). No entries were recorded for 1924; in 1925 there were several finishes by several Buc riders; see Statistics of the Grand Prix in [https://webcitation.org/5gWiFfRhr?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1924.html 1924] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]) and [https://webcitation.org/5gWntu2k0?url=http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1925.html 1925] (memento from May 4, 2009 on [[WebCite]]), both on the website www.teamdan.com (accessed on December 1, 2014).</ref> Depending on the source, the company produced 120,<ref name=":9">Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 69.</ref> 150<ref name=":6">Harald Linz, Halwart Schrader: Die ''große Automobil Enzyklopädie. 100 Jahre Geschichte, 2500 Marken aus 65 Ländern''. BLV Publishing Company Munich 1985, {{ISBN|3-405-13217-7}}, p. 72.</ref> or 200<ref name=":2">Eric Favre: ''Bucciali, la passion de la démesure'', History of the brand Bucciali in: La Gazoline, edition of January 26, 2003.</ref> cars in 1926. This was not enough to make the business economically viable.<ref name=":4">Daniel Vaughan: [https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z13389/bucciali-tav-12.aspx „1932 Bucciali TAV 12“]. www.conceptcarz.com, February 1, 2010, retrieved on December 1, 2014.</ref> As a result, the Bucciali brothers stopped producing conventionally designed automobiles at the end of 1925.


Beginning in 1926, ''Société Bucciali Frères'' became an automotive engineering design firm.<ref name=":2" /> The Bucciali brothers were now primarily involved in the development of [[Front-wheel drive|front-wheel-drive]] designs. This was a new drive concept for automobiles that had attracted some attention since 1925 when a front-wheel-drive racing car ([[Miller 122]]) designed by the American engineer [[Harry Miller (auto racing)|Harry Miller]] had been surprisingly successful in the "[[Indianapolis 500]]". The Buccialis often used the preliminary work of other engineers in their designs. The first front-wheel-drive car, the Bucciali TAV 1, incorporated ideas from Brazilian engineer Robert Dimitri Sensaud de Lavaud,<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> while later developments resembled the technology of the 1929 US [[Cord (automobile)|Cord L-29]]<ref name=":3">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 50.</ref>, the first mass-produced front-wheel-drive passenger car.<ref>Richard M. Langworth: ''Encyclopedia of American Cars 1930–1980''. Beekman House, New York 1984, <nowiki>ISBN 0-517-42462-2</nowiki>, p. 215 f.
Beginning in 1926, ''Société Bucciali Frères'' became an automotive engineering design firm.<ref name=":2" /> The Bucciali brothers were now primarily involved in the development of [[Front-wheel drive|front-wheel-drive]] designs. This was a new drive concept for automobiles that had attracted some attention since 1925 when a front-wheel-drive racing car ([[Miller 122]]) designed by the American engineer [[Harry Miller (auto racing)|Harry Miller]] had been surprisingly successful in the "[[Indianapolis 500]]". The Buccialis often used the preliminary work of other engineers in their designs. The first front-wheel-drive car, the Bucciali TAV 1, incorporated ideas from Brazilian engineer Robert Dimitri Sensaud de Lavaud,<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> while later developments resembled the technology of the 1929 US [[Cord (automobile)|Cord L-29]],<ref name=":3">Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 50.</ref> the first mass-produced front-wheel-drive passenger car.<ref>Richard M. Langworth: ''Encyclopedia of American Cars 1930–1980''. Beekman House, New York 1984, {{ISBN|0-517-42462-2}}, p. 215 f.


</ref>
</ref>


Beginning in 1926, the company, now explicitly known as Bucciali, presented a new design at each of the annual [[Paris Motor Show|Paris Motor Shows]] held in October, most of which were an evolution of previous concepts. In some cases, only the [[Vehicle frame|vehicle frames]] were exhibited, but in most cases, the chassis was fitted with individual [[Coachbuilder|coachworks]] designed by Angelo Bucciali. They were mostly characterized by unusual proportions, including an unusual length and an extremely low overall height. This design became a trademark of Bucciali. Bucciali's vehicles were usually equipped with [[Internal combustion engine|internal combustion engines]] from other manufacturers such as [[S.C.A.P.]], [[Continental Motors Company|Continental]] , or [[Lycoming Engines|Lycoming]]; only in the case of the 1930 [[Bucciali Double Huit]] did the company announce a 16-cylinder engine of its design, but this was never realized. Most Bucciali models remained one-offs; only three or four examples of the Bucciali TAV 30 are known to have been built.<ref name=":3" /> The company's last model was the 1931 TAV 12, which was fitted with two bodies in succession.
Beginning in 1926, the company, now explicitly known as Bucciali, presented a new design at each of the annual [[Paris Motor Show]]s held in October, most of which were an evolution of previous concepts. In some cases, only the [[vehicle frame]]s were exhibited, but in most cases, the chassis was fitted with individual [[Coachbuilder|coachworks]] designed by Angelo Bucciali. They were mostly characterized by unusual proportions, including an unusual length and an extremely low overall height. This design became a trademark of Bucciali. Bucciali's vehicles were usually equipped with [[internal combustion engine]]s from other manufacturers such as [[S.C.A.P.]], [[Continental Motors Company|Continental]] , or [[Lycoming Engines|Lycoming]]; only in the case of the 1930 [[Bucciali Double Huit]] did the company announce a 16-cylinder engine of its design, but this was never realized. Most Bucciali models remained one-offs; only three or four examples of the Bucciali TAV 30 are known to have been built.<ref name=":3" /> The company's last model was the 1931 TAV 12, which was fitted with two bodies in succession.


