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Panhard DB Coupé Frua

The Panhard DB Coupé Frua.

Vehicle Overview

The Panhard DB Coupé Frua was a limited-production sports car developed jointly by the French manufacturer Deutsch-Bonnet and the Italian coachbuilder Pietro Frua. The vehicle was introduced in 1952 and produced in small numbers through approximately 1954. It was conceived as a more refined, stylistically advanced variant of D.B.’s competition-focused models, aimed at a clientele seeking a closed sports car with distinctive European design. The chassis was derived from existing Deutsch-Bonnet underpinnings, employing a tubular steel frame and front-wheel-drive layout. The powerplant was a horizontally opposed, two-cylinder engine supplied by Panhard, available in displacements ranging from 745 cc to 851 cc. Output varied slightly by specification but generally remained below 50 horsepower. The engine was mounted at the front and coupled to a four-speed manual transmission. Performance was modest by contemporary sports car standards, with an emphasis on mechanical simplicity and low weight. The bodywork was designed and constructed by Pietro Frua in Turin. It featured a two-door fastback coupé configuration, notable for its rounded contours, low beltline, and integration of stylistic elements common to early 1950s Italian coachbuilding. Visual characteristics included a split front windshield, recessed headlamps, and three decorative portholes on each front wing. The body was executed in steel, in contrast to the aluminum or fiberglass panels used on D.B.’s competition models. Production numbers remain imprecise, though surviving documentation and marque histories estimate a total of approximately 60 units. The vehicles were assembled in small batches, with bodies transported from Frua’s workshop to France for mechanical completion. The Panhard DB Coupé Frua was not homologated for competition and was sold primarily as a road-going grand touring model. The model was ultimately succeeded by the D.B. HBR series, which shifted focus back toward lightweight construction and motorsport eligibility. Few examples of the Frua-bodied coupé survive. Known chassis are retained in private collections in France and Italy, though comprehensive records are absent. The vehicle represents a rare instance of postwar Franco-Italian collaboration and occupies a marginal position in both Frua’s design portfolio and D.B.’s production chronology.

Technical Specifications

  • Body
  • Year
    1953
  • Make
    Panhard
  • Model
    DB Coupé
  • Coachbuilder
    Frua
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  • DESIGNER
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