Rolls-Royce Corniche (V) `2000 - Представительский автомобиль (Великобритания)
HW100 - 45000
UAW55 - 105000
RRW100 - 175000
PKRR - 7500
 

Corniche V (2000-2002)
The fifth series to bear the Corniche name made its debut in January 2000. At the time of its release, it was the most expensive vehicle offered by Rolls-Royce, with a base price of US$359,900. 384 Corniche V were made with the last 45 being designated as "Final Series" Corniches and production ended in August 2002, after Bentley had become a subsidiary of Volkswagen AG and took over the Crewe manufacturing site while the rights to the Rolls-Royce name and trademarks were licensed by Rolls-Royce Aero Engines to BMW, building their cars in a new factory built by BMW on the Goodwood Estate near Chichester, West Sussex.
Production
Rolls-Royce Corniche I: 4,332
Saloon (1971-1981): 1,108
Convertible (1971-1988): 3,224
Bentley Corniche: 140
Saloon (1971-1981): 63
Convertible (1971-1984): 77
Rolls-Royce Corniche II (1988-1989): 1,234
Rolls-Royce Corniche III (1989-1992): 452
Rolls-Royce Corniche IV (1992-1995): 244
Corniche IV (1992-1995): 219
Corniche S (1995): 25
Rolls-Royce Corniche V (2000-2002): 384
Corniche V "Final Series": 45
Bentley Continental (1984-1994): 421
Bentley Continental Turbo (1992-1995): 8

2000 Rolls-Royce Corniche V

wikipedia.org (en)

 

Rolls-Royce Corniche (2000)

Rolls-Royce Corniche V
2000 Rolls-Royce Corniche V
Overview
Manufacturer - Rolls-Royce Motors
Production - 1999-2002 . 384 produced
Model years - 2000-2002
Assembly - Crewe, England
Designer - Graham Hull
Body and chassis
Class - Grand tourer (S)
Body style - 2-door 4-seat Soft-top convertible
Layout - FR layout
Platform - Rolls-Royce SZ
Doors - 2
Related - Bentley Azure
Powertrain
Engine - 6.75 L turbocharged Rolls-Royce V8
Transmission - 4-speed 4L80-E automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase - 120.51 in (3,061 mm)
Length - 212.79 in (5,405 mm)
Width - 81.02 in (2,058 mm)
Height - 58.07 in (1,475 mm)
Kerb weight - 6,031 lb (2,736 kg)
Chronology
Predecessor - Rolls-Royce Corniche IV
Successor - Rolls-Royce Phantom Drophead Coupé (indirect)

The Rolls-Royce Corniche V is a high end, two-door, four-seater luxury convertible car, that was produced in the United Kingdom from 1999 until 2002.
The model debuted in January 2000 and it was the second new model generation to bear the Corniche name, after four consecutive Corniche series derived from the Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. Contrary to all its predecessors, this Corniche was also the first Rolls-Royce with a soft-top that folded into the car's body.
Despite all-new sheetmetal, bearing a strong resemblance to the Silver Seraph, it had instead been derived from the pre-BMW era Bentley Azure, the model continued use of the traditional Rolls-Royce 6.75L V8 engine-block, in common with its predecessors, albeit significantly modernised, with improved performance, due to the Bentley-inherited turbocharger - this was the first Corniche to have this feature standard.
Released after a five-year production gap, the fifth series Corniche was Rolls-Royce's most expensive model and flagship car, with a base price of US$359,900. From 2003, Rolls-Royce motor car production was handed over to BMW, who did not prolong the production of any of the existing models, but instead reintroduced the brand with an all-new Phantom VII.
The Corniche V was the only Rolls-Royce model launched under Volkswagen holding ownership; the last Rolls-Royce Corniche to date, and with just 384 units built.