Although the Bucciali brothers regularly announced their intention to mass-produce their front-wheel-drive models, the seriousness of this intention is doubted in the literature, given the extremely low production volume. Most publications assume that the Bucciali brothers were primarily interested in selling their patented front-wheel-drive solutions to interested production car manufacturers; the Buccialis' sensational but impractical car bodies should also be seen in this context.<ref name=":4" /><ref>Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 51.</ref> Bucciali sold the rights to use some of his ideas to the [[Peerless Motor Company]], but the company went bankrupt in 1931 and turned into a [[brewery]] before it could implement Bucciali's concepts.
Although the Bucciali brothers regularly announced their intention to mass-produce their front-wheel-drive models, the seriousness of this intention is doubted in the literature, given the extremely low production volume. Most publications assume that the Bucciali brothers were primarily interested in selling their patented front-wheel-drive solutions to interested production car manufacturers; the Buccialis' sensational but impractical car bodies should also be seen in this context.<ref name=":4" /><ref>Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: ''Das Märchen vom Storch''. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', issue 5/1989, p. 51.</ref> Bucciali sold the rights to use some of his ideas to the [[Peerless Motor Company]], but the company went bankrupt in 1931 and turned into a [[brewery]] before it could implement Bucciali's concepts.
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=== Single piece or additional copies? ===
=== Single piece or additional copies? ===
''La flèche d'or'' was probably<ref name=":0" /> a single unit; in any case, only one car of this type is in existence today. Although a single source claims that two similar cars with Voisin engines<ref name=":6" /> were built in 1932, there is no proof.<ref>This may be a misleading formulation; the convertible and the following limousine may be counted as two separate vehicles.</ref> There is evidence, however, that in the summer or fall of 1932, a two-year-old TAV 30 chassis, initially fitted with a [[Roadster (automobile)|roadster]] body, was later fitted with a ''la Flèche d'or-''style body for a customer. <ref>Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 76.
''La flèche d'or'' was probably<ref name=":0" /> a single unit; in any case, only one car of this type is in existence today. Although a single source claims that two similar cars with Voisin engines<ref name=":6" /> were built in 1932, there is no proof.<ref>This may be a misleading formulation; the convertible and the following limousine may be counted as two separate vehicles.</ref> There is evidence, however, that in the summer or fall of 1932, a two-year-old TAV 30 chassis, initially fitted with a [[Roadster (automobile)|roadster]] body, was later fitted with a ''la Flèche d'or-''style body for a customer.<ref>Serge Bellu: ''Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali''. In: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 76.


</ref> However, this car was equipped with an eight-cylinder Lycoming engine. Finally, there is evidence that the Bucciali brothers began designing another limousine for the 1933 Paris Motor Show in the fall of 1932, but it was never realized, as Bucciali's development work came to an end in early 1933 for financial reasons.<ref name=":4" />
</ref> However, this car was equipped with an eight-cylinder Lycoming engine. Finally, there is evidence that the Bucciali brothers began designing another limousine for the 1933 Paris Motor Show in the fall of 1932, but it was never realized, as Bucciali's development work came to an end in early 1933 for financial reasons.<ref name=":4" />
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=== Dismantling and reconstruction ===
=== Dismantling and reconstruction ===
[[File:Bugatti Type 46 1930 Martigny-p1030717.jpg|thumb|Engine block and chassis details of a Bugatti Type 46]]
[[File:Bugatti Type 46 1930 Martigny-p1030717.jpg|thumb|Engine block and chassis details of a Bugatti Type 46]]
The TAV 12 was used regularly by its owner in the 1930s, but he had the body removed after a few years. The body was mounted on a [[Bugatti Type 46|Bugatti T46]] chassis in the late 1930s.<ref name=":8">H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: ''Der Flug der Störche''. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p. 30.</ref> Produced from 1929 to 1936, the T 46 was the second largest Bugatti and was known as the "''Petite Royale''" about the legendary [[Bugatti Royale|Type 41]] luxury limousine. <ref>H.G. Conway: ''Die Bugatti-Typen''. In: ''Die Bugattis. Automobile, Möbel, Bronzen''. Exhibition catalog of the Museum for Arts and Crafts Hamburg (1983), p. 271.</ref>The wheelbase of the Bugatti was half a meter shorter than that of the Bucciali, which meant that the body had to be shortened considerably at the front. The Bugatti with the "''la flèche d'or''" body was transferred to the USA in the early post-war period. The Bucciali chassis remained in France and was considered lost for several years. After its rediscovery, it was purchased by a French collector.<ref name=":8" />
The TAV 12 was used regularly by its owner in the 1930s, but he had the body removed after a few years. The body was mounted on a [[Bugatti Type 46|Bugatti T46]] chassis in the late 1930s.<ref name=":8">H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: ''Der Flug der Störche''. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p. 30.</ref> Produced from 1929 to 1936, the T 46 was the second largest Bugatti and was known as the "''Petite Royale''" about the legendary [[Bugatti Royale|Type 41]] luxury limousine.<ref>H.G. Conway: ''Die Bugatti-Typen''. In: ''Die Bugattis. Automobile, Möbel, Bronzen''. Exhibition catalog of the Museum for Arts and Crafts Hamburg (1983), p. 271.</ref> The wheelbase of the Bugatti was half a meter shorter than that of the Bucciali, which meant that the body had to be shortened considerably at the front. The Bugatti with the "''la flèche d'or''" body was transferred to the US in the early post-war period. The Bucciali chassis remained in France and was considered lost for several years. After its rediscovery, it was purchased by a French collector.<ref name=":8" />


