List of carbon fiber monocoque cars

{{Short description|none}}

This is a list of production cars with carbon-fiber monocoque cell design.

Carbon-fiber monocoque design has been commonly used in racing cars since the 1980s, like Formula racing and Le Mans series prototypes. The first production car with carbon-fiber monocoque design was the MCA Centenaire. Now many modern sports cars have carbon-fiber monocoque cells, and some big car manufacturers have also started applying the same in passenger cars like the BMW i3.{{Cite web|url=http://www.autonews.com/article/20131115/COPY01/311159959/bmw-i3-pioneers-use-of-carbon-fiber-in-mass-produced-cars|title = BMW i3 pioneers use of carbon fiber in mass-produced cars|date = 14 November 2013}} the Xworks automotive X1 concept was also made in 2004, with a vacuum formed Carbon fibre Monocoque. One of the very first to use actual vacuum process.

Eligible cars

For the purposes of this list, a production car is defined as a vehicle that:

  1. has a carbon-fiber monocoque/tub.
  2. is constructed principally for retail sale to consumers, for their personal use, to transport people on public roads. No commercial or industrial vehicles are eligible.
  3. is available for commercial sale to the public.
  4. is manufactured by a manufacturer whose WMI number is shown on the VIN, including vehicles that are modified by either professional tuners or others that result in a VIN with a WMI number in their name. (For example, if a Porsche-based car is remanufactured by RUF and has RUF's WMI W09, it is eligible; but if it has Porsche's WMI, WP0, it is not eligible.)
  5. is street-legal in its intended markets, having fulfilled the homologation tests or inspections required under the law of either the United States of America, the European Union, or Japan to be granted this status.
  6. is sold in more than one national market.

List

{{Expand list|date=August 2015}}

class="wikitable sortable"
ModelManufacturer

!Nation

Year of productionClassEngineInductionElectric motor
CentenaireMCA

|{{flagicon|MCO}}

1990Sports car4L V12Twin-Turbo-
MC20

|Maserati

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|2020

|Sports car

|3L V6

|Twin-Turbo

4CAlfa Romeo

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

2013Sports car1.75L I4Turbo-
Stradale

|Dallara

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|2017

|Sports car

|2.3L I4

|Turbo

| -

XJR-15Jaguar

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 1990

Sports car6.0L V12--
EB110Bugatti

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 1991

Sports car3.5L V12Quad-turbo-
SLR McLarenMercedes-Benz

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 2003

Sports car5.4L V8Supercharger-
KZ1Ascari

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2003

Sports car5.0L V8 (BMW)--
One-77Aston Martin

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2009

Sports car7.3L V12--
i3BMW

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 2013

City car0.647L I2 (REx models)-125 kW
i8BMW

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 2013

Sports car1.5L I3Turbo98 kW
VeyronBugatti

|{{flagicon|FRA}}

| 2005

Sports car8.0L W16Quad-turbo-
ChironBugatti

|{{flagicon|FRA}}

| 2016

Sports car8.0L W16Quad-turbo-
GTFord

|{{flagicon|USA}}

| 2017

Sports car3.5L V6Twin-turbo-
CC8SKoenigsegg

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

| 2002

Sports car4.7L V8 (Ford)Supercharger-
CCRKoenigsegg

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

| 2004

Sports car4.6L V8 (based on Ford)Twin-turbo-
CCXKoenigsegg

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

| 2005

Sports car4.7~4.8L V8Twin-supercharger-
AgeraKoenigsegg

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

| 2011

Sports car5.0L V8Twin-turbo-
RegeraKoenigsegg

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

| 2015

Sports car5.0L V8Twin-turbo340 kW (160+180)
F50Ferrari

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 1995

Sports car4.7L V12--
EnzoFerrari

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 2002

Sports car6.0L V12--
LaFerrariFerrari

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 2013

Sports car6.3L V12-120 kW (KERS)
AventadorLamborghini

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 2011

Sports car6.5L V12--
Countach

|Lamborghini

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|2022

|Sports car

|6.5L V12

|Hybrid

|48V 34CV

LFALexus

|{{flagicon|JPN}}

| 2010

Sports car4.8L V10--
F1McLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 1992

Sports car6.1L V12 (BMW)--
12CMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2011

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo-
P1McLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2013

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo131 kW
650SMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2014

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo-
675LTMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2016

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo-
570S{{Cite web|url=http://www.caranddriver.com/features/2016-mclaren-570s-dissected-feature|title=2016 McLaren 570S Dissected: Powertrain, Chassis, Design, and More! - Feature|date=25 May 2015|access-date=2016-08-29}}McLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2016

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo-
570 GTMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2016

Sports car3.8L V8Twin-turbo-
720SMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2017

Sports car4.0L V8Twin-turbo-
SennaMcLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2017

Sports car4.0L V8Twin-turbo-
765LT

|McLaren

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

|2020

|Sports car

|4.0L V8

|Twin-turbo

|

CLK-GTRMercedes-Benz

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 1998

Sports car6.0L V12-
ZondaPagani

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 1999

Sports car6.0~7.3L V12 (Mercedes-Benz)--
HuayraPagani

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 2011

Sports car6.0 V12 (Mercedes-Benz)Twin-turbo-
UtopiaPagani

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| 2022

Sports car6.0 V12 (Mercedes-Benz)Twin-turbo-
Carrera GTPorsche

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 2004

Sports car5.7L V10--
918 SpyderPorsche

|{{flagicon|GER}}

| 2013

Sports car4.6L V8-205 kW
MurtayaMurtaya

|{{flagicon|GBR}}

| 2006–2012

Kit car2.0L B4 (Subaru)Turbo-
SCX{{Cite web|url=https://agileautomotive.com/car-models/|title=Models - Agile Automotive|date=3 September 2020 |access-date=2022-05-19}}Agile

|{{flagicon|DEN}}

| 2021–

Sports car2.0L I4Turbo-

References