Overview

Performance
The Rolls-Royce Corniche V is powered by a 325 hp (240 kW) 6.75 L turbocharged Rolls-Royce V8. The engine is capable of producing 738 N·m (544 lb·ft) of torque between 2,100-2,300 rpm. The engine is mated to a four-speed automatic transmission. It has a top speed of 135 mph (220 km/h) and a 0-60 mph (96 km/h) acceleration time of 8 seconds. The convertible, weighing 6,031 lb (2,736 kg), was built more for comfort than for speed.
Features
The Corniche V came outfitted with every luxury and refinement characteristic of a Rolls-Royce.
The interior has Connolly Leather interior, Wilton wool carpets, lambswool rugs, chrome gauges and a wide choice of exotic wood trims applied to the dashboard, console & waistrails, Dual automatic temperature control, powered adjustable front seats, 2 stage heated seats (front and rear), 4 x 30 watt stereo, tuner, cassette and CD system with six CD changer unit mounted in the front seat armrest with eight speaker system. The exterior has a powered retractable soft top, automatic dual-headlamps with chrome surrounds, powered boot mechanism, 17" Alloy wheels, automatic ride control and Electronic Traction Assistance System (ETAS).
Styling cues were taken from the Rolls-Royce Silver Seraph sedan, but it shares little mechanically with that BMW-engined car. Instead, the Corniche's V body was set onto the older platform used for the Bentley Azure, the Rolls-Royce SZ platform. Making it the first and only Rolls-Royce developed from a Bentley rather than the other way around, (not withstanding the fact that the Bentley Azure was developed on a Rolls-Royce platform to begin with).
The Corniche V was the only new Rolls-Royce developed under Volkswagen's ownership, before the marque was sold in 2003. All Corniches were completely hand-built. The car was considered a slightly softer, much more exclusive version of the Azure.
Corniche V "Final Series"
Towards the end of production of the Corniche V, a limited run of 56 "Final Series" cars was planned, 56 being the years in which Rolls-Royce were built at Crewe. Ultimately, only 45 were made out of the original expected 56. They are distinguished by, but not limited to the following:

Front-fender badges reading “Rolls-Royce Cars, Crewe, England,” with a Union Jack insignia
Chromed mirror housings
Restyled & chromed Bentley Azure wheels
Spirit of Ecstasy Hubcaps
Red Rolls-Royce badges on the grille and trunk lid
Rosewood Burr & Cherry Wood trim with Spirit of Ecstasy inlay
Individually numbered commemorative plaque on the centre console (out of 56)

Final Rolls-Royce Corniche V
The last Rolls-Royce Corniche (Chassis 2079) was manufactured on 30 August 2002. Along with most features from the "Final Series" specification, It also had a unique seat style: A Chesterfield buttoned theme in spruce Green without seat edge piping, different centre console plaque reading "A Century of Excellence" with the RR logo, and the cities where Rolls-Royces were produced from 1904 to 2002 (in place of the numbered commemorative plaque), silver text inlays on the radio flap reading "The Final Rolls-Royce Corniche Chassis 2079" & treadplates, reading "The Final Rolls-Royce Corniche Chassis 2079 Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, Crewe, England 1946-2002". This was the last Rolls-Royce to be made at Crewe before it was transferred to Bentley models. It was in Rolls-Royce's ownership until September 2018 when it was auctioned off by Bonhams. The production run consisted of 384 cars.
Bentley Azure/Rolls-Royce Corniche body production figures*
Body - 1994 - 1995 - 1996 - 1997 - 1998 - 1999** - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - Totals
Azure - 3 - 160 - 229 - 200 - 209 - 141 - 189 - 194 - 78 - 1,403
Corniche - _ - _ - _ - _ - _ - 25 - 250 - 67 - 42 - 384
Totals - 3 - 160 - 229 - 200 - 209 - 166 - 439 - 261 - 120 - 1,787
*stated by Pininfarina production records
**From 2 varying documents, newer data used

Rolls-Royce Corniche V (Rear)
Interior
2002 Rolls-Royce Corniche V Final Series

wikipedia.org (en)