In 1976, the body and the Bucciali chassis came into the hands of an American collector, who had the ''la flèche d'or'' rebuilt. The engine, gearbox, front-wheel drive, suspension, and most of the sheet metal parts could be taken over from the original vehicle. Some parts of the chassis, the [[Fender (vehicle)|rear fenders]], and the hood were rebuilt from scratch. The reconstruction was completed more than ten years later. Since the late 1990s, the TAV 12 has been on public display several times, including at the [[Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance]] (2006).<ref name=":0" />
In 1976, the body and the Bucciali chassis came into the hands of an American collector, who had the ''la flèche d'or'' rebuilt. The engine, gearbox, front-wheel drive, suspension, and most of the sheet metal parts could be taken over from the original vehicle. Some parts of the chassis, the [[Fender (vehicle)|rear fenders]], and the hood were rebuilt from scratch. The reconstruction was completed more than ten years later. Since the late 1990s, the TAV 12 has been on public display several times, including at the [[Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance]] (2006).<ref name=":0" />
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==== Convertible ====
==== Convertible ====
The first version, which appeared in the fall of 1931, was a two-door convertible. The car had a steel chassis with a 3734 mm [[wheelbase]], which had already been used for a TAV 30 the previous year.<ref name=":3" /> Unlike the other TAV models, the body was not designed by the Bucciali brothers, but by Émile Guillet, the owner of a coachwork factory who was sometimes a partner of Bucciali.<ref name=":7" /> It was considered stylistically unsuccessful.<ref name=":4" />
The first version, which appeared in the fall of 1931, was a two-door convertible. The car had a steel chassis with a 3734&nbsp;mm [[wheelbase]], which had already been used for a TAV 30 the previous year.<ref name=":3" /> Unlike the other TAV models, the body was not designed by the Bucciali brothers, but by Émile Guillet, the owner of a coachwork factory who was sometimes a partner of Bucciali.<ref name=":7" /> It was considered stylistically unsuccessful.<ref name=":4" />


==== ''Berline: „la flèche d’or“'' ====
==== ''Berline: „la flèche d’or“'' ====
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In the early months of 1932, Bucciali produced a large four-door limousine (French: ''Berline'') for Roures, nicknamed ''la flèche d'or''. The body was of mixed construction, consisting of sheet steel shells nailed to a wooden frame.<ref name=":0" />
In the early months of 1932, Bucciali produced a large four-door limousine (French: ''Berline'') for Roures, nicknamed ''la flèche d'or''. The body was of mixed construction, consisting of sheet steel shells nailed to a wooden frame.<ref name=":0" />
[[File:Bucciali TAV8-32 1.jpg|thumb|Bucciali TAV 12]]
[[File:Bucciali TAV8-32 1.jpg|thumb|Bucciali TAV 12]]
The limousine's wheelbase was 4089 mm, only a few millimeters shorter than that of the [[Bugatti Royale|Bugatti T41 "Royale"]]. With a length of 6360 mm, the car was exceptionally long, while the body height was only 1480 mm.<ref name=":7" /> This made the Bucciali TAV 12 Berline the lowest car of its time. The wheels had a diameter of 24 inches.<ref name=":0" /> The body was designed by Paul-Albert Bucciali; the sheet metal parts were allegedly made to Bucciali's specifications at [[Saoutchik]] in [[Neuilly-sur-Seine]].<ref name=":0" /> The hood was also low. Its top line was below the highest point of the fenders so that the hood was partially hidden by the wheels and fenders when viewed from the side. As on the earlier TAV Buccialis models, a stylized [[stork]] was mounted on the side vents of the hood. It was a reference to the ''Escadrille des Cigognes'' (Stork Squadron)<ref>Popular name of the GC 12, ''groupe de combat'' n° 12, set up in Reims in 1912; [[Pascal Ory|Pascal Ory:]] ''Dictionnaire des étrangers qui ont fait la France'', Robert Laffont, Paris 2013.</ref> in which Paul-Albert Bucciali had participated during the [[World War I|First World War]].<ref name=":1" /> The absence of running boards was another stylistic feature. The big headlamps were positioned in front of the [[Grille (car)|grille]], directly on the front bumper. Two spare wheels were mounted on top of each other at the rear of the car.
The limousine's wheelbase was 4089&nbsp;mm, only a few millimeters shorter than that of the [[Bugatti Royale|Bugatti T41 "Royale"]]. With a length of 6360&nbsp;mm, the car was exceptionally long, while the body height was only 1480&nbsp;mm.<ref name=":7" /> This made the Bucciali TAV 12 Berline the lowest car of its time. The wheels had a diameter of 24 inches.<ref name=":0" /> The body was designed by Paul-Albert Bucciali; the sheet metal parts were allegedly made to Bucciali's specifications at [[Saoutchik]] in [[Neuilly-sur-Seine]].<ref name=":0" /> The hood was also low. Its top line was below the highest point of the fenders so that the hood was partially hidden by the wheels and fenders when viewed from the side. As on the earlier TAV Buccialis models, a stylized [[stork]] was mounted on the side vents of the hood. It was a reference to the ''Escadrille des Cigognes'' (Stork Squadron)<ref>Popular name of the GC 12, ''groupe de combat'' n° 12, set up in Reims in 1912; [[Pascal Ory]]: ''Dictionnaire des étrangers qui ont fait la France'', Robert Laffont, Paris 2013.</ref> in which Paul-Albert Bucciali had participated during the [[World War I|First World War]].<ref name=":1" /> The absence of running boards was another stylistic feature. The big headlamps were positioned in front of the [[Grille (car)|grille]], directly on the front bumper. Two spare wheels were mounted on top of each other at the rear of the car.


