Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • Robb Report

    How Christian von Koenigsegg Built the World’s Most Interesting Hypercar Company at the Age of 22

    By Bob Sorokanich,

    6 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3SpYPS_0uauozFU00

    There’s no carmaker on earth quite like Koenigsegg. The Swedish firm currently sells the Gemera, a four-seat hybrid with an eye-popping 2,300 horsepower, and the CC850, with 1,385 horsepower and a gearbox that can be a 9-speed automatic or a 6-speed manual with the touch of a button. These two models join a long line of crazy-powerful, hyper-exclusive cars packed with never-before-seen technology. The company, and the cars that it builds, all stem from the magnificent mind of one man: Christian von Koenigsegg. He never went to engineering school, and he never worked for a mainstream automaker, yet the company that bears his name is pushing the envelope of modern automotive performance. Here’s the life story of the man building some of the most outrageous cars on sale today.

    Christian von Koenigsegg was born in Sweden on July 2, 1972, the son of a wealthy entrepreneur and a woman described as a “fashionista.” The Koenigseggs descended from a noble family with roots in the Swabia region of southwest Germany, with a family coat-of-arms that was granted by the Holy Roman Empire in the 12th century.

    When he was 5 years old, Christian von Koenigsegg saw a movie that would shape the course of his life. “The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix” was a stop-motion-animation children’s movie made in Norway, showing the story of a bicycle mechanic who builds his own sports car, enters a major race (seemingly based on the 24 Hours of Le Mans), and beats all other competitors to the checkered flag. “Today, almost 45 years after he first saw it, mention of ‘The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix’ brings a smile to von Koenigsegg’s face,” Angus MacKenzie wrote in Motor Trend in 2023. The young von Koenigsegg was already fascinated by automobiles, and the movie planted the seed of an idea: To launch his own company, building sports cars of his own design.

    Throughout his childhood, von Koenigsegg fed his voracious mind, taking apart family appliances and building his own remote-control car. As a teenager, he got a job washing cars at the local Suzuki dealership, and built a side business buying, tuning up, and selling mopeds. He went to a well-respected Swedish boarding school, studied business, and at 19 years old, von Koenigsegg launched his own import-export company.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1YzTNy_0uauozFU00
    Christian von Koenigsegg with a Regera

    The work wasn’t glamorous—von Koenigsegg told CQP that his company mostly traded “odd stuff like frozen chicken and misprinted plastic bags,” importing goods into Estonia after that country left the crumbling Soviet Union. But he made good money, and just a few years later, he plowed all of those earnings into an ambitious new project: Koenigsegg Automotive, founded in 1994, when von Koenigsegg was just 22 years old.

    Starting a car company from scratch isn’t easy. As von Koenigsegg told Forbes, the fledgling automaker quickly ate up all of the $200,000 he had to his name. His father, an executive at an industrial heating-tech company, loaned him another $300,000. “My father didn’t know it then, but he would over the next few years invest his life savings, or about $2 million,” von Koenigsegg told Forbes. “Naturally my mother freaked out.”

    Amazingly, the company completed its first running prototype in 1996. The following year, Koenigsegg Automotive showed off its nearly production-ready supercar at the Cannes Film Festival. Seemingly out of nowhere, the Swedish upstart was making a bold impression. Kjell Nilsson, who had been a vice president at appliance maker Electrolux, volunteered to be chairman of the board of Koenigsegg. Saab engineers contributed their expertise in engine development, and Volvo gave the supercar startup access to test tracks and wind tunnels.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1L7Uih_0uauozFU00
    Koenigsegg Agera S

    In 2000, Koenigsegg debuted its first production supercar, the CC8S, at the Paris Motor Show. The first customer cars rolled out of the Koenigsegg factory in 2003. The 655-horsepower supercharged V8-powered mid-engined machine nabbed a Guinness World Record as the most powerful production car ever built and won a Red Dot award for design. Koenigsegg Automotive would only build six examples of the CC8S, but the striking supercar would prove to the world that von Koenigsegg was serious.

    2004 saw the debut of the next Koenigsegg supercar, the CCR. Building on lessons learned from the design and production of the CC8S, this CCR featured upgraded aerodynamics for additional downforce, plus bigger brakes, wheels, and tires. The engine was upgraded with twin superchargers, now churning out 806 horsepower. In February of 2005, von Koenigsegg took a CCR to the high-speed test track in Nardo, Italy, where it clocked a top speed of 387.86 km/h (just over 240 mph), narrowly beating the production-car top-speed record of 386.4 km/h set by the McLaren F1 in 1998. The CCR was now the fastest and most powerful production car in the world.

