With over 100 years of vehicle production experience, Praga is perhaps a surprise foray in to the supercar space, but the Bohema is a road-legal masterpiece focused on weight saving, aerodynamic efficiency, and outright track performance. The first Bohema was handed over to a customer in the Netherlands, though U.S. shipments won’t happen until spring 2024. With less than 20 units handmade per year, this car is as rare as it is avant-garde.
And unlike many boutique brands, Praga is not new to the game. Its history includes trucks, airplanes, karts and racing cars. The Bohema combines this storied DNA with road-centric engineering, and it shows. Approaching seven years of elaboration, the company has produced a device very little even to history, no “salesman,” so to talk, this machine definitely understands how to deliver.
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Deriving from the Nissan GT-R, the Bohema’s 700-hp, twin-turbocharged 3.8-liter V6 is bred for the backroads and developed by Litchfield Motors. Its modest power by today’s hypercar standards is no obstacle to a pure driving experience, thanks to a lightweight design and precision engineering. The full carbon-fiber monocoque brings the weight down to just 2300 pounds, adding to the agility and engagement on the track.
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Like any hypercar, aerodynamics are critical to the Bohema’s performance. And its shape, validated on a Formula 1 wind tunnel, generates almost 2000 pounds of downforce at 155 mph. Rather than heavy active aerodynamic systems, Praga used efficient design and simplicity to keep the car light and responsive.
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Don’t forget Praga has a racing background, and it shows in the Bohema. Taking cues from its track-only R1 racer and its pre-war designs like the Super Piccolo, Praga has blended lightweight materials and aerodynamic ingenuity. The end result is a car that straddles the line between GT3-type track performance and street usability.
The Bohema is not cheap — expect prices of over 1 million dollars — and was designed for exclusivity. Praga follows an individual production and customer service approach. It might qualify for road use in the U.S. under the so-called “Show and Display” exemption, making it a functional track-ready supercar with things like luggage space.
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In a packed field, the Bohema shines for its commitment to driving purity and lightweight innovation. Welcome to Praga’s world debut, and its flagship supercar the 21st-century piece that proves a century-old nameplate can still reside at the absolute summit of performance.