=== Technology ===
=== Technology ===
[[File:Bucciali 1930 TAV 8 Roadster Engine.jpg|thumb|Gearbox in front of the engine block: front-wheel drive chassis of a Bucciali]]
[[File:Bucciali 1930 TAV 8 Roadster Engine.jpg|thumb|Gearbox in front of the engine block: front-wheel drive chassis of a Bucciali]]
The TAV 12 had a steel chassis, front-wheel drive and independent front and [[Car suspension|rear suspension]].<ref name=":0" /> Paul-Albert Bucciali had already patented this design in 1928.<ref>Patent [https://worldwide.espacenet.com/patent/search?q=pn%3DUS1837106A US1837106A]: Motor vehicle. Applied for on September 25, 1928, published on December 15, 1931, inventor: Albert Paul Bucciali (the patent incorrectly lists the name "Albert Paul Bucciali" instead of Paul-Albert Bucciali).</ref> Both versions of the car were powered by a 12-cylinder engine that Bucciali purchased from Voisin. This H18 [[sleeve valve]] engine was mainly used in the [[Voisin C18]].<ref name=":10">Gijsbert-Paul Berk: ''André Lefebvre,and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën'', Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, <nowiki>ISBN 978-1-84584-464-6</nowiki>, S. 52.</ref> It had a displacement of 4886 cc. The mixture was prepared by four Zenith carburetors.<ref name=":0" /> The output of the Voisin engine was given as 180 bhp (132 kW)<ref name=":7" />, other sources say 120 bhp (88 kW)<ref name=":2" />. The Voisin engine, designed for a rear-wheel drive car, was mounted upside down in the Bucciali, so that the [[flywheel]] with the [[clutch]] was at the front.<ref name=":10" /> The four-speed transmission was a Bucciali design. It was positioned transversely in front of the engine, with the differential in front of it.<ref name=":10" /> The front [[Drum brake|drum brakes]] were internal, i.e. they were located on the differential and acted via the drive shafts.
The TAV 12 had a steel chassis, front-wheel drive and independent front and [[Car suspension|rear suspension]].<ref name=":0" /> Paul-Albert Bucciali had already patented this design in 1928.<ref>Patent [https://worldwide.espacenet.com/patent/search?q=pn%3DUS1837106A US1837106A]: Motor vehicle. Applied for on September 25, 1928, published on December 15, 1931, inventor: Albert Paul Bucciali (the patent incorrectly lists the name "Albert Paul Bucciali" instead of Paul-Albert Bucciali).</ref> Both versions of the car were powered by a 12-cylinder engine that Bucciali purchased from Voisin. This H18 [[sleeve valve]] engine was mainly used in the [[Voisin C18]].<ref name=":10">Gijsbert-Paul Berk: ''André Lefebvre,and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën'', Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, {{ISBN|978-1-84584-464-6}}, S. 52.</ref> It had a displacement of 4886 cc. The mixture was prepared by four Zenith carburetors.<ref name=":0" /> The output of the Voisin engine was given as 180&nbsp;bhp (132&nbsp;kW),<ref name=":7" /> other sources say 120&nbsp;bhp (88&nbsp;kW).<ref name=":2" /> The Voisin engine, designed for a rear-wheel drive car, was mounted upside down in the Bucciali, so that the [[flywheel]] with the [[clutch]] was at the front.<ref name=":10" /> The four-speed transmission was a Bucciali design. It was positioned transversely in front of the engine, with the differential in front of it.<ref name=":10" /> The front [[drum brake]]s were internal, i.e. they were located on the differential and acted via the drive shafts.