    Owning the record book wasn’t enough for von Koenigsegg. In 2006, the self-taught carmaker introduced the all-new CCX. Bigger, more powerful, and designed to be street-legal around the world, the CCX was the first Koenigsegg approved for sale in the United States. Koenigsegg brought his new car to the BBC’s Top Gear , where it set a production-car lap record that stood for 7 years and set a top-speed record of 196 mph around the show’s airfield test track. The following year, Koenigsegg built the CCXR, a flex-fuel monster that made 1,018 horsepower on E85. 2007 also saw the debut of the CCGT, a naturally aspirated race car intended to compete in the GT1 class at Le Mans. Unfortunately, the FIA increased the minimum production number for cars to compete in GT1, eliminating the Koenigsegg from competition. That year, the company sold 17 cars, a new high-water mark for production.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4d4A2Q_0uauozFU00
    Christian von Koenigsegg with a Regera

    New cars continued to roll out of Koenigsegg’s tiny facility in Sweden. 2010 saw the unveiling of the Agera, with a twin-turbo V8 making 960 horsepower; the radical machine was named Top Gear ’s 2010 Hypercar of the Year. One year later, the Agera R made 1,140 horsepower on E85; a year after that, the Agera S became the first Koenigsegg to make more than 1,000 horsepower on pump gas, with a total output of 1,040 hp.

    In 2013, Christian von Koenigsegg bought his first Tesla Model S. He was so enthralled by the instant torque and uninterrupted acceleration of his electric super-sedan, that he immediately began working on his own design for electric motors. The result: The Koenigsegg Regera, with a twin-turbo V8 engine, three electric motors, and no gearbox. At low speeds, the Regera moved under electric power; above 30 mph, the engine drove the wheels directly. It was a drivetrain design no automaker had ever attempted before, and the Regera’s acceleration was monumental: The car could sprint from zero to 400 km/h (249 mph) and back to zero in 31.49 seconds, beating the previous world record, set by the Agera, by nearly two seconds.

    Unconventional engineering became a signature of Koenigsegg vehicles. “I could have made my life easier,” von Koenigsegg told Motor Trend in 2023. “Half of the strangeness we have done would have been enough. But innovation, along with performance and function, is what drives me.” His next project took aim at a performance goal that seemed impossible: a car that had one horsepower for every kilogram of weight.

    The Koenigsegg One:1 debuted in 2014. Based on the Agera R, it was 100 kg lighter, totaling 1,360 kg (a hair less than 3,000 pounds). Running on E85, the twin-turbo engine made exactly 1,360 horsepower, the first street-legal production car with a true power-to-weight ratio of one. Next came the Agera RS, with a “slightly detuned” version of the One:1 engine making 1,160 horsepower on pump gas. In 2017, Koenigsegg factory driver Niklas Lilja hopped in an Agera RS in Pahrump, Nevada, and recorded a two-way average speed of 277.87mph, the highest top speed ever recorded with a production vehicle. Lilja briefly achieved a one-way speed of 284.55 mph, the highest speed ever measured on a public road.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1XLlzb_0uauozFU00
    Koenigsegg Jesko Attack

    2019 brought the next all-new Koenigsegg: The Jesko, named after Christian von Koenigsegg’s father. With a 5.0-liter twin-turbo V8, the Jesko made 1,280 horsepower on pump gas, rising to 1,600 horsepower with E85. The Jesko featured an all-new “Light Speed Transmission,” with nine gears, and seven clutches. Invented by von Koenigsegg himself, the gearbox could instantaneously shift to the lowest possible gear whenever the driver floored the accelerator, giving an EV-like response at any speed.

    The next Koenigsegg “megacar” was even more revolutionary. 2020 saw the introduction of the Gemera, a supercar unlike anything ever seen before. The two-door vehicle had four seats, each with room enough for a seven-foot occupant. Behind the passenger compartment was a 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine with no camshafts—the “tiny friendly giant,” which uses compressed air to operate the intake and exhaust valves, allowing for infinite valve-timing adjustments on the fly. The 492-horsepower engine sends its power to the Gemera’s front axle, while two electric motors drive the rear wheels. Total output? 1,677 horsepower, enough to rocket the Gemera from zero to 60 in under 2 seconds.

    In 2023, Koenigsegg opened the Gripen Atelier, the first new car factory established in Sweden in more than 50 years. It’s safe to say we’ll see lots more outrageous vehicles coming out of this facility in years to come.

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0