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Very brave driver takes his 1937 Bugatti worth $30 MILLION on road trip across the USA

Very brave driver takes his 1937 Bugatti worth $30 MILLION on road trip across the USA

Daily Mail​20 hours ago
An ambitious Swiss car enthusiast took his freshly restored $30 million 1937 Bugatti on an epic 3,600-mile road trip from from Rhode Island to California.
Car collector Fritz Burkhard drove the 88-year-old red and black beauty from coast to coast to prove that vintage vehicles are meant to be driven and not just marveled at.
'I wanted to show that it's possible,' Burkhard explained his thought process to KSBW.
'If I can drive a pre-war Bugatti across your beautiful country, you can do it in a '60 car, '70 car, and just go out and enjoy and use the cars. They're made for driving.'
Burkhard kicked off his 11-day cross-country roadtrip from Audrain Automobile Museum in New Port, Rhode Island on July 31.
His extensive journey landed him in Pebble Beach in California, for the coastal community's annual car show, Concours d'Elegance, which was on Sunday.
While he won Best of Show at the 2024 Concours d'Elegance with his 1934 Bugatti Type 59 Sports, he did not secure that prestigious accolade this year.
The title was taken by Penny and Lee Anderson of Naples, Florida with their 1924 Hispano-Suiza H6C Nieuport-Astra Torpedo.
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But he said his trip was not about winning again, but about enjoying his travels and encouraging a new generation of car connoisseurs.
'It's about having fun and enjoying, especially sharing this inspiration with young people,' he told ABC 6 at the start of his coast-to-coast endevor.
Burkhard's multimillion-dollar Bugatti was restored just before he headed for the West Coast.
To ensure his safety and that the car ran smoothly, he was trailed by mechanics from the museum in a 2009 Shelby Mustang.
Sean O'Donnell and Antonio Melegari, who run The Drivers' Seat with ABS podcast, also tagged along and documented the entire trip.
'He took a just-restored car and broke it in on the ride. It rode 3,500 to 3,600 miles across the country, and they made it,' the museum's chairman, Nicholas Schorsh, told KSBW.
Burkhard described driving the Bugatti as riding 'a mustang horse, except you have brakes to slow it down,' according to KION.
He said he drove at least 300 miles each day to make it to California.
While this may sound like a nightmare for most, the car-lover said he enjoyed every moment of it.
'Eight hours at least driving every day. You have a great country, the roads in Nebraska, Wyoming, we went off the highway,' he told KION.
'Sometimes we were half an hour or one hour alone. Nobody around us. Just cruising through those beautiful landscapes. Fantastic. So much fun at every gas station.'
Burkhard's love of classic cars emerged when he was just seven years old. He purchased his first vintage vehicle when he was 20 - a 1967 Chevrolet Camaro - he told Lux Magazine.
He started his own car collection, the Burkhard Pearl Collection, which is located in Zug, Switzerland. He estimated it has about 90 automobiles.
And Burkhard refuses to let his array of cars sit there and collect dust, as he believes they are meant to be driven regardless of their ages.
'If people just park their cars to show them and keep them in the garage they miss 70-80 percent of the fun,' he told ABC 6.
'They don't know what that is. These are machines to be driven. They are pieces of art, but you don't tack them on the wall.'
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