== The TAV 12 in the press and literature ==
The special features of the Bucciali TAV 12 are highlighted in both contemporary and historical media. At its first contemporary exhibition in Paris, an exhibition report described the ''Flèche d'or'' as "the most modern and advanced car in France" of its time.<ref name=":4" /> In retrospect, writers consider it one of the most famous<ref name=":0" /> or "most mysterious automobiles ever produced".<ref name=":9" />


== Technical data ==
== Technical data ==
Line 88: Line 86:
|-
|-
|Maximum power:
|Maximum power:
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center" |120 hp (88 kW) or 180 hp (132 kW)<ref>The sources provide different information on this.</ref>
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center" |120&nbsp;hp (88&nbsp;kW) or 180&nbsp;hp (132&nbsp;kW)<ref>The sources provide different information on this.</ref>
|-
|-
|Mixture preparation:
|Mixture preparation:
Line 126: Line 124:
|-
|-
|Maximum speed:
|Maximum speed:
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center" |180&nbsp;km/h
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center" |{{Convert|180|km/h|0|abbr=on}}
|}
|}

== References ==
<references />


== External links ==
== External links ==


* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160305091732/http://www.kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf Model history of the Bucciali TAV 12 on the website www.kidston.com] (Memento from March 5, 2016 in the [[Internet Archive]])
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160305091732/http://www.kidston.com/pdfs/116.pdf Model history of the Bucciali TAV 12 on the website www.kidston.com] (Memento from March 5, 2016, in the [[Internet Archive]])
* [https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z13389/bucciali-tav-12.aspx Model history of the Bucciali TAV 12 with numerous illustrations on the website www.conceptcarz.com]
* [https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z13389/bucciali-tav-12.aspx Model history of the Bucciali TAV 12 with numerous illustrations on the website www.conceptcarz.com]
* [https://www.coachbuild.com/index.php/encyclopedia/coachbuilders-models/item/42 Images of the Bucciali TAV 12 on the website www.coachbuild.com]
* [https://www.coachbuild.com/index.php/encyclopedia/coachbuilders-models/item/42 Images of the Bucciali TAV 12 on the website www.coachbuild.com]

== References ==
<references />


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==


* Gijsbert-Paul Berk: ''André Lefebvre, and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën'', Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, <nowiki>ISBN 978-1-84584-464-6</nowiki>
* Gijsbert-Paul Berk: ''André Lefebvre, and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën'', Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, {{ISBN|978-1-84584-464-6}}
* Griffith Borgeson: ''Das Märchen vom Storch'', Biografie der Frontantriebs-Modelle, in: [[Motor Klassik|''Motor Klassik'']], Issues 4 and 5/1989.
* Griffith Borgeson: ''Das Märchen vom Storch'', Biografie der Frontantriebs-Modelle, in: ''[[Motor Klassik]]'', Issues 4 and 5/1989.
* Eric Favre: ''Bucciali, la passion de la démesure'', Brand history Bucciali, in: ''La Gazoline'', Issue of January 26, 2003
* Eric Favre: ''Bucciali, la passion de la démesure'', Brand history Bucciali, in: ''La Gazoline'', Issue of January 26, 2003
* Christian Huet: ''Bucciali'', ed. Christian Huet (Self-published), 2004.
* Christian Huet: ''Bucciali'', ed. Christian Huet (Self-published), 2004.
* Serge Bellu: ''L’Attraction des frères Bucciali''. Brand history and presentation of the Bucciali TAV 12, in: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p. 68 ff.
* Serge Bellu: ''L’Attraction des frères Bucciali''. Brand history and presentation of the Bucciali TAV 12, in: ''Automobiles Classiques'' No. 116 (September 2001), p.&nbsp;68 ff.
* H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: ''Der Flug der Störche''. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p. 26
* H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: ''Der Flug der Störche''. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p.&nbsp;26

[[Category:Luxury vehicles]]
[[Category:Limousines]]
[[Category:1931]]

Latest revision as of 01:49, 14 May 2024

Bucciali TAV 12
Bucciali TAV 12 "la flèche d’or"
Overview
Model codeTAV 12
Also calledBucciali TAV 8-32
Production1931 - 1932
Body and chassis
ClassLuxury car
Body style2-door convertible (before being rebodied)
4-door sedan
Powertrain
Engine4.9 liter V12 (88 or 132 kW[1])
Dimensions
Wheelbase3,734–4,089 mm (147.0–161.0 in)
Length6,360 mm (250.4 in)
Height1,480 mm (58.3 in)

The Bucciali TAV 12 (alternatively also 8-32 or Type 7) is the last model from the French car manufacturer Bucciali. Introduced in 1931, the TAV 12's history and characteristics are not fully understood.[2] Unusual for the time, it had front-wheel drive and sensational bodywork, the flat and long limousine version of which was also known as la flèche d'or ("the golden arrow"). The vehicle, of which only one is known, was dismantled into its individual parts before the outbreak of the Second World War. A collector had it rebuilt 40 years later.[3] Since the early 1990s, the TAV 12 has been ready to drive again and is shown at exhibitions from time to time.

Background[edit]

The Bucciali brand can be traced back to Angelo ("Buc"; 1889–1981) and Paul-Albert Bucciali (1887–1946). The Bucciali brothers, from a Corsican family, were born in Boulogne-sur-Mer in northern France and worked as piano and organ builders in their hometown.[4] After World War I, they founded Société Bucciali Frères, based in Courbevoie near Paris, which produced a series of small, conventionally styled sports cars from 1922.[5] Some of the cars initially marketed under the Buc badge were one-offs, but some models were produced in small series of up to 100 units (Buc AB 4–5).[6] Occasionally, Buc cars appeared at French motorsport events.[7] Depending on the source, the company produced 120,[8] 150[9] or 200[10] cars in 1926. This was not enough to make the business economically viable.[11] As a result, the Bucciali brothers stopped producing conventionally designed automobiles at the end of 1925.

Beginning in 1926, Société Bucciali Frères became an automotive engineering design firm.[10] The Bucciali brothers were now primarily involved in the development of front-wheel-drive designs. This was a new drive concept for automobiles that had attracted some attention since 1925 when a front-wheel-drive racing car (Miller 122) designed by the American engineer Harry Miller had been surprisingly successful in the "Indianapolis 500". The Buccialis often used the preliminary work of other engineers in their designs. The first front-wheel-drive car, the Bucciali TAV 1, incorporated ideas from Brazilian engineer Robert Dimitri Sensaud de Lavaud,[2][4] while later developments resembled the technology of the 1929 US Cord L-29,[12] the first mass-produced front-wheel-drive passenger car.[13]

Beginning in 1926, the company, now explicitly known as Bucciali, presented a new design at each of the annual Paris Motor Shows held in October, most of which were an evolution of previous concepts. In some cases, only the vehicle frames were exhibited, but in most cases, the chassis was fitted with individual coachworks designed by Angelo Bucciali. They were mostly characterized by unusual proportions, including an unusual length and an extremely low overall height. This design became a trademark of Bucciali. Bucciali's vehicles were usually equipped with internal combustion engines from other manufacturers such as S.C.A.P., Continental , or Lycoming; only in the case of the 1930 Bucciali Double Huit did the company announce a 16-cylinder engine of its design, but this was never realized. Most Bucciali models remained one-offs; only three or four examples of the Bucciali TAV 30 are known to have been built.[12] The company's last model was the 1931 TAV 12, which was fitted with two bodies in succession.

Although the Bucciali brothers regularly announced their intention to mass-produce their front-wheel-drive models, the seriousness of this intention is doubted in the literature, given the extremely low production volume. Most publications assume that the Bucciali brothers were primarily interested in selling their patented front-wheel-drive solutions to interested production car manufacturers; the Buccialis' sensational but impractical car bodies should also be seen in this context.[11][14] Bucciali sold the rights to use some of his ideas to the Peerless Motor Company, but the company went bankrupt in 1931 and turned into a brewery before it could implement Bucciali's concepts.

Nomenclature[edit]

As is often the case with Bucciali models, the name of the vehicle is confusing. Several different designations were used over the years. At the factory, the car was initially called the Bucciali 8-32, with the first digit representing the originally intended eight-cylinder engine and the last two digits indicating the year 1932, when it was to be presented to the public. However, this designation became obsolete when the customer opted for a V12 engine. Automobile historians then introduced the designation TAV 12. TAV stood for Traction Avant (= front-wheel drive), while the 12 denoted the tax class or the number of cylinders, depending on the source. Alternatively, the TAV 12 is also known as Type 7, Bucciali's seventh model.[12]

History of the TAV 12[edit]

Production in response to changing customer requirements[edit]

The TAV 12 was the last of the Bucciali brothers' seven front-wheel-drive cars, and the only one that was not built primarily for show, but for a client.[11] The client was Georges Roure, a businessman who had seen the front-wheel-drive Bucciali Double Huit (Double Eight) with a 16-cylinder engine at the 1930 Paris Motor Show. During production, the car underwent numerous conceptual changes. Roure's original order was for a replica of a 1930 convertible with a V16 engine. However, the Bucciali brothers were unable to deliver a working V16 engine at short notice, as such a design did not exist: The V16 engine block on display at the 1930 show was merely a prototype, with no internal workings.[3][10] Roure initially ordered an American 8-cylinder engine from Continental instead but changed his order a second time before installation and finally had a 12-cylinder engine from French manufacturer Aéroplanes G. Voisin installed.[11] The first version, introduced in the fall of 1931, was a two-door convertible. Unlike some earlier Bucciali designs, the convertible was unquestionably road-worthy. There are reports of a promotional drive by Paul-Albert Bucciali in November 1931, when Bucciali took the car to Nice, where it participated in an exhibition and was awarded an honorary prize for its sophisticated engineering.[11] Despite this, the customer soon gave up on the convertible as he did not agree with the lines of the body.

In the early months of 1932, Bucciali was commissioned by Roures to produce a large four-door Limousine (French: Berline) nicknamed la flèche d'or. La flèche d'or was completed in April 1932. In the same month, the client Georges Roure took delivery of the car. Bucciali charged 130,000 French francs for the chassis and another 85,600 francs for the body.[11] Roure sold the car shortly thereafter to a Parisian banker.[15]

In October 1932, la flèche d'or was presented to the public at the Paris Motor Show. It was the last time that Bucciali had a stand at this show. Alongside the TAV 12 was a TAV 30 convertible, whose long, low lines followed those of the Berline and which was powered by a Lycoming eight-cylinder in-line engine.

Single piece or additional copies?[edit]

La flèche d'or was probably[2] a single unit; in any case, only one car of this type is in existence today. Although a single source claims that two similar cars with Voisin engines[9] were built in 1932, there is no proof.[16] There is evidence, however, that in the summer or fall of 1932, a two-year-old TAV 30 chassis, initially fitted with a roadster body, was later fitted with a la Flèche d'or-style body for a customer.[17] However, this car was equipped with an eight-cylinder Lycoming engine. Finally, there is evidence that the Bucciali brothers began designing another limousine for the 1933 Paris Motor Show in the fall of 1932, but it was never realized, as Bucciali's development work came to an end in early 1933 for financial reasons.[11]

Dismantling and reconstruction[edit]

Engine block and chassis details of a Bugatti Type 46

The TAV 12 was used regularly by its owner in the 1930s, but he had the body removed after a few years. The body was mounted on a Bugatti T46 chassis in the late 1930s.[18] Produced from 1929 to 1936, the T 46 was the second largest Bugatti and was known as the "Petite Royale" about the legendary Type 41 luxury limousine.[19] The wheelbase of the Bugatti was half a meter shorter than that of the Bucciali, which meant that the body had to be shortened considerably at the front. The Bugatti with the "la flèche d'or" body was transferred to the US in the early post-war period. The Bucciali chassis remained in France and was considered lost for several years. After its rediscovery, it was purchased by a French collector.[18]

In 1976, the body and the Bucciali chassis came into the hands of an American collector, who had the la flèche d'or rebuilt. The engine, gearbox, front-wheel drive, suspension, and most of the sheet metal parts could be taken over from the original vehicle. Some parts of the chassis, the rear fenders, and the hood were rebuilt from scratch. The reconstruction was completed more than ten years later. Since the late 1990s, the TAV 12 has been on public display several times, including at the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance (2006).[2]

Design and technical details[edit]

Car bodies[edit]

At first, it was a convertible, but later it was given a four-door limousine body.

Convertible[edit]

The first version, which appeared in the fall of 1931, was a two-door convertible. The car had a steel chassis with a 3734 mm wheelbase, which had already been used for a TAV 30 the previous year.[12] Unlike the other TAV models, the body was not designed by the Bucciali brothers, but by Émile Guillet, the owner of a coachwork factory who was sometimes a partner of Bucciali.[5] It was considered stylistically unsuccessful.[11]

Berline: „la flèche d’or“[edit]

Low hood, large wheels: La flèche d'or (model)

In the early months of 1932, Bucciali produced a large four-door limousine (French: Berline) for Roures, nicknamed la flèche d'or. The body was of mixed construction, consisting of sheet steel shells nailed to a wooden frame.[2]

Bucciali TAV 12

The limousine's wheelbase was 4089 mm, only a few millimeters shorter than that of the Bugatti T41 "Royale". With a length of 6360 mm, the car was exceptionally long, while the body height was only 1480 mm.[5] This made the Bucciali TAV 12 Berline the lowest car of its time. The wheels had a diameter of 24 inches.[2] The body was designed by Paul-Albert Bucciali; the sheet metal parts were allegedly made to Bucciali's specifications at Saoutchik in Neuilly-sur-Seine.[2] The hood was also low. Its top line was below the highest point of the fenders so that the hood was partially hidden by the wheels and fenders when viewed from the side. As on the earlier TAV Buccialis models, a stylized stork was mounted on the side vents of the hood. It was a reference to the Escadrille des Cigognes (Stork Squadron)[20] in which Paul-Albert Bucciali had participated during the First World War.[4] The absence of running boards was another stylistic feature. The big headlamps were positioned in front of the grille, directly on the front bumper. Two spare wheels were mounted on top of each other at the rear of the car.

Technology[edit]

Gearbox in front of the engine block: front-wheel drive chassis of a Bucciali

The TAV 12 had a steel chassis, front-wheel drive and independent front and rear suspension.[2] Paul-Albert Bucciali had already patented this design in 1928.[21] Both versions of the car were powered by a 12-cylinder engine that Bucciali purchased from Voisin. This H18 sleeve valve engine was mainly used in the Voisin C18.[22] It had a displacement of 4886 cc. The mixture was prepared by four Zenith carburetors.[2] The output of the Voisin engine was given as 180 bhp (132 kW),[5] other sources say 120 bhp (88 kW).[10] The Voisin engine, designed for a rear-wheel drive car, was mounted upside down in the Bucciali, so that the flywheel with the clutch was at the front.[22] The four-speed transmission was a Bucciali design. It was positioned transversely in front of the engine, with the differential in front of it.[22] The front drum brakes were internal, i.e. they were located on the differential and acted via the drive shafts.

Technical data[edit]

Bucciali TAV 12
Parameter Convertible Berline

La flèche d’or

Motor:  Twelve-cylinder gasoline engine

V-arrangement

Cubic capacity: 4886 cm³
Maximum power: 120 hp (88 kW) or 180 hp (132 kW)[23]
Mixture preparation: 4 Zenith carburetors
Valves:  none

(Knight system slide gate motor)

Cooling: Water cooling
Gearbox: Four-speed gearbox (manual gearbox)

Transverse at the front

Wheel suspension: Independent front suspension
Brakes: Front and rear drum brakes
Chassis: Steel frame
Coachwork:  Mixed construction (wood frame with steel sheet cladding)
Wheelbase: 3734 mm 4089 mm
Dimensions

(length × width × height):

6360 × ... × 1480 mm
Maximum speed: 180 km/h (112 mph)

References[edit]

  1. ^ There are different data on this in the sources.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i „1932 Bucciali TAV 12 Berline, Coachwork by Saoutchik. Private Portfolio No. 114“. (PDF) www.kidston.com, October 12, 2014, archived from the original (no longer available online) on July 14, 2014; retrieved December 1, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: Das Märchen vom Storch. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: Motor Klassik, issue 5/1989, p. 48.
  4. ^ a b c Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: Das Märchen vom Storch. Brand history Bucciali (1926–1932), Part 1. in: Motor Klassik, issue 4/1989, p. 49.
  5. ^ a b c d Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12: L’attraction des frères Bucciali. In: Automobiles Classiques No. 116 (September 2001), p. 77 (with illustration).
  6. ^ Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali. In: Automobiles Classiques No. 116 (September 2001), p. 70.
  7. ^ There is no record of an overall victory by a Buc in a motorsport event. At the III Grand Prix de Boulogne in 1923, a driver named Augustus Bucciali made his first start in a car designated as a Buc; he crossed the finish line but was not classified due to insufficient distance; see statistics of the race on the website www.teamdan.com (memento from May 4, 2009 on WebCite) (retrieved on December 1, 2014). No entries were recorded for 1924; in 1925 there were several finishes by several Buc riders; see Statistics of the Grand Prix in 1924 (memento from May 4, 2009 on WebCite) and 1925 (memento from May 4, 2009 on WebCite), both on the website www.teamdan.com (accessed on December 1, 2014).
  8. ^ Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali. In: Automobiles Classiques No. 116 (September 2001), p. 69.
  9. ^ a b Harald Linz, Halwart Schrader: Die große Automobil Enzyklopädie. 100 Jahre Geschichte, 2500 Marken aus 65 Ländern. BLV Publishing Company Munich 1985, ISBN 3-405-13217-7, p. 72.
  10. ^ a b c d Eric Favre: Bucciali, la passion de la démesure, History of the brand Bucciali in: La Gazoline, edition of January 26, 2003.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Daniel Vaughan: „1932 Bucciali TAV 12“. www.conceptcarz.com, February 1, 2010, retrieved on December 1, 2014.
  12. ^ a b c d Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: Das Märchen vom Storch. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: Motor Klassik, issue 5/1989, p. 50.
  13. ^ Richard M. Langworth: Encyclopedia of American Cars 1930–1980. Beekman House, New York 1984, ISBN 0-517-42462-2, p. 215 f.
  14. ^ Griffith Borgeson, Roy D. Query: Das Märchen vom Storch. Brand history Bucciali (1926-1932), part 2, in: Motor Klassik, issue 5/1989, p. 51.
  15. ^ Wouter Melissen: „Bucciali TAV 8-32 Saoutchik 'Fleche d’Or' Berline“. www.conceptcarz.com, October 18, 2006, retrieved on December 1, 2014.
  16. ^ This may be a misleading formulation; the convertible and the following limousine may be counted as two separate vehicles.
  17. ^ Serge Bellu: Bucciali TAV 12. L’attraction des frères Bucciali. In: Automobiles Classiques No. 116 (September 2001), p. 76.
  18. ^ a b H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: Der Flug der Störche. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p. 30.
  19. ^ H.G. Conway: Die Bugatti-Typen. In: Die Bugattis. Automobile, Möbel, Bronzen. Exhibition catalog of the Museum for Arts and Crafts Hamburg (1983), p. 271.
  20. ^ Popular name of the GC 12, groupe de combat n° 12, set up in Reims in 1912; Pascal Ory: Dictionnaire des étrangers qui ont fait la France, Robert Laffont, Paris 2013.
  21. ^ Patent US1837106A: Motor vehicle. Applied for on September 25, 1928, published on December 15, 1931, inventor: Albert Paul Bucciali (the patent incorrectly lists the name "Albert Paul Bucciali" instead of Paul-Albert Bucciali).
  22. ^ a b c Gijsbert-Paul Berk: André Lefebvre,and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën, Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, ISBN 978-1-84584-464-6, S. 52.
  23. ^ The sources provide different information on this.

External links[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Gijsbert-Paul Berk: André Lefebvre, and the Cars He Created at Voisin and Citroën, Veloce Publishing Ltd, 2011, ISBN 978-1-84584-464-6
  • Griffith Borgeson: Das Märchen vom Storch, Biografie der Frontantriebs-Modelle, in: Motor Klassik, Issues 4 and 5/1989.
  • Eric Favre: Bucciali, la passion de la démesure, Brand history Bucciali, in: La Gazoline, Issue of January 26, 2003
  • Christian Huet: Bucciali, ed. Christian Huet (Self-published), 2004.
  • Serge Bellu: L’Attraction des frères Bucciali. Brand history and presentation of the Bucciali TAV 12, in: Automobiles Classiques No. 116 (September 2001), p. 68 ff.
  • H. O. (Hans Otto) Meyer-Spelbrink: Der Flug der Störche. The front-wheel drive models from Bucciali. Oldtimer Markt, issue 4/2016, p. 26

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